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Incarceration Nations: A Journey to Justice in Prisons Around the World Hardcover – February 9, 2016

4.6 out of 5 stars 17 customer reviews

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“[Baz Dreisinger’s] maternal turmoil when her students are denied parole, rearrested, shot, deprived of opportunity or go missing, as well as her teacherly pride in their successes, is the genuine heart of [this] story…The hopeful note on which this book ends… seems in no small part due to the wish that even our harsh system of punishment can explore connections to the world in ways that can push us for the better.” The New York Times Book Review

“Norway might as well be another galaxy, considering the description offered in Baz Dreisinger’s intriguing new book, Incarceration Nations...The great gift of Incarceration Nations is that, by introducing a wide range of approaches to crime, punishment and questions of justice in diverse countries — Rwanda, South Africa, Brazil, Jamaica, Uganda, Singapore, Australia and Norway — it forces us to face the reality that American-style punishment has been chosen. It is not normal, natural or inevitable…To be clear, this is not a typical criminal justice reform book stocked with data, policy analyses and prescriptions for change. Nor is it written by a criminal justice expert…The heart and soul of this book are the stories of the people [Dreisinger] encounters along the way.”The Washington Post

"Dreisinger's refusal to offer sweeping generalizations or simple directives in the name of restorative justice is bold...[Incarceration Nations is] an eye-opening, damning indictment of the American prison system and the way its sins reverberate around the globe." —Kirkus Reviews

"Powerful...Dreisinger carries out an incisive inquiry into the standards for a just society’s humane treatment of its prisoners." —Publishers Weekly

"[Baz Dreisinger] spent two years visiting prisons around the world--Incarceration Nations is the astounding culmination of her undertaking. Armed with compassion and a vast knowledge of incarceration history, Dreisinger explores facilities from Rwanda to Australia…[and her] zeal to change the penal system is contagious…Incarceration Nations is crucial reading for the world's largest jailer (United States) and the rest of the global population." —Shelf Awareness

“[Baz Dreisinger] isn’t coy about her idea of the greater good: She marches to the tune of Angela Davis’s crusade for the abolishment of prison…The work Dreisinger does is vital, occasionally lifesaving.” Newsday

“[Dreisinger’s] commitment is admirable.” —Financial Times

“Given the current national attention surrounding mass incarceration, from the wide popularity of Michelle Alexander’s book The New Jim Crow, to Kendrick Lamar’s explosive political performance at the Grammys, there’s perhaps no better time for Americans to reflect on their contemporary prison system and its origins. Stepping into the conversation with her new book, Incarceration Nations, author and activist Baz Dreisenger takes the debate the a step further, analyzing the philosophies and legislation behind the various prison and judicial systems across the world…Dreisinger…effectively puts the popular zeitgeist of criminal justice under the microscope, guiding the reader through a deep analysis of the prison system’s history and motives, as well as through popular conceptions of punishment… Incarceration Nations ultimately does what any good manifesto should do: ask its readers to look outside the comfort zone of their long-held beliefs. While some readers may be more swayed by Dreisinger’s calls for prison reform than her views on forgiveness, such views are worthwhile ideals to consider as the people of the world seek to reevaluate the state of their prisons and prisoners.” —PopMatters

"Incarceration Nations is a thoughtful, well-written and distressing look at the problems we face in our nation and in the world. Dreisinger does not claim to have the answers to our problems, but she has reminded us that doing nothing is an unacceptable alternative."Bookreporter

“In a world where mass incarceration has reached levels of near insanity, Dresinger’s stirring work offers new ideas in an area that seems to be starving for them. This book is a more than a cry for massive overhaul in prison reform, it gives voice to the silent millions of men and women who live behind prison walls on every continent, and whose suffering is a reflection of our own inhumanity and fear. Forgiveness, payback, restoration, these are the words peppered throughout this well-written work of redemption and identity.  This book is living proof that mass incarceration is a virus that infects us all.” —James McBride, author of The Color of Water andThe Good Lord Bird
 
Incarceration Nations sheds important light on the ways that justice systems around the world are similar, as well as their unique aspects. It uncovers both their most horrifying and hopeful parts. Offering historical investigation and myriad facts, and complementing that research with personal experiences and stories of human beings, the book captures the reader into more inquiry about this vast and critical subject. This is a great read for both students of criminal justice, as well as citizens of the world.” —Debbie Mukamal, Executive Director, Stanford Criminal Justice Center,  Stanford Law School
 
“Despite tacit awareness that the prison crisis is global and that the global prison’s modern form is US-generated, work on incarceration is almost always limited by national context.  The work of gaining access and trust, of studying multiple intricate systems and national contexts, of traveling long distances and juggling multiple exchanges—while achieving depth of focus—is surely too great for one scholar.  Or so it would seem.  Dreisinger’s Incarceration Nations, which documents prisons on four continents, appears to do the impossible.  It's a vital work—part memoir, part scholarly excavation—that manages to inspire even as it chronicles some of the world’s most horrific places.  Dreisinger’s long history of work with the currently and formerly incarcerated is the perfect background and material for weaving an account that asks all of the right questions, setting us on a path while acknowledging that answers are really just the ground for asking anew.” —Gina Dent, Associate Professor and Chair, Feminist Studies, UC Santa Cruz

"In Incarceration Nations, Baz Dreisinger makes a truly important contribution to the discussion of one of America's most notorious exports—prisons.  Observing the American penal landscape through the lens of prisons in nine diverse countries, Dreisinger is able to feel sympathy for both victims and prisoners while showing that nations from Uganda to South Africa to Australia expect more than just punishment and warehousing out of their corrections systems.  As deplorable as the conditions in some of those prisons are, America can learn a lot from Incarceration Nations about how to tackle our own mass incarceration dilemma."  —Vincent Schiraldi, Senior Advisor, NYC Mayor's Office of Criminal Justice

Incarceration Nations is required reading for anyone concerned about the severity of punishment in America, and that should be all of us. Baz Dreisinger traces our legacy of mass incarceration around the globe. She does it with honesty, courage, and humility over the size of the problem, and yet she finds magical possibilities everywhere she goes when the imprisoned are treated as real persons. There are answers. This book says we can find them.” —Robert A. Ferguson, George Edward Woodberry Professor of Law, Literature, and Criticism, Columbia University

About the Author

Baz Dreisinger is an Associate Professor in the English Department at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York, and the founder and Academic Director of the Prison-to-College Pipeline program (P2CP), which offers credit-bearing college courses and reentry planning to incarcerated men. She is also a reporter on popular culture, the Caribbean, world music, and race-related issues for the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Wall Street Journal, and NPR, among others, and a co-producer and co-writer of the documentaries Black & Blue: Legends of the Hip-Hop Cop and Rhyme & Punishment. She is the author of Near Black: White to Black Passing in American Culture (2008).
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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Other Press (February 9, 2016)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 159051727X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1590517277
  • Product Dimensions: 6.3 x 1 x 9.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #11,435 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: Hardcover
The American criminal justice system is undergoing a reevaluation at many levels. In recent years, drug prosecutions, imposition of the death penalty, wrongful convictions and the militarization of our police have all been placed under the microscope of public discontent. Inevitably these discussions lead to one fact that cannot be avoided: the realization that America imprisons more of its citizens than any other nation in the world.

Despite being only five percent of the world’s population, America has nearly 25 percent of the world’s adult prisoners. More than half of those inmates are serving lengthy terms for the sale of drugs. In California alone, 3,700 inmates who never committed a violent crime are serving sentences of 25 years to life. After decades of advocating for longer prison sentences, Americans have come to the realization that they are not the answer. At the same time, there are no easy solutions to solving the problems created by the modern prison system.

Professor Baz Dreisinger teaches in the English department at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. She is the founder and Academic Director of the Prison-to-College-Pipeline, which offers college courses and reentry programs to incarcerated men throughout New York State and seeks to increase access to higher education for individuals during and after incarceration. In INCARCERATION NATIONS, Dreisinger undertook a journey to the prison communities of nine countries around the world. Her goal was to determine how prisons are functioning. She wanted to discover what might make prisons successful, as well as reflect on the injustice and inhumanity that too often seems to be the common thread of incarceration regardless of national origin.
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Format: Hardcover Vine Customer Review of Free Product ( What's this? )
This is a really important book in it's breadth and Dreisinger has some remarkable thoughts and experiences. For the most part I found the information she shared staggering and disturbing, such as the statistic that more African Americans are in the correctional system than were enslaved in 1850. I appreciate that she traveled the world looking at all different types of prison systems and tends to identify the pros and cons of each system with relative objectivity. It's not a "wow, Norway is a utopia" kind of book. She definitely sees the problems with creating a good system and realizes when a show is being put on for her.

A few times I thought that her personal beliefs detracted from the book - e.g. when she is thankful to hear that Obama is still president (which had nothing to do with what she was writing about) or the time that she scoffs at Jesus being a drug relapse plan. I wish she'd left some of those things out because they were superfluous and I found her scoffing to be personally offensive.

She attempts to make it a narrative of her sabbatical but half of the book was written when she wasn't on sabbatical. The timeline gets a little lost in the writing and almost seems to interrupt it. I think separate chapters would have actually been more cohesive than trying to impose a timeline on to her experiences.

I also found it a little odd regarding how much time she actually spend in any one prison. It's a long book for the few days she spent in each place. But given that, she did an incredible job writing a meaty book about prisons in general.

Overall I thought her approach was really balanced and she's an extremely skilled writer which I appreciated.
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Disclaimer: I am not an expert on the prison system. This book is my first encounter with studies related to prisons.
When I started reading this book, I was wary, but I soon felt more at ease. While I don’t agree with everything Baz writes, much of it makes sense and has helped me open my mind about how we can make society safer and better. Indeed, reading “Incarceration Nations” often felt like a stretching session for my brain! While the subject matter is naturally difficult, Baz’s tone is friendly and accessible; her explanations are clear. Though she is clearly passionate about her work, she doesn’t try to shove her beliefs or ideas down the reader’s throat – there is sometimes a feeling of sadness, of exhaustion, but rarely of anger. She doesn’t take a “holier-than-thou” stance or try to make readers feel bad. Rather, she treats readers almost as confidantes as she visits prisons around the world, focusing particularly on prisons that are implementing new programs and/or taking on new approaches to incarceration. Though the focus is on the prisoners and the people trying to help them, Baz also writes about her personal journey and feelings. Rather than feeling like an intrusion, Baz’s experiences as she sees some of the best and worst prisons in the world – and questions, is there ever a good prison? – help flesh out the story for readers thousands of mile away. Though not a light read by any means, “Incarceration Nations” feels like a serious conversation with a good friend – difficult at times but essential. Highly recommended.
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“Incarceration Nations” by Baz Dreisinger speaks to me powerfully, because for a number of years, I have been growing increasingly concerned about the unbelievable problem of the incredible expansion of the prison population in the United States. This concern developed after my husband began corresponding with a young man whom he met during his public-transit commute to work in the early 1980’s. This individual was at that point released on parole, and was living in a “halfway house”. Sometime thereafter, unfortunately, a parole violation occurred, and the man was returned to a “correctional institution”. Due to fairly reasonable visitation circumstances, the connection was maintained with regularity until a subsequent release occurred. However, the “rules” became ever more draconian, and the friend was soon returned to custody yet again; in the meantime, the term “correctional institution” was dropped by our state, and all such places are now called prisons, with ever fewer opportunities for rehabilitation or education.

Meanwhile, my husband’s personal contact with one inmate began to expand to a full-scale ministry as his friend introduced him to more potential pen-pals, and our understanding of the unbelievable injustices of the prison system increased. I was quite familiar with the statistics Dreisinger cites at the beginning of this deeply meaningful documentary; what makes it so incredibly valuable, however, is the personal experiences the author shares. She is a creative writing teacher, and has made working with the Prison-to-College Pipeline program at John Jay College of Criminal Justice her true vocation. Hence it is not surprising that the narrative style of her work is nothing short of brilliant.
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