With recourse to the poetry of Guantanamo’s detainees, this article describes the extra-legal legality that typifies the conception and activities of post-9/11 terror-suspect prison camps. It argues that the state of exception, which has become integral in the war on terror, is not a product of necessity, but a reflection of the interplay between biopolitics, biopower, and Orientalism in the post-9/11 era. By considering the ways in which Guantanamo detainees employ poetry to plead their innocence and exhibit their suffering body as political subjects and objects, this article pays careful attention to the aesthetics of Guantanamo poetry and how it reveals the poets’ individual humanity against the fabric of the brutality and illegality pac...
In Rasul v. Bush, the Supreme Court held that U.S. district courts have jurisdiction to consider cha...
This article takes violence in the law seriously, scrutinizing three sites engaged in violent subjec...
Prison memoirs often consider the author’s life of crime prior to incarceration and reflect on the b...
Guantanamo Bay is almost unanimously seen as an exceptional space inhabited by 'bare life'. This art...
The idea of the Guantánamo detainee as a Muselmann, the lowest order of concentration camp inmates, ...
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">Some miles off in the distance on a swelteringly hot and sunny day, a...
In situations of war or emergency, as in the current 'war on terrorism', international humanitarian ...
Some miles off in the distance on a swelteringly hot and sunny day, as the waves of the Gulf of Mexi...
Some miles off in the distance on a swelteringly hot and sunny day, as the waves of the Gulf of Mexi...
For more than one hundred years, immigration law has stood on the doctrinal foundation that it is ci...
Immigration law is central to justifications for why five men remain detained indefinitely at Guanta...
The principle aim of my work titled "Violations of human rights within the American War on Terror: A...
This volume presents a number of controversial cases of enforced medical treatment from around the g...
This article posits a theoretical framework within which to analyze various aspects of post-Septem...
Abstract: The post 9/11 move by democracies to enact security measures which challenge both domestic...
In Rasul v. Bush, the Supreme Court held that U.S. district courts have jurisdiction to consider cha...
This article takes violence in the law seriously, scrutinizing three sites engaged in violent subjec...
Prison memoirs often consider the author’s life of crime prior to incarceration and reflect on the b...
Guantanamo Bay is almost unanimously seen as an exceptional space inhabited by 'bare life'. This art...
The idea of the Guantánamo detainee as a Muselmann, the lowest order of concentration camp inmates, ...
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">Some miles off in the distance on a swelteringly hot and sunny day, a...
In situations of war or emergency, as in the current 'war on terrorism', international humanitarian ...
Some miles off in the distance on a swelteringly hot and sunny day, as the waves of the Gulf of Mexi...
Some miles off in the distance on a swelteringly hot and sunny day, as the waves of the Gulf of Mexi...
For more than one hundred years, immigration law has stood on the doctrinal foundation that it is ci...
Immigration law is central to justifications for why five men remain detained indefinitely at Guanta...
The principle aim of my work titled "Violations of human rights within the American War on Terror: A...
This volume presents a number of controversial cases of enforced medical treatment from around the g...
This article posits a theoretical framework within which to analyze various aspects of post-Septem...
Abstract: The post 9/11 move by democracies to enact security measures which challenge both domestic...
In Rasul v. Bush, the Supreme Court held that U.S. district courts have jurisdiction to consider cha...
This article takes violence in the law seriously, scrutinizing three sites engaged in violent subjec...
Prison memoirs often consider the author’s life of crime prior to incarceration and reflect on the b...