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| Stopping The Prison-Industrial Juggernaut By Linda M. Thurston
Conditions Worsen But prisons are not only a national shame. They are also big business. Correctional Corporation of America, Wackenhut and other companies have discovered in the United States' propensity for locking away its own people a prime oportunity for profit. Private prisons have sprung up across the country. At least one, an immigration detention facility in New Jersey, has seen a major uprising in protest of conditions, yet private prisons remain even less accountable to the people than are the public prisons that pioneered mass incarceration. The business of prisons runs through these public institutions as well, as companies grow by providing food, clothing, and equipment to the public and private prisons. In many areas, as factories have headed out of the country, prisons have become the only business in town. Clusters of so-called "correctional facilities" have grown on hillsides in Colorado, in the midst of forests in Massachusetts, and by highways in Michigan. Prison guards in some states make more money than college professors, leading the working class to see their hope for financial survival in the business of locking up their fellow Americans. Building
Resistance Some groups did survive, and some activists, mostly on the local level, continued the struggle. Organizations like the American Friends Service Committee and the ACLU National Prison Project and a range of left organizations supporting social and political prisoners continued to advocate for an end to abusive conditions, to prison construction and to lengthening sentences. But the prisoner rights movement seemed largely moribund, reduced to small groups hanging on by stubborn conviction, isolated in spots around the country, working with all volunteers in borrowed office space or no office space, or working within service agencies or from home, doing whatever they could manage to get done to try to keep the situation from getting worse. Spreading the word. Getting out information. Never giving up. Their stubbornness may well have paid off. Last year, a group of activists, academics, prisoners and ex-prisoners, musicians, students and others organized four days of panels, task force and caucus meetings and workshops aimed at re-building a movement for fundamental change in the prison system. A core organizing committee in California was joined by committees in New York, Hartford and other Eastern cities. Organizers initially expected 500 people to attend, mostly from the West Coast. As the months of organizing progressed, they realized that they'd awakened a sleeping monster of concern about prisons. They revised their expected attendance to 1,000. In late September 1998, more than 3,000 people came together from nearly every U.S. state and from several countries around the world. Ironic Juxtapositions
The gathering would have been useful if all it accomplished was to spread some new information and to provide a site for national networking among activists. This conference, however, had a bigger goal: We seek to facilitate a productive exchange between a diverse
range of individuals-including grassroots organizers, academics, former prisoners,
policymakers, lawyers and other advocates-and organizations who traditionally
have not worked together around prison issues. The goal of the conference is to
establish a broad network of individuals and organizations committed to critical
public discourse, effective social and cultural activism, further research, and
dramatic policy transformation. We hope to create a foundation for a new movement
against the prison industrial complex. Workshops, round table discussions, video conferences, caucuses and task forces met to discuss a wide range of topics, including:
In the plenary sessions, too, the excitement was palpable. The final plenary, televised live by Deep Dish TV, was literally filled to overflowing; organizers had to open up two overflow rooms. The presenters-all of whom had led workshops-included one-time fugitive Angela Davis, the recently released Black Panther political prisoner Geronimo Ji Jagga Pratt, a Puerto Rican independista, blues and folk singer Faith Nolan and MacArthur Fellow Ellen Barry, fonder of Legal Services for Women in Prison. Barry named the next moves forward, including Through the Wall Week this coming April 11-17, called as a national week of contact between prisoners and those on the outside. Conferences happen all the time. Did the Critical Resistance conference jumpstart a mass movement for change in this country's criminal justice system? That remains to be seen. It is clear that the thousands of people who came together in Berkeley in September were reinvigorated, inspired and linked with people nationwide committed to making fundamental change in the system. The 3,000 gathered in Berkeley were not just the "usual cast of characters," but a broad range of activists from different movements, different histories, different politics and different styles of communication and activism. There is hope in that, as there is in the planned regional meetings to be held in 1999 and the follow-up conference being discussed by some activists on the East Coast for late 1999 or early in the year 2000. Abolishing prisons as we know them can't be much more impossible than abolishing war, can it? For
more info about the conference or April's Through the Wall Week contact: Critical
Resistance, PO Box 339, Berkeley, Ca 94701; (510)643-2094; e-mail: critresist@aol.com;
website: www.igc.org/justice/critical. |
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