The United States has the most extensive immigration detention system in the world, expanding from a capacity of less than 5, 000 detainees per day in the 1980s to 52, 000 by 2019. While the most vociferous anti-immigrant rhetoric may be attributed to Republicans, US detention infrastructure has grown exponentially regardless of the political party in power, as reports of abysmal detention conditions pile up.
Nancy Hiemstra and Deirdre Conlon provide a damning exposé of the ways immigration detention generates income while those detained are starved, sickened, and exploited as a matter of routine detention operation. Drawing on over a decade of research and focusing on detention centers in New Jersey and New York, the authors map public-private financial relationships and trace how detention contracts for food, medical care, and in-facility stores are fought over to the penny. By dissecting the inner workings of immigration detention, they show a system governed by a capitalist logic that produces sickening and corrupting dependencies in communities across the US.
Coming at a pivotal social and political moment, Immigration Detention Inc. makes the case for dismantling immigration detention regimes everywhere.
Tabela de Conteúdo
Introduction
1. Examining Sick Economies: How We Probe U.S. Detention’s Unhealthy Growth
2. ‘Meatballs that smell like fecal matter’: Contracting, Competition and Chronic Hunger in Detention
3. Embedding Bad Care: Sickness as the Standard in Detention Medical Service Provision
4. Captive Consumers and (In)Voluntary Labor
5. Illusions, Infections, and the Expansion of Detention
Conclusion
Sobre o autor
Deirdre Conlon is Associate Professor of critical human geography, based at the University of Leeds, England. Her work examines the politics and economics of detention: how migration as a business contributes to the expansion of migration controls and impacts communities. She has written numerous journal articles, book chapters, reports, and op-eds, including several pieces, as well as co-editing two book collections.