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Om författaren

Christian Parenti is a professor at the School for International Training Graduate Institute and a contributing editor at The Nation. He has a PhD in sociology from the London School of Economics. His books include Lockdown America, The Soft Cage, and The Freedom: Shadows and Hallucinations in visa mer Occupied Iraq. visa färre

Inkluderar namnet: Christian Parenti

Foto taget av: David Shankbone, September 2007

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There is a good book here that's been subsumed by jargon-laden sentences that obscure rather than clarify. It's too bad as Parenti's thesis is a good one, the unfortunate reality of how climate change is manifesting: the mid-latitude poor countries break down while the northern rich become more authoritarian. Parenti describes a constellation of factors, local and global, current and historic - no single cause but force multipliers and repeated shocks to the system from multiple interrelated cause and effects. Recommended for the reader with a good thesaurus.… (mer)
½
 
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Stbalbach | Apr 12, 2016 |
As a U.S. historian and someone very interested in issues related to surveillance, privacy, and personal identity, I was hoping for a nice, comprehensive examination of state intrusions on personal privacy in America. Alas, I got something far less interesting and far less useful than that.

I had high hopes for the book because the first chapter uses a number of Michel Foucault's concepts (from "Discipline and Punish" and elsewhere). That's all to the good, as Foucault has some fascinating and ground-breaking things to say about the topic of privacy and state surveillance of the individual. But it goes downhill from there. A layman's discussion of Foucault as a centralizing principle for the book would have worked, but Parenti fails to return to the ideas he raises in the first chapter. At times, the various chapters seem like interesting case studies or digressions that are never strung together or connected into a meaningful whole. We get some nice info on antebellum slave passes, early attempts at collecting biometric data, and surveillance as a tool to exclude Asian immigration, but what does it all mean?

When we finally got to the last chapter, the one concerning the post-9/11 world, I thought we would finally get a really nice, solid analysis of the PATRIOT Act and the Total Information Awareness program. I wanted to see someone objectively analyze the government's efforts to increase its domestic intelligence collection capabilities and examine what the impact of these efforts is on the average citizen's privacy. After all, the author promised to do as much. We often hear a loud outcry that the PATRIOT Act, TIA, DHS, FISA, and various governmental "watchlists" are eroding US citizens' privacy and civil rights, and I wanted to see someone take that on and argue one way or the other. But no. We didn't get that here. Parenti ought to be ashamed of himself in this chapter.

What I wanted: an analysis of the PATRIOT Act.

What I got: "An analysis of the USA Patriot Act could go on for many pages. [It does not; the book discusses it for two and a half pages.] The point for our purposes is that it liberalizes the legal environment in which federal cops will be gathering and processing the routine informational detritus of the digital age." (p. 202)

Nope, sorry Parenti, that's not just a self-evident fact; a pronouncement like that has to be proven through careful examination and analysis of the facts. There are a lot of ideas in that sentence and it needs to be unpacked and explored, piece-by-piece, with evidence brought to bear to support the author's contentions. If one of my college students wrote that on a paper, I'd give them a failing grade. (Well, OK, probably not, given the rampant grade inflaton, I'd probably give them a C, but I'd sure *want* to give them an F.)

This book is sorely lacking in a thesis; heck, some connective tissues for the various chapters would have gone a long way. In the end, it's written fairly journalistically and without a well-formed argument that is discussed and proven. A comprehensive history of privacy in America needs to be written. Unfortunately, this book isn't it.

Review copyright 2008 J. Andrew Byers
… (mer)
½
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bibliorex | Jul 17, 2008 |
The Freedom is The Nation writer Christian Parenti’s first-person account of his stints reporting on the war in Iraq from the frontlines during 2003 and the first half of 2004. It’s a moving account, and covers ground I haven’t read in newspapers or magazines. That’s not to say it hasn’t been written, but I haven’t seen it.

(Full review at my blog)
 
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KingRat | Jun 17, 2008 |
From Amazon.com:
Why is criminal justice so central to American politics? Lockdown America not only documents the horrors and absurdities of militarized policing, prisons, a fortified border, and the federalization of the war on crime, it also explains the political and economic history behind the massive crackdown. This updated edition includes an afterword on the War on Terror, a meditation on surveillance and the specter of terrorism as they help reanimate the criminal justice attack. Written in vivid prose, Lockdown America will propel readers toward a deeper understanding of the links between crime and politics in a period of gathering economic crisis.… (mer)
½
 
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WayCriminalJustice | Apr 4, 2016 |

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