Australia and Nuclear Weapons: The Case for a non-Nuclear Region in South East Asia, The Administration of the White Australia Policy and Profile of Australia
In: International affairs, Band 44, Heft 2, S. 390-391
ISSN: 1468-2346
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In: International affairs, Band 44, Heft 2, S. 390-391
ISSN: 1468-2346
In: International affairs, Band 44, Heft 1, S. 161-162
ISSN: 1468-2346
In: International affairs, Band 43, Heft 3, S. 606-607
ISSN: 1468-2346
In: Public opinion quarterly: journal of the American Association for Public Opinion Research, Band 2, S. 287-294
ISSN: 0033-362X
In: Journal of the Royal United Service Institution, Band 53, Heft 380, S. 1342-1350
ISSN: 1744-0378
In: Journal of the Royal United Service Institution, Band 53, Heft 379, S. 1202-1208
ISSN: 1744-0378
In: Journal of the Royal United Service Institution, Band 53, Heft 378, S. 1066-1076
ISSN: 1744-0378
In: Journal of the Royal United Service Institution, Band 38, Heft 197, S. 747-752
ISSN: 1744-0378
In: Journal of the Royal United Service Institution, Band 32, Heft 144, S. 677-678
ISSN: 1744-0378
In: Journal of the Royal United Service Institution, Band 31, Heft 142, S. 1021-1023
ISSN: 1744-0378
In: Journal of the Royal United Service Institution, Band 28, Heft 125, S. 569-573
ISSN: 1744-0378
In: Journal of the Royal United Service Institution, Band 26, Heft 114, S. 180-180
ISSN: 1744-0378
In: Journal of the Royal United Service Institution, Band 25, Heft 112, S. 712-716
ISSN: 1744-0378
In: Journal of the Royal United Service Institution, Band 30, Heft 135, S. 789-794
ISSN: 1744-0378
In: Punishment & society
ISSN: 1741-3095
Since the eruption of the COVID-19 pandemic, U.S. correctional facilities have reported more than half a million positive cases and nearly 3000 deaths. The carceral regime's unconscionable response to COVID-19 has been accepted as a mere "failure" by observers. We question this reading given the dispossessing purpose of carceral punishment, instead reframing prisons as necropolitical death-worlds that weaponize crisis to advance their repressive capacities. We draw from 132 texts authored by 68 incarcerated witnesses and published by the American Prison Writing Archive to assess how incarcerated individuals experience and interpret both the COVID-19 pandemic and the mitigation efforts enacted by prison administrations. Rather than prisons struggling, sincerely, to slow the spread of COVID-19, witnesses call attention to how prisons constrict and evolve punishment under the guise of care. Sampled writings detail alarming changes, including the excessive application of already harmful practices like solitary confinement. Our findings speak to the "inside," lived implications of disaster-response by death-worlds, where the necropolitical order practices and perfects its violence with little external protest. Scholars of carceral punishment should more deliberately consider the impact of crises like the pandemic, as it is certainly not the last disaster that the prison order will appropriate.