Category Archives: Prison

In memory of Eric Allison, former prisoner and campaigning journalist.

We first met Eric Allison in 2008 at the funeral of Pauline Campbell, who died of a broken heart after her daughter’s death from deliberate neglect in prison. By then we had been following Eric’s articles in the Guardian for a few years, impressed by his determination to tell the truth about what prisoners are facing inside.

We were regularly in touch over the decades and Eric was always available to help us with whatever prisoners’ struggle we were involved in. In 2011, he reviewed Jailhouse Lawyers, a book we published by US prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal, edited and introduced by Selma James from the Global Women’s Strike. In his review, he modesty described himself as a jailhouse lawyer who “enjoyed some minor victories and liked being a thorn in the side of my keepers and fighting them on behalf of prisoners with a grievance”.

He would help us with information and contacts. He got publicity for the ground-breaking 2013 California Prisoners Hunger Strike of 30,000 prisoners which lasted 60 days and won the release from solitary confinement of over 100 men and the release from prison of many others. He also enlisted the help of lawyers and other prominent people for our campaign against the Royal College of Psychiatrists which claimed that Close Supervision Centres (CSC) – solitary confinement by another name – were “enabling environments”. That campaign was initiated at the request of prisoner Kevan Thakrar, himself held for over 10 years in a CSC. We soon found out that they knew each other as Eric had given evidence in court on Kevan’s behalf in a case that exposed an institutionalised racist brutal regime in Frankland prison. Kevan won.

In 2013, we invited Eric to speak at SlutWalk, an event of the anti-violence women’s movement held in Trafalgar Square. His first words were: “I want to speak about the abuse of children at the hands of the state.” As mothers and grannies, we were grateful to find a man, and a jail bird at that, who thought that working-class children’s lives matter. It remained a focus of his life and work to expose not only those who abused children but those who stood by in full knowledge of this horror and let it happen. In a letter to us he said: “It seems to me that, sadly, we will always have abusers, but they can only flourish in institutions by the cowardice or apathy of others — and then of course, the state steps in to protect its own, rather than those in their care.” Eric went on to speak fervently about the injustice of imprisoning traumatised and vulnerable women, many of whom had been victims of rape and/or domestic violence and then suffered further sexual violence from guards. Always a man of action, he said about a judge who imprisoned a woman for eight years for aborting her baby: “People ought to kick in the court where he’s sitting, and let them know what they think about this shameful sentence of this woman who needed help, not punishment.”

His Guardian articles were always the go-to-place for coverage about the brutal restraint of children, deaths of prisoners from neglect or despair, private racketeering in the prison industry, the scandal of imprisonment for public protection sentences and various miscarriages of justice. When one of the women at our centre was campaigning to save from the cruellest neglect, the life of her severely disabled son, Daniel Roque Hall, who was serving a three-year prison sentence, it was Eric who publicized it, helping to win Daniel’s release.  

We miss Eric every day since his death. We are less protected, less encouraged, less supported. The only appropriate tribute to a man of such principled determination is for us to continue gathering our forces and digging in our heels in our common struggle for justice. We mourn the dead and fight like hell for the living.

We send our condolences to Eric’s daughters, grandchildren, family and other friends.

Legal Action for Women, December 2022

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Press: Campaigners call on the Royal College of Psychiatrists to stop endorsing “solitary confinement”

LEGAL ACTION FOR WOMEN HELPED ORGANISE THIS PROTEST REPORTED IN THE CANARY.

A demonstration was held on 28 June outside the headquarters of the Royal College of Psychiatrists (RCPsych) over the organisation’s support for the UK’s Close Supervision Centre (CSC) System.

The protest – called by a coalition of groups – was joined by ex-prisoners and the families of current prisoners.

A press release from the coalition of groups reads:

Former prisoners [joined] a gathering called by a coalition of groups outside the Royal College of Psychiatrists (RCPsych) to protest its endorsement of Close Supervision Centres.

The UK’s CSCs are prisons within prisons, where people are kept isolated for years with very little human contact. CSC prisoners face the “most restrictive conditions” seen in the UK prison system.

RCPsych is a professional medical body representing psychiatrists in the UK. However, prisoners and their supporters argue that the CSC system it endorses causes damage to mental health. A UN representative has said the system may amount to torture.

Solitary confinement is in breach of international human rights standards

According to the campaigners’ statement:

CSCs are prisons within UK prisons — segregation units where prisoners are locked in their cell 22 or more hours per day for months or years with no independent right of appeal. This level of confinement and deprivation of contact with other human beings is comparable to “solitary confinement”.

Long-term solitary confinement is a breach of United Nations (UN) rules:

Being held in solitary confinement for more than [15] days is a breach of the UN Mandela Rules on the treatment of prisoners.

The UK’s CSC system has been criticised by international human rights organisations:

Amnesty International condemned CSCs (formerly SSUs) as far back as 1997 as “cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment”.

However, the RCPsych has rubber stamped this brutal prison regime as ‘positive’. According to campaigners:

Shamefully the RCPsych, whose primary duty should be the welfare of patients, instead endorses CSCs as “Enabling Environments“, that is places where there is a focus on creating a “positive and effective social environment”.

Brutality inflicted on prisoners

Kevan Thakrar, a prisoner who has spent 11 years inside the CSC system, wrote in Inside Times:

The cost of each place is over five times a place in a maximum security main location, the brutality inflicted upon the prisoners within them exceeds all other prison environments in the UK, and they cause the majority of its residents to develop major mental illness requiring treatment within the secure hospitals of Broadmoor, Rampton or Ashworth under the Mental Health Act.

Kevan is currently struggling to be moved out of the CSC. He was placed in the system after defending himself against a racist attack by a prison guard in 2010. He was cleared of assaulting the guards, on the grounds of self-defence. But he remains stuck in the CSC system.

It’s not surprising that Kevan has found it hard to get out of the CSC, as a 2015 HM Inspectorate of Prisons report found that there was no independent scrutiny of decision making within the CSC system.

The UN special rapporteur wrote in March this year:

we express our grave concern at the indefinite and prolonged detention of Mr. Thakrar in what appears to be conditions of solitary confinement. Both in this individual case and in terms of general policy, we are particularly concerned at the reported use of prolonged or indefinite solitary confinement in Close Supervision Centers, thus predictably inflicting severe pain or suffering amounting to cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment, or even torture.

“Fed through a hatch and isolated from family and outside support”

The campaigners’ press release continues:

Other prisoners describe being fed through a hatch and isolated from family and outside support. They speak of attacks from guards that remain unpunished and complain that there is no transparent process to decide who is placed in the CSC and therefore “no way out”.

“Institutional racism” and “colonial mentality”

Campaigners accuse RCPsych of institutional racism:

Approximately 50% of prisoners held in CSCs are Muslim which indicates that these units are institutionally racist. This is not the only time that the RCPsych has been called out for racism. Last year more than 160 psychiatrists wrote to the RCPsych urging it to “root out all examples of institutional racism and colonial mentality”.

The campaign calling on RCPscych to drop its endorsement of CSCs has broad support:

The campaign demanding that the RCPsych withdraw its endorsement of CSCs is backed by more than 60 organizations and hundreds of individuals, including Prof. Angela Davis, author and anti-racist campaigner Selma James, former Chief Inspector of Prisons Lord Ramsbotham, miscarriage of justice victim Winston Silcott, Prof. Benjamin Zephaniah and a number of practicing psychiatrists.

The Canary contacted RCPscych for a comment, but we’d received no reply by the time of publication.

“CSCs and solitary must end!”

Sara Callaway from Women of Colour Global Women’s Strike – one of the groups who called the protest –  said:

We are part of this campaign because CSCs are racist and women end up picking up the pieces when men are abused within them. We will be making our voices heard until the RCPsych stops covering up for cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment. This campaign was initiated by prisoners and is growing in size – CSCs and solitary must end!

Tom Anderson is part of the Shoal Collective, a cooperative producing writing for social justice and a world beyond capitalism. 

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Protest Royal College of Psychiatrists covering up prison abuse.

Monday 28 June, 12.30-2pm, 21 Prescot Street, E1 8BB

The Royal College of Psychiatrists has given its “Enabling Environments” award to prison Close Supervision Centres (CSCs) – segregation units where prisoners are often held in solitary confinement, locked in their cell 22 or more hours per day for months or years with no independent right of appeal.

More than 15 days in solitary is considered torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment, under the UN Nelson Mandela rules.

CSCs are racist institutions in which approximately 50% of prisoners are Muslim, despite Muslims being only 5% of the UK population.

This complicity must stop now. Despite protests and an open letter signed by over 60 organisations and many prominent individuals Dr. Adrian James, RCP president has responded with platitudes about “equality and diversity”.

We have to disrupt the RCP’s work until this professional body stops covering up for institutional racism and abuse. We’ll make noise and make ourselves heard on behalf of all the prisoners who have no voice outside prison walls. Bring something to make a lot of noise!

Sponsors: Legal Action for Women (LAW) Payday men’s network, Joint Enterprise Not Guilty by Association (JENGbA), Women of Colour Global Women’s Strike, Community Action on Prison Expansion (CAPE), Fight Racism Fight Imperialism (FRFI), Prisoner Solidarity Network (PSN)

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Solitary Confinement is a Crime

International webinar: 12 May 2021
7 – 9pm (UK), 2 – 3.30pm (US Eastern Time)

REGISTER HERE

Hosted by Legal Action for Women, Payday men’s network,
Women of Colour Global Women’s Strike

Speakers include:

Kevan Thakrar, over 11 years in UK Close Supervision Centre – audio presentation Now in further segregation: ACTION ALERT

Khalfan Al-Badwawi, survivor of torture and solitary confinement in Oman

Susie Winter, former prisoner

Dr. Derek Summerfield, Psychiatrist, member of The International Critical Psychiatry Network 

Shandre Delaney, Human Rights Coalition (US), mother of Carrington Keys, one of the Dallas 6 prisoners

Deepa Govindarajan Driver, campaigner against the continuing imprisonment in solitary of journalist Julian Assange

Mumia Abu-Jamal, famed political prisoner and solitary survivor – message of solidarity

Plus: Q&A.

The UK government denies that there is solitary confinement and that dozens of prisoners are being held in isolation, sometimes for years – 23 hours a day, having to choose whether to phone relatives or bathe, or take exercise in the one hour allowed out of their cell.  Since March 2020, all prisoners have suffered these conditions – effectively held in solitary because of the pandemic.

A smaller number of prisoners are held in Close Supervision Centres (CSCs) where conditions replicate those in solitary. Prisoners describe being fed through a hatch and isolated from family and outside support. They report attacks from guards that remain unpunished and complain that there is no transparent process to decide who is placed in the CSC and therefore there is “no way out”. Approximately 50% of prisoners held in CSCs are Muslim – proof that these units are institutionally racist.

A campaign initiated by prisoners is pressing the Royal College of Psychiatrists to withdraw the “Enabling Environment” status they awarded to CSCs. These awards deny prisoners’ experience and provide a cover for abuse. A letter signed by 60 organizations and 200 individuals, including Professor Emeritus Angela Y. Davis, Professor and former prisoner Benjamin Zephaniah, and psychiatrists and other healthcare providers, was delivered to the RCP last December.

This webinar aims to highlight the cruelty and illegality of solitary confinement and help build the movement to end it in the UK and internationally.

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Women’s Resistance, Prison

Women’s Resistance

Behind Bars, US & UK

Vikki Law, author and journalist

6.30pm. Thursday 30 May 2019

Crossroads Women’s Centre

25 Wolsey Mews, Kentish Town, London, NW5 2DX

Vikki Law is a author and journalist who highlights in particular the effective and creativeorganising of women prisoners which is so often overlooked. Over half of women in prison in the UK have suffered domestic abuse and one in three sexual abuse. Two-thirds are mothers separated from their children and women of colour are disproportionately represented inside.It is rarely acknowledged how women prisoners and detainees are spearheading opposition to abuse in prison and detention.

Ms Law is author of Resistance Behind Bars: The Struggles Of Incarcerated Women and Don’t Leave Your Friends Behind: Concrete Ways to Support Families in Social Justice Movements and Communities. She writes for NY Times, most recently on End Forced Labor in Immigrant Detention and is a regular commentator for Truth Out.

 

For more information:

Legal Action for Women & Women of Colour GWS

LAW@AllWomenCount.net / WomenOfColour@GlobalWomenStrike.net

020 7482 2496



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Key statement by prisoners in the US on unity.

Agreement to end hostilities

Dated Aug. 12, 2012

To whom it may concern and all California Prisoners:

Greetings from the entire PBSP-SHU Short Corridor Hunger Strike Representatives. We are hereby presenting this mutual agreement on behalf of all racial groups here in the PBSP-SHU Corridor. Wherein, we have arrived at a mutual agreement concerning the following points:

1. If we really want to bring about substantive meaningful changes to the CDCR system in a manner beneficial to all solid individuals who have never been broken by CDCR’s torture tactics intended to coerce one to become a state informant via debriefing, that now is the time for us to collectively seize this moment in time and put an end to more than 20-30 years of hostilities between our racial groups.

2. Therefore, beginning on Oct. 10, 2012, all hostilities between our racial groups in SHU, ad-seg, general population and county jails will officially cease. This means that from this date on, all racial group hostilities need to be at an end. And if personal issues arise between individuals, people need to do all they can to exhaust all diplomatic means to settle such disputes; do not allow personal, individual issues to escalate into racial group issues!

Like the Attica rebellion, the Lucasville prisoners who took over their prison in April 1993 deliberately united across the racial lines that prison authorities use to divide and conquer prisoners. The multi-racial leadership has remained united to this day throughout their isolation on death row. This photo of a sign made during the rebellion was used as an exhibit during their trial in 1996. – Photo: Courtesy Staughton Lynd

3. We also want to warn those in the general population that IGI [Institutional Gang Investigators] will continue to plant undercover Sensitive Needs Yard (SNY) debriefer “inmates” amongst the solid GP prisoners with orders from IGI to be informers, snitches, rats and obstructionists, in order to attempt to disrupt and undermine our collective groups’ mutual understanding on issues intended for our mutual causes (i.e., forcing CDCR to open up all GP main lines and return to a rehabilitative-type system of meaningful programs and privileges, including lifer conjugal visits etc. via peaceful protest activity and noncooperation, e.g., hunger strike, no labor etc.). People need to be aware and vigilant to such tactics and refuse to allow such IGI inmate snitches to create chaos and reignite hostilities amongst our racial groups. We can no longer play into IGI, ISU (Investigative Service Unit), OCS (Office of Correctional Safety) and SSU’s (Service Security Unit’s) old manipulative divide and conquer tactics!

In conclusion, we must all hold strong to our mutual agreement from this point on and focus our time, attention and energy on mutual causes beneficial to all of us [i.e., prisoners] and our best interests. We can no longer allow CDCR to use us against each other for their benefit!

Because the reality is that collectively, we are an empowered, mighty force that can positively change this entire corrupt system into a system that actually benefits prisoners and thereby the public as a whole, and we simply cannot allow CDCR and CCPOA, the prison guards’ union, IGI, ISU, OCS and SSU to continue to get away with their constant form of progressive oppression and warehousing of tens of thousands of prisoners, including the 14,000-plus prisoners held in solitary confinement torture chambers – SHU and ad-seg units – for decades!

We send our love and respect to all those of like mind and heart. Onward in struggle and solidarity!

Presented by the PBSP-SHU Short Corridor Collective:

  • Todd Ashker, C-58191, D1-119
  • Arturo Castellanos, C-17275, D1-121
  • Sitawa Nantambu Jamaa (Dewberry), C-35671, D1-117
  • Antonio Guillen, P-81948, D2-106

And the Representatives Body:

  • Danny Troxell, B-76578, D1-120
  • George Franco, D-46556, D4-217
  • Ronnie Yandell, V-27927, D4-215
  • Paul Redd, B-72683, D2-117
  • James Baridi Williamson, D-34288. D4-107
  • Alfred Sandoval, D-61000, D4-214
  • Louis Powell, B-59864, D1-104
  • Alex Yrigollen, H-32421, D2-204
  • Gabriel Huerta, C-80766, D3-222
  • Frank Clement, D-07919, D3-116
  • Raymond Chavo Perez, K-12922, D1-219
  • James Mario Perez, B-48186, D3-124

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ROTEST & SPEAK OUT in support of women prisoners at Chowchilla, California and in the UK

Friday 25 January 2013 5pm-7pm
Holloway Prison Parkhurst Road London N7 0NU

The California Coalition of Women Prisoners and other groups are protesting the transfer of women prisoners from Valley State Prison (which is being converted to a men’s prison) into the two remaining women’s prisons in the state. Even before the transfer, Chowchilla, with a maximum capacity of 2,000, already has a population close to 4,000.

This move has resulted in terrible overcrowding and other abuses, the deterioration of health care, the forced displacement of thousands of people all which are shattering the lives of prisoners and of their families.

Our protest supports theirs and highlights the situation of women prisoners here in the UK.

Did you know that:

Two-thirds of women in UK prisons are in for non-violent offences and the “criminalisation of survival”: shoplifting, non-payment of fines, sex work, offences linked to drug addiction and so-called benefit fraud – unlike well-paid bankers who steal from the public, women living in poverty get prison.

Over half of women prisoners are mothers; every year 17,000 children are deprived of their mothers’ care by prison, which Baroness Corston has described as “often nothing short of catastrophic”.

Over half have themselves been victims of violence and one in three has experienced sexual abuse. Unbelievably some are in prison as a result of reporting rape and being disbelieved, while their attackers go free.

Women of colour are the fastest growing sector in the prison population and are three times more likely to get a prison sentence than white women. Immigrant women who are alone in the UK are often deprived of what families provide and suffer the agonies of separation.

Scores of women self-harm and even take their own lives while in prison.  Pauline Campbell (photo) mother of one of six women who killed themselves in Styal prison in one year, was arrested numerous times for protesting at prison deaths. Our protest will commemorate her extraordinary contribution.

Women prisoners suffer “excessively punitive” treatment that many of us would consider torture.  How else to describe “separation visits”; where mothers are forced to say farewell to children who are being taken for adoption, in the main visiting hall?

Thousands of others – women and men — are imprisoned but are innocent. Jailhouse lawyers – prisoners who study the law to represent themselves against injustice and abusive prison conditions — are targeted by the authorities.

In the UK, 150,000 people go through prison each year, hundreds of thousands more are ex-prisoners or their families, yet prisoners are disregarded and disparaged by the government, media and other voices in authority.

Every cut in housing, benefits and other resources is bound to result in more women, particularly mothers, being criminalised and imprisoned. The government knows this very well.

Some of the worst criminals have never been locked up: from serial rapists and murderers, MPs stealing “expenses”, to bankers and corporations defrauding taxpayers, and prime ministers who should be tried for war crimes.

London protest called by:

Global Women’s Strike (GWS) gws@globalwomenstrike.net, Women of Colour in the GWS womenofcolour@globalwomenstrike.net, Legal Action for Women law@allwomencount.net, Payday men’s network payday@paydaynet.org. Tel: 020 7482 2496


 

“We are given bedding you wouldn’t want even your dog sleeping on.”

Everything we rely on to survive, including medical and legal, is highly impacted by overcrowding. Overcrowding is the issue. It causes everything else to come crashing down like dominoes.”

Demand an end to overcrowding! Our loved ones deserve humane living conditions and their freedom! Bring them home!

Solidarity actions encouraged! Contact info@womenprisoners.org or 415-255-7036 x 314

The Chowchilla Freedom Rally Coalition includes members from California Coalition for Women Prisoners, Californians United for a Responsible Budget, Justice NOW, All Of Us Or None, Legal Services for Prisoners With Children, Fired Up!, Campaign to End the Death Penalty, Transgender, Gender Variant, Intersex Justice Project, Critical Resistance, Youth Justice Coalition, Global Women’s Strike, Occupy 4 Prisoners, Asian Pacific Islander Support Committee and the California Prison Moratorium Project.

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PRISONERS ARE ENTITLED TO THE VOTE

When MPs consider prisoners’ right to vote they should have in mind who prisoners are, and how many should never even have been locked up.

Two thirds of women in British prisons are there for non-violent offences. Most are inside for fewer than six months for shoplifting, non-payment of fines, benefit fraud, and offences linked to drug addiction and sex work.  A quarter had no previous convictions.

Over half are mothers.  Every year 17,000 children are deprived of their mothers by prison, which Baroness Corston has described as “often nothing short of catastrophic”.

Over half are themselves victims of violence and one in three has experienced sexual abuse.  Some, like Layla Ibrahim and Gail Sherwood, are rape victims who were disbelieved and are campaigning to clear their name.  Verna Joseph, raped by a gang who threatened to kill her and her daughter if she didn’t bring drugs into Britain commented: “I was sentenced to nine years while my attackers were never arrested.” Women prisoners are subjected to “excessively punitive” treatment that many of us would consider criminal torture.  How else do we describe “separation visits” in a prison main visiting hall where mothers say farewell to their children before they are taken for adoption?  
Black people are 14% of those in prison but only 2% of the overall population. Young Muslims protesting Israel’s bombing of Gaza in 2008-9, and people convicted in the 2011 rebellions that followed the police shooting of Mark Duggan, received significantly harsher sentences than standard. How much are these disparities due to discrimination against people of colour and working class people, especially when they are protestors? Recently released Ben Gunn served many years over his tariff because he fought for prisoners’ rights.  He comments: “Prisoners are part of society, and the treatment we receive is part of society’s standards of in/humanity.  Why shouldn’t we have a say?” Daniel Roque Hall, a severely disabled man nearly died after only seven weeks in prison; he is still in hospital fighting not to be sent back to conditions which amount to a death sentence.
Scores of women self-harm and take their own lives while in prison.  Pauline Campbell, mother of Sarah, one of six women who died in Styal prison in one year, was arrested numerous times for protesting at prison deaths: “The unjust sentencing of vulnerable women; their suffering, and deaths – that is the injustice.  [The] Justice Secretary is the one who should be in the dock, not me.”
One hundred and fifty thousand people in the UK go through prison each year, many more are ex-prisoners, or related to people who are or have been inside.  Cameron said he felt “physically sick” at prisoners gaining the right to vote, and most MPs went along with him.  How sick to dismiss such a large and vulnerable proportion of the population!   Some of the worst criminals have never been locked up: from MPs stealing “expenses”, to bankers and corporations defrauding taxpayers, and prime ministers who should be tried for war crimes.  Should they vote?


Contact: Niki Adams

Legal Action for Women

Crossroads Women’s Centre

25 Wolsey Mews

Kentish Town

London, NW5 2DX

020 7482 2496

07956 316 899

21 November 2012

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Prisoner’s rights: Mumia Abu-Jamal

Mumia Abu-Jamal is an award-winning journalist who, in the years leading up to his arrest, actively exposed corruption and racism in Philadelphia.  He was convicted in 1982 of killing a policeman in a trial drenched in racism: while Philadelphia was 43% Black, only two jurors were African-American.  Throughout almost three decades on death row, Mumia Abu-Jamal has consistently fought against injustice and for his freedom.

A new book from death row

Mumia Abu-Jamal

JAILHOUSE LAWYERS:

PRISONERS DEFENDING PRISONERS V THE USA

Foreword by Angela Y. Davis
Introduction to UK edition by Selma James

Published by Crossroads Books

From death row, award-winning journalist Mumia Abu-Jamal introduces us to fellow prisoners who litigate against their jailers, risking punishment or even death, to win justice for themselves and other prisoners. 

“This is the story,” he writes, “of law learned not in the ivory towers of multi-billion-dollar endowed universities [but] in the hidden, dank dungeons of America – the Prisonhouse of Nations.”

Selma James’s Introduction presents the parallel universe of UK jailhouse lawyers who, like their US counterparts, are leading a justice movement inside prisons.

UK prisoners, denied the vote, are campaigning for this fundamental right. A legal challenge brought by a jailhouse lawyer supported by a dedicated legal team won a European Court ruling in 2004 that a blanket ban on votes for prisoners violates their human rights. Yet the government, in opposing votes for prisoners, acts as if those of us who are prisoners are less human, and deny that prisons and what goes on in them also frame the kind of society we all inhabit.

The UK publication of Jailhouse Lawyers is an opportunity for prisoners’ campaign for the vote and other efforts for fundamental reforms to be more widely known and supported.

 

Click here to order

More information

Report from book launch in the House of Lords

Prisma Newspaper

Also in this section

Mumia case: appellate judges deliberate
Mumia’s response to the court ruling

Death Row journalist Mumia Abu-Jamal – The case for a new trial

pamphlet

LAW’s Niki Adams speaks about Mumia Abu-Jamal

Leading UK lawyers petition US Appeal Court protesting racism in Mumia Abu-Jamal’s case
Also available in French, German, Italian, Polish, Spanish

Voice article  Speech by Ian Macdonald

Journalists in support of Mumia: an open letter to the court

In Prison My Whole Life: a film about Mumia

Parliamentary showing

Exeter University showing

 LAW at the 3rd World Congress Against the Death Penalty (2007)

Doing the movement’s work from inside: an article by Selma James

Mumia in the media

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