Caging borders and carceral states : incarcerations, immigration detentions, and resistance /
edited by Robert T. Chase.
- Chapel Hill : University of North Carolina Press, (c)2019.
- 1 online resource.
- Justice, power, and politics .
Includes bibliographies and index.
Carceral shadows : entangled lineages and technologies of migrant detention / The means and meanings of carceral mobility : U.S. deportation trains and the early twentieth-century deportation assemblage / Scorpion's tale : a borderlands history of Mexican imprisonment in the Sunbelt / Cultural resilience as resistance : the world of Mexican prisoners in Texas / They are all she had : formerly incarcerated women and the right to vote, 1890-1945 / Menacing (re)production : the commodification and de-commodification of incarcerated black women's wombs and work / Whatever happened to the Southern chain gang? Reinventing the road prison in Sunbelt Florida / Private prisons : where the Sunbelt casts its global shadow / Blood in, blood out : the emergence of California prison gangs in the 1960s / The path to Pelican Bay : the origins of the Supermax prison in the shadow of the law, 1982-1989 / The Clintons' war on drugs : why black lives didn't matter / From Dachau with love : George Jackson, black radical memory, and the transnational political vision of prison abolition / The spider's web : mass incarceration and settler custodialism in Indian country / David Manuel Hernandez -- Ethan Blue -- Kelly Lytle Hernandez -- George T. Diaz -- Pippa Holloway -- Talitha L. LeFlouria -- Vivien Miller -- Volker Janssen -- Heather McCarty -- Keramet Reiter -- Donna Murch -- Dan Berger -- Douglas K. Miller.
"This volume considers the interconnection of racial oppression in the U.S. South and West, presenting thirteen case studies that explore the ways in which people have been caged and incarcerated, and what these practices tell us about state building, coercive legal powers, and national sovereignty. As these studies depict the institutional development and state scaffolding of overlapping carceral regimes, they also consider how prisoners and immigrants resisted such oppression and violence by drawing on the transnational politics of human rights and liberation, transcending the isolation of incarceration and the boundaries of domestic law"--