DeeDee Halleck on Mon, 20 Jul 1998 16:42:34 +0200 (MET DST) |
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<nettime> The Prison Activist List and other Net Projects |
Info about the Prison Activist List and other Internet Projects www.igc.org/prisons We are preparing a big thing this september with a streaming audio if not also video of the big conference on prisons which is organized by Angela Davis. We will also have a live teleconference from the San Francisco jail. (DeeDee) ------- Basic Information about Critical Resistance Beyond the Prison Industrial Complex A National Conference and Strategy Session September 25-27, 1998 University of California at Berkeley http://www.prisonactivist.org/critical/about_crit.html Almost two million people are currently locked up in U.S. prisons and jails, the majority of whom are people of color. Since 1980 the population of prisoners has tripled and it is expected to double again by 2005. While imprisoned populations are overwhelmingly male, the number of women prisoners is increasing at an even greater rate than men. Between 1990 and 1995, 213 new federal and state prison facilities were constructed, representing a 41 percent increase in prison capacity. The growing reliance on imprisonment as a solution to systemic social problems, combined with mounting corporate interests in an expanding punishment industry, has led to the emergence of a late-twentieth century prison industrial complex. As politicians, the mass media, and conservative organizations represent crime as the most serious problem of our time, even though crime rates have been relatively stable since the 1970s, the public responds with fear and with acquiescence to the exponential expansion of the penal system. This prison industrial complex, which includes private and super maximum prisons, not only violates the civil and human rights of incarcerated men and women, but poses grave threats to the very future of democracy in our country and throughout the world. We call upon activists, advocates, scholars, policy makers and former prisoners to join us in a national conference and strategy session, Critical Resistance: Beyond the Prison Industrial Complex, which will take place at the University of California, Berkeley, September 25 - 27, 1998. For more information: Critical Resistance PO Box 339 Berkeley CA 94701 email: critresist@aol.com phone: (510) 643-2094 fax: (510) 845-8816 ----- Maximum Security Democracy: a poster series from the resistant strains working group http://www.prisonactivist.org/resistant-strains/ Although the title Maximum Security Democracy is somewhat overarching, this project began with a fairly specific intent: to focus on the US prison industry and to highlight some of the struggles of those opposing it with a series of artists' posters designed for a variety of uses. The series serves to foreground some of the issues central to the construction of crime and punishment at a time when these issues are deliberately dismissed in the frenzied expansion of the criminal justice system. The poste rs also elaborate a definition of maximum security democracy, a structure of systems which maintain elaborate security (physical, financial, political, etc.) for some through the repression, both direct and subtle, of others. While there are obvious shortcomings and omissions in the series (i.e., no work from prisoner artists, no work about control units, medical neglect, HIV, corrections officers violence, visitation rights, the death penalty, alternatives to incarceration, treating youths as adults, and so on), we plan to continue with this work in different formats, expanding the range of concerns to further explore the prison-industrial complex and, more importantly, to focus on the work of people fighting it. Part of our intent is to produce materials that are useful to activists, and also in some way about resistance. As we continue, then, we encourage more activists to become involved in the preliminary discussions and in directly collaborating with artists. This involvement will contribute to decisions about both form and content, making our projects more effective in political context. But at the same time, these works are not for activists only. We are interested in producing critical, political art that is accessible to anyone, and that examines issues without resorting to oversimplification. We want to put out works that are sharp and funny and engaging and politically challenging, and avoid those which once again combine a slogan with an image from the lefty stockpile (the clenched fist, the dove, the stripes of a flag turned into prison bars, people at a rally, etc.). These posters, the third project of resistant strains, are another step in this direction. We hope the images and words, if not explicitly about resistances to maximum security democracy, encourage, support, and contribute to these resistances. -- D. Thorne for resistant strains ---------- http://www.prisonactivist.org/pubs/polit-pamph-index.html Political Pamphlets Available from PARC These are the titles available online: -The Social Functions of the Prisons in the United States: Bettina Aptheker: If They Come in the Morning (edited by Angela Davis) 12/71 -The Prison Industrial Complex and the Global Economy by Linda Evans and Eve Goldberg -The Labor of Doing Time, by Julie Browne. (prison labor and chain gangs) -Gardens of the Law: the Role of Prisons in Capitalist Society, by Joel Olson. -The New Plantation, by political prisoner Bill Dunne. -UPDATE: California's expanding prison-industrial complex, by PARC. -Changing the Rules: Prison Officials and Legislators Mount an All-Out War Against Prisoners' Right to Legal Access, by PARC. ------- An example from the list: >From owner-prisonact-list@igc.org Sun Jul 19 22:14:21 1998 Date: Sun, 19 Jul 1998 23:02:46 -0500 From: Beverly George <ahobbit@flash.net> Subject: THE CHILDREN'S QUILT To: patrick@mediadinamics.com (PATRICK Mailing List) Organization: Prison Activist Resource Center >THE CHILDREN'S QUILT......THE CHILDREN'S VOICE........ > >http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Ridge/8616/quiltproject.html > > BEVERLY GEORGE *PRISON REFORM COLUMNIST FOR THE DALLAS TIMES* OPERATIONS DIRECTOR FOR P.L.A.N. (Positive Living Advocacy Network) P.O. Box 916 Magnolia, Texas 77353-0916 281-356-1579 phone & fax 281-473-6501 voice mail http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Ridge/8616/texasprisonabuse.html http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Ridge/8616/thetexascurepage.html http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Ridge/8616/amanameasureatruth.html http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Ridge/8616/quiltproject.html ACTIVIST FOR: PRISON REFORM HUMAN RIGHTS CHILDREN'S RIGHTS MENTAL HEALTH PRISONER'S RIGHTS +-+ sent by the Prison Activist List <prisonact-list@igc.org> +-+ See the Prison Issues Desk webpage at <http://www.igc.org/prisons>. 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