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Zusatztext This book is very informative and readable.... [For] corrections administrators! prison scholars! and students—both undergraduate and graduate. Informationen zum Autor Terry Allen Kupers is an award-winning psychiatrist and Professor Emeritus at The Wright Institute Graduate School of Psychology. As one of the nation’s foremost experts on the mental health effects of solitary confinement, he has testified in over two dozen class action lawsuits about jail and prison conditions, the quality of mental health care “inside” and the effects of sexual abuse behind bars. He is a frequent consultant to the ACLU’s National Prison Project and Human Rights Watch and the author of Prison Madness . Klappentext “Terry Kupers’s sustained focus on psychiatry and social justice has helped us to understand the dangerous symbiotic relationship between the failures of the public mental health system and the growth of the prison industrial complex. In Solitary , Kupers exposes the devastating consequences of solitary confinement and offers a valuable analysis of the racism and criminalization of mental illness that undergird it. An exceptionally well-researched account and a compelling call to action.”—Angela Y. Davis, Distinguished Professor Emerita, University of California, Santa Cruz “I had the good fortune to meet with Dr. Kupers shortly after my release from thirty-one years in prison, twenty-nine of them in solitary confinement at Louisiana State Prison in Angola. The depth of his understanding of the experience of solitary confinement and his compassion and wisdom were a welcome relief and comfort at this transitional time for me. This book accurately captures the moral depravity of this particular form of incarceration that has sadly burgeoned throughout the country in the last decades. Thanks to work like that of Dr. Kupers, it is possible that we may see an end to this brand of torture.”—Robert Hillary King, member of the Angola Three “This is one of those practices that many of us are now saying, what were we possibly thinking? The author opens a door for the reader that had previously been closed twenty-three hours a day, seven days a week.”—Rick Raemisch, Executive Director, Colorado Department of Corrections “Terry Kupers is a genuine hero in the fight to bring an end to the torture of solitary confinement. His work has given him a nearly unparalleled understanding of how solitary confinement operates on the ground and how it destroys the minds and wrecks the lives of those condemned to live in concrete boxes for years or even decades. His book is an impassioned, informed, down-to-earth, and highly readable account of all he has learned over the years, full of the real stories of people in solitary, insights of other experts, and concrete ideas for how prison officials, advocates, and mental health professionals can work together to end this human rights crisis in our midst.”—James Ridgeway, investigative journalist, director of Solitary Watch, and coeditor of Hell Is a Very Small Place: Voices from Solitary Confinement “Dr. Kupers gives us a front row seat to America’s tragic experiment in mass incarceration and one of its most devastating, cruel, and painful practices: solitary confinement. Kupers’s unflinching insight into the hidden world of prisons exposes America at its darkest, but at the same time offers concrete solutions and hope for a safer, more effective, and humane criminal justice system.”—Amy Fettig, Deputy Director, American Civil Liberties Union National Prison Project “Terry Kupers’s wisdom, humanism, and generosity have helped advocates and litigators across the United States—not to mention countless prisoners—seeking to curb solitary confinement. His commitment to the well-being and dignity of every person behind bars has shaped his ...