Ending Isolation: The Case Against Solitary Confinement
Autor Christopher William Blackwell, Deborah Zalesne Cu Kwaneta Harris, Terry Kupersen Limba Engleză Paperback – 20 sep 2025
Găsim în Ending Isolation o analiză frontală și documentată a sistemului carceral american, care propune o perspectivă interdisciplinară rară asupra izolării celulare. Cartea nu se limitează la un studiu sociologic, ci integrează medicina, dreptul penal și jurnalismul de investigație pentru a demonta mitul necesității 'izolării'. Considerăm că forța acestui volum rezidă în echilibrul dintre rigoarea academică a profesoarei Deborah Zalesne și experiența trăită a autorilor Christopher William Blackwell și Kwaneta Harris.
Structura editorială este organizată progresiv, pornind de la o istorie a izolării în America (capitolul 3) și avansând către impactul devastator asupra categoriilor vulnerabile, precum minorii și persoanele cu afecțiuni psihice. Putem afirma că abordarea este una exhaustivă, cuprinsul indicând capitole dedicate special injustiției de gen și barierelor legale în calea reformei. Această lucrare completează perspectiva oferită de Solitary de Terry Allen Kupers, adăugând o dimensiune narativă personală mult mai pronunțată și o analiză a 'injustiției de mediu' pe care volumul lui Kupers o tratează tangențial. De asemenea, dacă Hell Is a Very Small Place funcționează ca o antologie de mărturii, Ending Isolation merge mai departe, oferind un cadru strategic pentru advocacy și activism.
Efortul autorilor este de a demonstra că izolarea nu este doar o problemă de administrare a penitenciarelor, ci o încălcare sistemică a drepturilor omului. Prin corelarea datelor clinice despre trauma psihologică cu realitățile administrative, cartea devine un instrument indispensabil pentru înțelegerea mecanismelor de control social și a necesității unei reforme radicale în justiția penală.
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Specificații
ISBN-10: 0745351271
Pagini: 288
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.29 kg
Editura: PLUTO PRESS
Colecția Pluto Press
De ce să citești această carte
Recomandăm Ending Isolation oricărui cititor interesat de criminologie, drepturile omului sau sociologie juridică. Este o lectură esențială pentru a înțelege de ce izolarea este considerată o formă de tortură modernă. Veți câștiga o perspectivă informată asupra modului în care sistemul de justiție afectează sănătatea mintală și veți descoperi argumente juridice solide pentru reforma sistemului de detenție, fundamentate pe experiențe reale și expertiză medicală.
Despre autor
Christopher William Blackwell este un jurnalist premiat, în prezent încarcerat în statul Washington, a cărui muncă oferă o voce rară celor direct afectați de sistemul penal. Deborah Zalesne este profesor la CUNY School of Law, specializată în drept contractual și justiție socială. Echipa este completată de Kwaneta Harris, jurnalistă care a supraviețuit opt ani în izolare în Texas, și Terry Kupers, psihiatru și expert de renume mondial în efectele psihologice ale detenției solitare. Împreună, acești autori îmbină experiența directă cu autoritatea academică pentru a produce o critică informată a sistemului carceral.
Descriere scurtă
“Offers an indispensable tool to campaigns for abolition everywhere” - Juan E. Méndez, former UN Special Rapporteur on Torture
“Powerful…These excruciating accounts from prisoners across the country shocked even me as I read them from the madhouse of Sing Sing” - John J. Lennon, contributing editor at Esquire and author of The Tragedy of True Crime
The injustice and cruelty of the US carceral system find their barbaric apogee in the practice of solitary confinement. Once deemed a form of torture by the US Supreme Court, “the hole” is still wrongly used as a solution to prison overcrowding and violence. But locking someone in a cell the size of a parking space for months or years causes profound psychological harm. For Christopher Blackwell, it was a harrowing ordeal that changed his life forever. Ending Isolation weaves Chris’s vivid account with other stories from solitary confinement, alongside insights from legal and medical experts. Through these narratives and undeniable research, the book makes a powerful case for abolishing this cruel and unusual punishment.
Christopher Blackwell is an award-winning journalist currently incarcerated in Washington State. Deborah Zalesne is a law professor at CUNY School of Law. Kwaneta Harris is a journalist who survived eight years in solitary in Texas. Terry Kupers is a leading medical expert on the harms of solitary confinement.
Recenzii
Angela Y. Davis
'The use and abuse of solitary confinement has grown over the recent decades in many countries, most significantly in the United States. The recognition that prolonged or indefinite isolation, no matter its purpose, inflicts mental pain and suffering amounting to torture is, finally, providing impulse to advocacy and mobilization to outlaw this cruel practice. An indispensable tool to campaigns for abolition everywhere'
Juan E. Mendez, Professor of Human Rights in Residence, Washington College of Law at American University, and Former UN Special Rapporteur on Torture (2010-16)
'Prison journalists Christopher Blackwell and Kwaneta Harris team up with scholars to make a powerful case for ending the torture used in our prisons: solitary confinement. This oral history, which includes excruciating accounts from many prisoners across the country, even shocked me as I read it in the madhouse of Sing Sing. By revealing the real-life horror story of what’s happening in the American prison, Ending Isolation is an urgent call to do away with solitary confinement'
John J. Lennon, contributing editor at Esquire and author of The Tragedy of True Crime
'A vital, systematic dismantling of every possible argument one could use to justify solitary confinement'
Guardian
'Every day, hundreds of thousands of people are tortured in prisons and jails funded by U.S. taxpayers. Ending Isolation is a comprehensive accounting of the physical, psychological, and societal costs of solitary confinement — and an urgent call for change'
Jessica Schulberg, senior reporter at HuffPost
'It’s one thing to be aware, as most people are, of the existence of solitary confinement. But reading this book is a revelation, if a disturbing one. In the continuing debate over the legitimacy and efficacy of solitary confinement, Ending Isolation will be a powerful brief for its abolition'
Jeffrey Toobin, Legal Analyst and author of The Pardon
'Solitary confinement is torture. This innovative book, told across too many prison walls, demonstrates why it must end—and, by confronting solitary through solidarity, Ending Isolation begins to show us how'
Dan Berger, author of Stayed on Freedom: The Long Journey of Black Power Through One Family’s Journey
'Solitary confinement is one of the most pressing humanitarian crises of our time. By combining powerful firsthand accounts of solitary confinement with compelling evidence of its devastating harms, Blackwell and Zalesne have created both a highly readable primer on solitary and an urgent call to finally end this torturous practice'
Jean Casella, Director, Solitary Watch
'A searing indictment of solitary confinement, blending personal testimony, legal insight, and medical expertise to expose its devastating human toll. Urgent and unflinching, it dismantles harmful myths and calls for humane alternatives to this system of state-sanctioned torture'
Jessica Sandoval, National Director of Unlock the Box Campaign
'Blackwell and Zalesne mount a heartbreakingly compelling case against the use of solitary confinement. They paint a vivid portrait of its terrible effects on physical, mental, and emotional health and demand that we find alternatives to this torturous practice. This book combines Blackwell's hard-won knowledge from within prison walls and Zalesne's legal expertise, and it highlights many other voices of those most affected by this appalling--and appallingly common-- penal practice. Truly an eye-opening read, even for those who think they already know what solitary confinement is and does'
Carol S. Steiker, Professor, Harvard Law School
'A critical book to read to understand the harms and torture that occurs daily in American prisons when people are placed in solitary confinement. This book uniquely combines the authors’ personal experience with expert medical and legal knowledge'
Jules Lobel, Bessie McKee Professor of Law, University of Pittsburgh Law School
'As someone who spent years in solitary confinement, I know firsthand the psychological devastation of being locked in a cell for 23 hours a day. Ending Isolation brings the truth to light with piercing clarity—this is not rehabilitation, it’s state-sponsored psychological torture. What makes this book indispensable is its fusion of lived experience, legal scholarship, and medical expertise. At a time when political leaders are doubling down on fear-based punishment and supermax prisons are expanding globally, this book is more than a warning—it’s a moral call to action. It arms the reader with the knowledge—and the moral clarity—needed to dismantle one of the most brutal tools in the American penal system. We cannot claim to value justice while legislating cruelty'
Johnny Perez, Director, U.S. Prisons Program, National Religious Campaign Against Torture
'Chris Blackwell is a gifted writer who gives voice to those silenced and brutalized by the justice system. In this honest, unflinching book, Chris and his co-authors expose the cruelty and futility of solitary confinement. A searing indictment and urgent call to action'
Udi Ofer, John L. Weinberg Visiting Professor, Lecturer in Public and International Affairs, Princeton School of Public and International Affairs
Notă biografică
Deborah Zalesne is a Professor of Law at the City University of New York School of Law where she teaches Contract Law from a social justice perspective. With Christopher Blackwell, she co-founded Empowerment Avenue's Writers Development Program for aspiring incarcerated writers. She has published extensively in the areas of race and gender justice and is the author of two books and over forty scholarly articles for publications such as the Yale Journal of Law and Feminism and the Columbia Journal of Race and the Law.
Cuprins
1. Introduction
2. Buried Alive
3. A Brief History of Solitary Confinement in America
4. Who Gets Sent to the Hole
5. Cruel and Unusual Punishment: Stories of Torture
6. The Physical and Psychological Harms of Solitary
7. Mental Illness and Solitary Confinement
8. Juveniles in Solitary
9. Environmental Injustice and Its Effect on Solitary
10. Sexual Assault and Gender-Based Injustices in the Hole
12. After Solitary
13. The Legal Boundaries of Solitude
14. Reform, Advocacy, and Activism by Impacted People and the Community
15. Solitary by Any Other Name
16. The Case Against Solitary Confinement