Hope Behind Bars: Notes from Indian Prisons

Author:

Sanjoy Hazarika

,

Madhurima Dhanuka

Publisher:

PAN MACMILLAN INDIA

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Publisher

PAN MACMILLAN INDIA

Publication Year 2022
ISBN-13

9789389104028

ISBN-10 9789389104028
Binding

Hardcover

Number of Pages 194 Pages
Language (English)
Dimensions (Cms) 22 x 14 x 2
Weight (grms) 300
A piercing portrait of the injustices of the Indian prison system. For decades, the narratives around prisoners in India have perpetuated arbitrary notions of the ‘good’ and ‘bad’ citizen. Stories about Indian prisons rarely make it to public notice – from deplorable living conditions, lack of medical care and legal support to intense mistreatment, violence and all manner of horrific abuse. Despite the mounting evidence, any attempts to study the systemic frailties and chilling injustices that abound within a prison complex have been few and far between. In Hope Behind Bars, editors Sanjoy Hazarika and Madhurima Dhanuka draw upon extensive research, identifying prisoners and ex-prisoners, their families and associates and gathering first-person experiences about the Indian prison system. With ten essays contributed by subject specialists, including a former Supreme Court judge, lawyers, inmates, prison officials and activists, on a range of issues, such as the rights of prisoners, the journey to justice in the controversial Hashimpura killings case and life in a detention centre, this essential collection brings prisoners’ lives and liberties to the heart of public debate and policies, presenting accounts of how hope can flower in the most unlikely places. Searing and thought-provoking, it provides the reader with valuable insight into the vexed idea of incarceration and delivers a necessary human document of the true face of justice behind bars in our country

Sanjoy Hazarika

Sanjoy Hazarika is Director of the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative. Earlier he was Director of the Centre for Northeast Studies and Policy Research at Jamia Millia Islamia.
He is an award-winning journalist, formerly with the New York Times. His books include Bhopal: The Lessons of a Tragedy, Strangers of the Mist: Tales of War and Peace from India’s Northeast, Rites of Passage: Border Crossings, Imagined Homelands, India’s East and Bangladesh and Writing on the Wall, a collection of essays. As a columnist and specialist commentator on the Northeast and its neighbouring regions, Hazarika has written and published extensively on draconian laws like the Armed Forces Special Powers Act, the Eastern Himalaya and freedom fighters from the Northeast. He is founder and managing trustee of C-NES which has pioneered the work of boat clinics on the Brahmaputra River, these provide nearly half a million people every year with regular healthcare. Hazarika has made over a dozen documentary films on a number of subjects including the Brahmaputra, the endangered Gangetic river dolphin and the danger that women face in conflict situations. The films look at how communities and individuals, especially women, cope with conditions of acute conflict as in Rambuia, his latest documentary on Mizoram. These have been screened across India and at national and international film festivals and also in Dhaka, London, New York, Washington, Berlin, Gottingen and Vienna.

Madhurima Dhanuka

Madhurima Dhanuka is a lawyer with an LLM in criminal justice from the University of Nottingham in the UK. Currently, she heads the prison reforms programme at the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative, where Dhanuka leads, manages and develops initiatives to improve prison conditions, ensure access to legal aid for persons in custody and protect the rights of foreign nationals, asylum seekers and refugees in detention in India. She has written numerous studies and reports on matters related to the criminal justice system. Dhanuka has also contributed to several publications of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime on legal aid services.
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