FourWinds10.com - Delivering Truth Around the World
Custom Search

Baz Dreisinger,Incarceration Nations,A Journey to Justice in Prisons Around the World

Smaller Font Larger Font RSS 2.0

7-17-17

Baz Dreisinger,Incarceration Nations,A Journey to Justice in Prisons Around the World

http://www.otherpress.com/books/incarceration-nations/

http://www.otherpress.com/authors/baz-dreisinger/

http://www.jjay.cuny.edu/sites/default/files/faculty/cv/Dreisinger_Baz.pdf

Contact Info For Professor Baz Dreisinger

Email:                  bdreisinger@jjay.cuny.edu

Phone number:     212.237.8197

Room number:     7.65.14NB

EDUCATION:      PhD Columbia University

BIO

Dr. Dreisinger works at the intersection of race, crime, culture and justice. She earned her Ph.D. in English from Columbia University, specializing in American and African-American studies. At John Jay she is the Founding Academic Director of John Jay's Prison-to-College Pipeline program, which offers college courses and reentry planning to incarcerated men at Otisville Correctional Facility, and broadly works to increase access to higher education for incarcerated and formerly incarcerated individuals. Dr. Dreisinger's book Incarceration Nations: A Journey to Justice in Prisons Around the World (2016) was heralded by the New York Times, NPR and many more, and was named a notable book of 2016 by the Washington Post. Professor Dreisinger moonlights as a journalist and critic, writing about Caribbean culture, race-related issues, travel, music and pop culture for such outlets as the New York Times, Los Angeles Times and Wall Street Journal, and producing on-air segments about music and global culture for National Public Radio (NPR). Her first book Near Black: White-to-Black Passing in American Culture (2008) was featured in the New York Times and on NPR and CNN. Together with Oscar-nominated filmmaker Peter Spirer, Professor Dreisinger produced and wrote the two nationally aired documentaries about hip-hop, criminal justice and the prison industrial complex. She regularly speaks about justice reform and prison issues on popular news media and in international settings.

Dr. Dreisinger was named a 2017-2018 Global Fulbright Scholar and is working to internationally replicate the Prison-to-College Pipeline, with a focus on the Caribbean and South Africa. She is currently working on a road map for how prison-to-college pipelines and restorative justice can replace mass incarceration as a system of justice.

******************

Incarceration Nations

A Journey to Justice in Prisons Around the World

Publication Date: Feb 09, 2016

336 pp

Ebook

List Price US $21.99

ISBN: 9781590517284

Hardcover

List Price US $27.95

Trim Size (H x W): 6 x 9


Baz Dreisinger goes behind bars in nine countries to investigate the current conditions in prisons worldwide

Beginning in Africa and ending in Europe, Incarceration Nations is a first-person odyssey through the prison systems of the world. Professor, journalist, and founder of the Prison-to-College-Pipeline, Dreisinger looks into the human stories of incarcerated men and women and those who imprison them, creating a jarring, poignant view of a world to which most are denied access, and a rethinking of one of America’s most far-reaching global exports: the modern prison complex.

From serving as a restorative justice facilitator in a notorious South African prison and working with genocide survivors in Rwanda, to launching a creative writing class in an overcrowded Ugandan prison and coordinating a drama workshop for women prisoners in Thailand, Dreisinger examines the world behind bars with equal parts empathy and intellect. She journeys to Jamaica to visit a prison music program, to Singapore to learn about approaches to prisoner reentry, to Australia to grapple with the bottom line of private prisons, to a federal supermax in Brazil to confront the horrors of solitary confinement, and finally to the so-called model prisons of Norway. Incarceration Nations concludes with climactic lessons about the past, present, and future of justice.