Dylan Rodríguez,
"'I Would Wish Death on You...' Race, Gender, and Immigration in the Globality of the U.S. Prison Regime"
(page 7 of 9)
The last dozen years have yielded an almost astronomical growth in
the operating capacity, jurisdictional expansion, and institutional
geography of U.S. immigration prisons, and recent years have brought
increased attention to the U.S. government's carceral investments in
both secret/CIA proctored detention sites and U.S. military prisons in
places like Guantanamo Bay and Abu Ghraib. By extension, the modalities
in which racially pathologized brown bodies encounter the racist state
through border militarization,[16]
"anti-terrorism," and "anti-gang"
policing (etc.) significantly articulate through the institutional
spaces and surveillance/punishment technologies of the U.S. global
carceral formation. While these institutional formations can and must
be contextualized within the historical specificities of the current
moment of global U.S. statecraft and its symbiotic projects of
(extra-domestic) nation-building and white supremacist institutionality,
my specific concerns here run across a pair of overlapping conceptual
and analytical questions: 1) What does the regime—the strategic
organization and deployment of carceral-punitive
technologies—encompassing immigrant detention prisons, secret prisons,
and U.S. military prisons tell us of the genealogy and institutional
movements of the U.S. prison generally? 2) If these "new" prisons are
neither anomalies nor qualitatively novel state fabrications, how are
they connected organically to a genealogy of U.S. state violence
and terror across different geographies, from the domestic and local, to
the "exotic" and global?
It is worth briefly placing the data regarding the last two decades
of immigrant imprisonment (and the rapidly accelerating growth therein)
within the context of the U.S. prison industrial complex writ large. In
so doing, the critical praxis of addressing immigrant detention might
more adequately resist the impulse to analytically amputate this
particular modality and geography of imprisonment from the
overarching and socially constitutive historical technologies of
racist and white supremacist U.S. state violence, policing, and
imprisonment.
According to the U.S. government's own Bureau of Justice Statistics,
"between 1985 and 2000 the number of immigration offenders under
sentence in a Federal prison increased from 1,593 to 13,676."[17] On the
other hand, the number of people imprisoned in the U.S. grew from
800,000 in 1985[18]
to over 2.2 million in 2005.[19] I offer these
figures to illustrate what may seem an obvious point, but one which
bears repeating in the wake of repeated (and technically accurate)
claims that immigrant detention prisons are the most rapidly increasing
facet of the U.S. carceral formation: while the almost tenfold increase
in the number of immigrants held in Federal detention centers is a
remarkable one, this carceral body count constitutes a minute portion of
the policing-imprisonment-punishment nexus, and to suggest that it ought
to be treated as politically distinct from the living apocalypse
of the larger U.S. prison industrial complex is to work within a
structure of willful ignorance at best, and political bad faith at
worst.
The U.S. prison, as a regime of dominance and strategic
violence, institutes technologies of power that exceed the prison's
formal designation as a place governed by the constraints of the
criminal-juridical. Thus, we might consider imprisonment as a practice
of social ordering and geopolitical power, and not as a
self-evident or foreclosed jurisprudential practice: in this context,
the "post-9/11" formation of the Homeland Security State, the 2004
spectacle of torture at Abu Ghraib prison, and accelerated immigrant
criminalization/detention can be understood as particular
significations of a regime of dominance that is neither (only) local nor
(erratically) exceptional, but is at once mobilized, proliferating, and
global.
I have argued elsewhere[20]
for a conception of the U.S. prison not as
a self-contained institution or isolated place, but rather as a material
prototype of organized punishment and (social, civil, and biological)
death. Thus, to understand the U.S. prison as a regime is to
focus conceptually, theoretically, and politically on the prison as a
pliable module or mobilized vessel through which American globality
generates its particular (local) practices of legitimated violence and
bodily immobilization. To invoke and critically revise Negri and Hardt's
formulation in the widely read text Empire,[21] the focal question
becomes: How does the right of the U.S.-as-global police to kill,
detain, obliterate become voiced, juridically coded, and culturally
recoded?
The structure of presumption—and therefore relative political
silence—enmeshing the prison's centrality to the logic of American
globality is precisely evidence of the fundamental power of the U.S.
prison regime within the larger schema of American hegemony. In this
sense, the U.S. prison regime is ultimately really not an "institution,"
in the contained sense of a discrete and juridically delimited domain;
rather, it is a formulation of world order (hence, a dynamic and
perpetual labor of institutionalization rather than a definitive
modernist institution) in which massively scaled, endlessly strategized
technologies of human immobilization address (while never fully
resolving) the socio-political crises of globalization. The U.S. prison
regime defines a global logic of social organization that
constitutes, mobilizes, and prototypes across various localities. What
would it mean, then, to consider state-crafted, white supremacist
modalities of imprisonment as the perpetual end rather than the
self-contained means of American globality?
It is precisely because the U.S. prison regime composes an acute
formation of racist and white supremacist state violence that its very
institutionality encompasses the capacity for mobilization of an
epochal (and internally dynamic) white supremacist global logic. It is
within this composition of the "global"—as it is indelibly marked by the
genealogies of "local" U.S. racial formation and racist statecraft—that
the particular institutional extremities of the prison regime
(e.g. accelerated immigrant criminalization and detention, Abu Ghraib
and Guantanamo Bay military prisons, CIA secret prisons) can be more
delicately resituated and critically addressed.
An elaboration on the genealogy of the U.S. prison regime, from its
post-emancipation institutional origins to its contemporary globality,
is necessary here. I initiate the final section of this essay with two
points of departure, in the hope of fostering a conceptualization of the
U.S. prison regime that speaks to the productive entanglement of two
structural logics: 1) white supremacy as a historical modality
of social (dis)organization; and 2) the capacity of allegedly "local" or
"domestic" U.S. social formations to circulate, militarize, and mobilize
across global geographies.
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