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Built around the experiences of older prisoners, Punished for Aging
looks at the challenges individuals face in Canadian penitentiaries
and their struggles for justice. Through firsthand accounts and
quantitative data drawn from extensive interviews, this book brings
forward the experiences of federally incarcerated people living
their "golden years" behind bars. These experiences show the
limited ability of the system to respond to heightened needs, while
also raising questions about how international and national laws
and policies are applied, and why they fail to ensure the safety
and well-being of incarcerated individuals. In so doing, Adelina
Iftene explores the shortcomings of institutional processes,
prison-monitoring mechanisms, and legal remedies available in
courts and tribunals, which leave prisoners vulnerable to rights
abuses. Some of the problems addressed in this book are not new;
however, the demographic shift and the increase in people dying in
prisons after long, inadequately addressed illnesses, with few
release options, adds a renewed sense of urgency to reform. Working
from the interview data, contextualized by participants' lived
experiences, and building on previous work, Iftene seeks solutions
for such reform, which would constitute a significant step forward
not only in protecting older prisoners, but in consolidating the
status of incarcerated individuals as holders of substantive
rights.
Built around the experiences of older prisoners, Punished for Aging
looks at the challenges individuals face in Canadian penitentiaries
and their struggles for justice. Through firsthand accounts and
quantitative data drawn from extensive interviews, this book brings
forward the experiences of federally incarcerated people living
their "golden years" behind bars. These experiences show the
limited ability of the system to respond to heightened needs, while
also raising questions about how international and national laws
and policies are applied, and why they fail to ensure the safety
and well-being of incarcerated individuals. In so doing, Adelina
Iftene explores the shortcomings of institutional processes,
prison-monitoring mechanisms, and legal remedies available in
courts and tribunals, which leave prisoners vulnerable to rights
abuses. Some of the problems addressed in this book are not new;
however, the demographic shift and the increase in people dying in
prisons after long, inadequately addressed illnesses, with few
release options, adds a renewed sense of urgency to reform. Working
from the interview data, contextualized by participants' lived
experiences, and building on previous work, Iftene seeks solutions
for such reform, which would constitute a significant step forward
not only in protecting older prisoners, but in consolidating the
status of incarcerated individuals as holders of substantive
rights.
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