Detention camp: Manila
In: Bulletin of concerned Asian scholars, Band 6, Heft 4, S. 39-42
134 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Bulletin of concerned Asian scholars, Band 6, Heft 4, S. 39-42
In: American journal of international law: AJIL, Band 112, Heft 2, S. 326-329
ISSN: 2161-7953
On January 30, 2018, President Trump signed Executive Order 13,823, directing officials to keep the Guantánamo Bay detention camp open and permitting additional detainees to be transported to the facility. In announcing his decision during the State of the Union address to Congress, Trump stated, "I am asking Congress to ensure that, in the fight against ISIS and Al Qaida, we continue to have all necessary power to detain terrorists … . And in many cases, for them, it will now be Guantánamo Bay." Section 2 of the order provides:
(a)Section 3 of Executive Order 13492 of January 22, 2009 …, ordering the closure of detention facilities at U.S. Naval Station Guantánamo Bay, is hereby revoked.(b)Detention operations at U.S. Naval Station Guantánamo Bay shall continue to be conducted consistent with all applicable United States and international law, including the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005.(c)In addition, the United States may transport additional detainees to U.S. Naval Station Guantánamo Bay when lawful and necessary to protect the Nation.
In: American Journal of International Law, Band 102, Heft 4, S. 875
In: American Journal of International Law, Band 102, Heft 3, S. 653
In: American journal of international law: AJIL, Band 102, Heft 3, S. 653-657
ISSN: 2161-7953
In: American journal of international law: AJIL, Band 102, Heft 4, S. 875-879
ISSN: 2161-7953
In: American journal of international law: AJIL, Band 104, Heft 1, S. 115-116
ISSN: 2161-7953
In: American journal of international law: AJIL, Band 102, Heft 1, S. 181-183
ISSN: 2161-7953
In: American journal of international law: AJIL, Band 101, Heft 2, S. 487-490
ISSN: 2161-7953
In: Shima: The International Journal of Research into Island Cultures, Band 6, Heft 2
SSRN
In: American journal of international law: AJIL, Band 103, Heft 4, S. 758-760
ISSN: 2161-7953
In: International journal of intelligence and counterintelligence, Band 18, Heft 3, S. 538-548
ISSN: 1521-0561
In: American journal of international law: AJIL, Band 103, Heft 3, S. 575-579
ISSN: 2161-7953
In: American journal of international law: AJIL, Band 100, Heft 4, S. 936-938
ISSN: 2161-7953
In: Incarceration: an international journal of imprisonment, detention and coercive confinement, Band 3, Heft 1, S. 263266632210845
ISSN: 2632-6663
Migration-related detention, the administrative incarceration of people lacking legal authorisation to remain, has become a standardised technique used by states to violently regulate and discipline undesired mobility. As carceral junctions, migration detention camps serve to identify, confine, symbolically punish and expel people deemed 'out of place' in the national order of things. As bordering mechanisms, they are techniques of sorting and controlling populations, and sites where we can observe the enforcement of state racism. These processes of racialisation and expulsion operate corporally and affectively. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork with prison officers working inside Denmark's migration-related detention camp, and engaging with the literature on race, emotion and border criminology, the article traces the role of racial affect in forging the identities of people interacting inside the camp. It demonstrates how prison officers' racialised suspicion, compromised compassion, and passionate nationalism partake in making incarcerated migrants into expellable subjects, and in ordering them in accordance with matrices of racial differentiation. The officers' emotions, I argue, should be understood as part of the camp's infrastructure, and productive for the border regime.