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Arendt, Agamben and the Issue of Hyper-Legality - In Between the Prisoner-Stateless Nexus (Paperback)
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Arendt, Agamben and the Issue of Hyper-Legality - In Between the Prisoner-Stateless Nexus (Paperback)
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In the Origins of Totalitarianism, Hannah Arendt famously argued
that the stateless were so rightless, that it was better to be a
criminal who at least had some rights and protections. In this
book, Kathleen R. Arnold examines Arendt's comparison in the
context of post-1996 U.S. criminal and immigration policies,
arguing that the criminal-stateless binary is significant to
contemporary politics and yet flawed. A key distinction made today
is that immigrant detention is not imprisonment because it is a
civil system. In turn, prisoners are still citizens in some
respects but have relatively few rights since the legal
underpinnings of "cruel and unusual" have shifted in recent times.
The two systems - immigrant detention and the prison system - are
also concretely related as they often house both populations and
utilize the same techniques (such as administrative segregation).
Arnold compellingly argues that prisoners are essentially made into
foreigners in these spaces, while immigrants in detention are cast
as outlaws. Examining legal theory, political theory and discussing
specific cases to illustrate her claims, Arendt, Agamben and the
Issue of Hyper-Legality operates on three levels to expose the
degree to which prisoners' rights have been suspended and how
immigrant policy and detention cast foreigners as inherently
criminal. Less talked about, the government in turn expands
sovereign, discretionary power and secrecy at the expense of
openness, transparency and democratic community. This book will be
of interest to scholars and students of contemporary political
theory, philosophy and law, immigration, and incarceration.
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