International Handbook on Abolitionism
Version vom 1. Juli 2018, 12:29 Uhr von Tiao (Diskussion | Beiträge)
What is abolitionism?
Some eminent abolitionists
- Faye Honey Knopp, Ruth Morris, Herman Bianchi, Louk Huslman, Nils Christie, Heinz Steinert, Thomas Mathiesen, Angela Y. Davis, William Lloyd Garrison, Elijah Lovejoy, Nat Turner, Cesare Beccaria, Wilberforce, Douglass, Thomas Clarkson, Josephine Butler, Anna Pappritz, Auguste Viktoria, (Tolstoi), Frank Tannenbaum, ...
What did it take to abolish slavery?
- Ideology
- Commitment
- Organization
- Grass-roots mobilization
- Institutional political bridgeheads
- Getting one's hands dirty
The legal repression of women
- The Contagious Disease Acts (1864-1886); the movements in continental Europe
- The sex workers' movements vs. the "white-slavery" debate and the "new abolitionists"
The case of torture
Psychiatric confinement
Penal abolitionism
- Capital punishment
- See: Death and other ... on Beccaria's phenomenological vs. principled abolitionism
Repeal of anti-drug laws
- Abolishing the punishment of prison
- gradualism, reductionism, net wideneing, feminism, pos., ref ...
- Abolishing confinement
penitentiaries, serving prisons; remand; pre-trial, security detention, forensic, deportation, administrative, gulags, POW camps, refugee camps ...
Abolitionist strategies
- Decriminalization
- Reduction
- Normalization
- Segmentary abolitionism
- fine default
- children, juveniles
- women
- life
Abolitionist achievements
- Psychiatry
- Work houses (Scandinavia)
- Massachusetts
Abolitionist Groups
- Society of Friends
- Black Cross
- KRIM ...
- ...