Carceral Logics
Herausgeber: Gruen, Lori; Marceau, Justin
Carceral Logics
Herausgeber: Gruen, Lori; Marceau, Justin
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In this volume, Lori Gruen and Justin Marceau invite experts to examine connections between mass incarceration of humans and captive control of animals. Chapters explore how carceral responses to animal crime and carceral thinking about animal captivity can impact the lives and legal status of both humans and non-humans.
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In this volume, Lori Gruen and Justin Marceau invite experts to examine connections between mass incarceration of humans and captive control of animals. Chapters explore how carceral responses to animal crime and carceral thinking about animal captivity can impact the lives and legal status of both humans and non-humans.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 448
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. März 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 795g
- ISBN-13: 9781108843584
- ISBN-10: 1108843581
- Artikelnr.: 62846881
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 448
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. März 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 795g
- ISBN-13: 9781108843584
- ISBN-10: 1108843581
- Artikelnr.: 62846881
Introduction Lori Gruen and Justin Marceau; Part I. Carceral Thinking in
Animal Protection: Justifications and Repudiations: 1. Saved: the
historical roots of humane carceral logics in the United States Paula
Tarankow; 2. Criminal animal abuse: interconnectedness, and human morality
Richard L. Cupp, Jr; 3. Giving a voice to the voiceless: a prosecutor's
efforts to combat animal cruelty Ashley N. Beck; 4. Examining anticruelty
enhancements: historical context and policy advances Pamela D. Frasch; 5.
Carceral progressivism and animal victims Benjamin Levin; Part II. Animal
Law in Context: The Limits of Carceral Strategies: 6. Spectacular
immigration enforcement in hidden spaces aging and immigration enforcement
Jennifer M. Chacón; 7. Against a 'war on animal cruelty': lessons from the
war on drugs and mass incarceration Sam Kamin; 8. Criminalization as a
solution to abuse: a cautionary tale Tamara L. Kuennen; 9. Humanizing
animals, dehumanizing humans Aya Gruber; 10. Treating humans worse than
animals? Exposing a false solitary confinement narrative Delcianna Winders;
11. Carceral logics beyond incarceration Justin F. Marceau; Part III.
Implications of Carceral Logics and Carceral Spaces for Animals and for
Humans: 12. Incarcerating animals and egregious losses of freedoms Jessica
Pierce and Marc Bekoff; 13. Juvenile smokescreens: softening the harm of
zoos, aquaria and prisons through (human) children Maneesha Deckha; 14.
Bovine lives and the making of a nineteenth-century American carceral
archipelago Karen M. Morin; 15. Animals in prison: collateral damage and
commodities of 'rehabilitation' Kelly Struthers Montford; 16. Political
prisoners and the repression of animal liberation and intersectional
environmental justice movements David N.Pellow; Part IV. Challenging
Captivity and Changing Carceral Thinking: 17. Cause lawyering for the
caged: invisibility, moral suasion, and defranchisement in the prisoners'
rights and animal protection movements Alan K. Chen and Vikram David Amar;
18. Litigating animal capitivy: habeas corpus in the carceral state Jessica
Eisen; 19. 'True' imprisonment Douglas A. Kysa; 20. Imagining animal rights
as a civil rights movement Will Potter; 21. Abolition: thinking beyond
carceral logics Lori Gruen.
Animal Protection: Justifications and Repudiations: 1. Saved: the
historical roots of humane carceral logics in the United States Paula
Tarankow; 2. Criminal animal abuse: interconnectedness, and human morality
Richard L. Cupp, Jr; 3. Giving a voice to the voiceless: a prosecutor's
efforts to combat animal cruelty Ashley N. Beck; 4. Examining anticruelty
enhancements: historical context and policy advances Pamela D. Frasch; 5.
Carceral progressivism and animal victims Benjamin Levin; Part II. Animal
Law in Context: The Limits of Carceral Strategies: 6. Spectacular
immigration enforcement in hidden spaces aging and immigration enforcement
Jennifer M. Chacón; 7. Against a 'war on animal cruelty': lessons from the
war on drugs and mass incarceration Sam Kamin; 8. Criminalization as a
solution to abuse: a cautionary tale Tamara L. Kuennen; 9. Humanizing
animals, dehumanizing humans Aya Gruber; 10. Treating humans worse than
animals? Exposing a false solitary confinement narrative Delcianna Winders;
11. Carceral logics beyond incarceration Justin F. Marceau; Part III.
Implications of Carceral Logics and Carceral Spaces for Animals and for
Humans: 12. Incarcerating animals and egregious losses of freedoms Jessica
Pierce and Marc Bekoff; 13. Juvenile smokescreens: softening the harm of
zoos, aquaria and prisons through (human) children Maneesha Deckha; 14.
Bovine lives and the making of a nineteenth-century American carceral
archipelago Karen M. Morin; 15. Animals in prison: collateral damage and
commodities of 'rehabilitation' Kelly Struthers Montford; 16. Political
prisoners and the repression of animal liberation and intersectional
environmental justice movements David N.Pellow; Part IV. Challenging
Captivity and Changing Carceral Thinking: 17. Cause lawyering for the
caged: invisibility, moral suasion, and defranchisement in the prisoners'
rights and animal protection movements Alan K. Chen and Vikram David Amar;
18. Litigating animal capitivy: habeas corpus in the carceral state Jessica
Eisen; 19. 'True' imprisonment Douglas A. Kysa; 20. Imagining animal rights
as a civil rights movement Will Potter; 21. Abolition: thinking beyond
carceral logics Lori Gruen.
Introduction Lori Gruen and Justin Marceau; Part I. Carceral Thinking in
Animal Protection: Justifications and Repudiations: 1. Saved: the
historical roots of humane carceral logics in the United States Paula
Tarankow; 2. Criminal animal abuse: interconnectedness, and human morality
Richard L. Cupp, Jr; 3. Giving a voice to the voiceless: a prosecutor's
efforts to combat animal cruelty Ashley N. Beck; 4. Examining anticruelty
enhancements: historical context and policy advances Pamela D. Frasch; 5.
Carceral progressivism and animal victims Benjamin Levin; Part II. Animal
Law in Context: The Limits of Carceral Strategies: 6. Spectacular
immigration enforcement in hidden spaces aging and immigration enforcement
Jennifer M. Chacón; 7. Against a 'war on animal cruelty': lessons from the
war on drugs and mass incarceration Sam Kamin; 8. Criminalization as a
solution to abuse: a cautionary tale Tamara L. Kuennen; 9. Humanizing
animals, dehumanizing humans Aya Gruber; 10. Treating humans worse than
animals? Exposing a false solitary confinement narrative Delcianna Winders;
11. Carceral logics beyond incarceration Justin F. Marceau; Part III.
Implications of Carceral Logics and Carceral Spaces for Animals and for
Humans: 12. Incarcerating animals and egregious losses of freedoms Jessica
Pierce and Marc Bekoff; 13. Juvenile smokescreens: softening the harm of
zoos, aquaria and prisons through (human) children Maneesha Deckha; 14.
Bovine lives and the making of a nineteenth-century American carceral
archipelago Karen M. Morin; 15. Animals in prison: collateral damage and
commodities of 'rehabilitation' Kelly Struthers Montford; 16. Political
prisoners and the repression of animal liberation and intersectional
environmental justice movements David N.Pellow; Part IV. Challenging
Captivity and Changing Carceral Thinking: 17. Cause lawyering for the
caged: invisibility, moral suasion, and defranchisement in the prisoners'
rights and animal protection movements Alan K. Chen and Vikram David Amar;
18. Litigating animal capitivy: habeas corpus in the carceral state Jessica
Eisen; 19. 'True' imprisonment Douglas A. Kysa; 20. Imagining animal rights
as a civil rights movement Will Potter; 21. Abolition: thinking beyond
carceral logics Lori Gruen.
Animal Protection: Justifications and Repudiations: 1. Saved: the
historical roots of humane carceral logics in the United States Paula
Tarankow; 2. Criminal animal abuse: interconnectedness, and human morality
Richard L. Cupp, Jr; 3. Giving a voice to the voiceless: a prosecutor's
efforts to combat animal cruelty Ashley N. Beck; 4. Examining anticruelty
enhancements: historical context and policy advances Pamela D. Frasch; 5.
Carceral progressivism and animal victims Benjamin Levin; Part II. Animal
Law in Context: The Limits of Carceral Strategies: 6. Spectacular
immigration enforcement in hidden spaces aging and immigration enforcement
Jennifer M. Chacón; 7. Against a 'war on animal cruelty': lessons from the
war on drugs and mass incarceration Sam Kamin; 8. Criminalization as a
solution to abuse: a cautionary tale Tamara L. Kuennen; 9. Humanizing
animals, dehumanizing humans Aya Gruber; 10. Treating humans worse than
animals? Exposing a false solitary confinement narrative Delcianna Winders;
11. Carceral logics beyond incarceration Justin F. Marceau; Part III.
Implications of Carceral Logics and Carceral Spaces for Animals and for
Humans: 12. Incarcerating animals and egregious losses of freedoms Jessica
Pierce and Marc Bekoff; 13. Juvenile smokescreens: softening the harm of
zoos, aquaria and prisons through (human) children Maneesha Deckha; 14.
Bovine lives and the making of a nineteenth-century American carceral
archipelago Karen M. Morin; 15. Animals in prison: collateral damage and
commodities of 'rehabilitation' Kelly Struthers Montford; 16. Political
prisoners and the repression of animal liberation and intersectional
environmental justice movements David N.Pellow; Part IV. Challenging
Captivity and Changing Carceral Thinking: 17. Cause lawyering for the
caged: invisibility, moral suasion, and defranchisement in the prisoners'
rights and animal protection movements Alan K. Chen and Vikram David Amar;
18. Litigating animal capitivy: habeas corpus in the carceral state Jessica
Eisen; 19. 'True' imprisonment Douglas A. Kysa; 20. Imagining animal rights
as a civil rights movement Will Potter; 21. Abolition: thinking beyond
carceral logics Lori Gruen.