In this excerpt from his interview for The Exile Nation Project, Parenti describes what has changed in the twelve years since the publication of his seminal work on police and prisons, Lockdown America.
This complete interview with Christian Parenti is #2 of 100 in The Exile Nation Project's archive and can be found on Vimeo.
CHRISTIAN PARENTI
In 1999, at only 30 years of age, award-winning investigative journalist Christian Parenti wrote one of the seminal works on the American correctional system, Lockdown America: Police & Prisons in The Age of Crisis. (2000, Verso).
Over a dozen years later it remains one of the most honest and comprehensive examinations of the American criminal justice system, while Parenti himself remains an outspoken critic of the "system of repression" known as American Mass Incarceration
Christian Parenti is also the author of The Soft Cage: Surveillance in America from Slavery to the War on Terror (2004, Basic Books). He is a contributing editor at The Nation and a visiting scholar at the Center for Place, Culture and Politics, at the CUNY Grad Center. He has reported extensively from Afghanistan, Iraq and various parts of Africa, Asia, and Latin America. His work has appeared in Fortune, The Washington Post, The New York Times, London Review of Books, Mother Jones and Playboy.
The most recent of his three books is, The Freedom: Shadows and Hallucinations in Occupied Iraq. He has a PhD in sociology from the London School of Economics, has held fellowships from OSI, RBF and the Ford Foundation; and has won numerous awards, including the 2009 Lange-Tailor Prize and Best Magazine Writing 2008 from the Society for Professional Journalists.
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Produced & Directed by Charles Shaw
Edited by Charles Shaw & Brodie Sullivan
Motion Graphics & Music by Brodie Sullivan
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