|
Rendition to Torture
Price: $42.95
Written by Alan W. Clarke
Subject: Human Rights, Law
Cloth ISBN: 978-0-8135-5276-7
Pages:
248 pages
Publication Date: April 2012
Series: Genocide, Political Violence, Human Rights
Praise for Rendition to Torture:
"When the United States sends a terror suspect to another country that is notorious for torture, that is known as extraordinary rendition. Alan Clarke's book on this topic is a major contribution to the history of a sordid chapter in the American experience."
—Marjorie Cohn, editor of The United States and Torture: Interrogation, Incarceration, and Abuse
Description:
Torture occurs in democracies as well as in dictatorships. Nonetheless, many Americans were surprised following the attacks of 9/11 at how easily the United States embraced torture as well as the supposedly lesser evil of cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment. Extraordinary rendition hid from the public eye cruel and bloody interrogations. "Torture lite" or "torture without marks" became the norm for those in American custody.
In Rendition to Torture, Alan W. Clarke explains how the United States adopted torture as a matter of official policy; how and why it turned to extraordinary rendition as a way to outsource more extreme, mutilating forms of torture; and outlines the steps the United States took to hide its abuses. Many adverse consequences attended American use of torture. Clarke offers an extended critique of these activities, placing them in historical and legal context as well as in transnational and comparative perspective.
About the Author:
ALAN W. CLARKE is currently an endowed visiting professor in the criminology and criminal justice department at St. Thomas University. A professor of integrated studies at Utah Valley University, he has coauthored Bitter Fruit of American Justice: International and Domestic Resistance to the Death Penalty and more than thirty journal articles.
Receive
special offers and book notices by email. Sign up for RU READING?
Price: $42.95 |