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"detention"
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Spinifex & sunflowers
Nick Harris has been drifting for years -- until the day he finds himself amid red dirt and razor wire, a refugee-prison guard in a detention centre. Nick is no crusader and no bleeding-heart. He's just a man in debt who needs a job. Time passes slowly behind the wire, no matter who you are. To distract themselves, the asylum seekers tell Nick about their lives and cultures, and the families they have left behind. They steal from him with good humour, and swear at him with bad. Nick breaks all the rules: slacking off when he guards the cordial machine, swimming with crocodiles, brawling with locals, romancing workmates. And then there is the cardinal sin -- becoming friends with the detainees. The novel is a realistic window into the hidden world of immigration detention centres, drawn from the experience of a former guard. It is one man's vision, looking through the wire at the people locked inside our desert prisons, and looking out at the people who put them there.
Challenging immigration detention : academics, activists and policy-makers
Governments increasingly rely upon detention to control the movement of undocumented migrants and asylum seekers. The deprivation of liberty of non-citizens due to their undocumented or irregular status is often fraught with gross injustices. This book stresses the need for global policy-makers to address these practices in order to ensure compliance with fundamental human rights and prevent detention abuses. Approaching detention from an interdisciplinary perspective, this volume brings together leading writers and thinkers to provide a greater understanding of why it is such an important social phenomenon and suggest ways to confront it locally and globally. Challenging Immigration Detention thematically examines a broad range of situations across the globe, with contributors providing overviews of key issues, case studies and experiences in their fields, while highlighting potential strategies for curbing detention abuses. Demonstrating the value of varied analytical frameworks and investigative angles, the contributors provide urgently needed insight into a growing human rights issue. With cross-disciplinary investigation into an issue with immediate global importance, Challenging Immigration Detention is vital for undergraduates, postgraduates, activists, lawyers and policy-makers interested in international human rights. National and international humanitarian organizations and advocacy groups working in migrant and asylum rights will find this a compelling and diverse overview of migrant detention.
The Downstream Consequences of Misdemeanor Pretrial Detention
2017
In misdemeanor cases, pretrial detention poses a particular problem because it may induce innocent defendants to plead guilty in order to exit jail, potentially creating widespread error in case adjudication. While practitioners have long recognized this possibility, empirical evidence on the downstream impacts of pretrial detention on misdemeanor defendants and their cases remains limited. This Article uses detailed data on hundreds of thousands of misdemeanor cases resolved in Harris County, Texas—the third-largest county in the United States—to measure the effects of pretrial detention on case outcomes and future crime. We find that detained defendants are 25% more likely than similarly situated releasees to plead guilty, are 43% more likely to be sentenced to jail, and receive jail sentences that are more than twice as long on average. Furthermore, those detained pretrial are more likely to commit future crimes, which suggests that detention may have a criminogenic effect. These differences persist even after fully controlling for the initial bail amount, offense, demographic information, and criminal history characteristics. Use of more limited sets of controls, as in prior research, overstates the adverse impacts of detention. A quasi-experimental analysis based on case timing confirms that these differences likely reflect the causal effect of detention. These results raise important constitutional questions and suggest that Harris County could save millions of dollars per year, increase public safety, and reduce wrongful convictions with better pretrial release policy.
Journal Article
Prison boy
by
McKay, Sharon E., author
in
Orphans Juvenile fiction.
,
Juvenile detention Juvenile fiction.
,
Torture victims Juvenile fiction.
2015
When the orphanage they live in is closed, Pax and a younger boy, Kai, are forced to live on the streets. Desperate to make enough money to send Kai to school, Pax does jobs for a shady character known only as Mister. When Pax is given a \"special mission\"--to deliver a heavy box to a certain location--Pax winds up charged with terrorism and plunged into a brutal prison environment where his captors will do anything to make him talk.
Habeas Corpus after 9/11
by
Jonathan Hafetz
in
Combatants and noncombatants (International law)
,
Cuba
,
Detention of persons
2011
2012 American Bar Association Gavel Award Honorable
Mention for Books 2012 Scribes Book Silver Medal
Award presented by the American Society of Legal Writers
The U.S. detention center at Guantánamo Bay has long been
synonymous with torture, secrecy, and the abuse of executive power.
It has come to epitomize lawlessness and has sparked protracted
legal battles and political debate. For too long, however,
Guantánamo has been viewed in isolation and has overshadowed a
larger, interconnected global detention system that includes other
military prisons such as Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan, secret CIA
jails, and the transfer of prisoners to other countries for
torture. Guantánamo is simply-and alarmingly-the most visible
example of a much larger prison system designed to operate outside
the law. Habeas Corpus after 9/11 examines the rise of the U.S.-run
global detention system that emerged after 9/11 and the efforts to
challenge it through habeas corpus (a petition to appear in court
to claim unlawful imprisonment). Habeas expert and litigator
Jonathan Hafetz gives us an insider's view of the detention of
\"enemy combatants\" and an accessible explanation of the complex
forces that keep these systems running. In the age of terrorism,
some argue that habeas corpus is impractical and unwise. Hafetz
advocates that it remains the single most important check against
arbitrary and unlawful detention, torture, and the abuse of
executive power.