Esther Whitfield's book examines how art produced in Guantánamo transcends cultural and linguistic divides to find common ground, reimagining empathy and resistance against political forces.
A report showed that the detainees were denied to speak to their loved ones, subjected to humiliating searches and left in isolation for prolonged periods.
a professor at the Ohio State University Moritz College of Law and author of several books on US immigration enforcement, including Welcome the Wretched. However, the people Trump is trying to ...
It would be understandable if many readers assumed that Omar El Akkad’s book of essays One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This, began with the tweet.
Excerpts from recent editorials in the United States and abroad: ___ March 3 The Washington Post on Guantanamo Bay Since President George W. Bush opened the facility in 2002, at the height of the “ ...
Hope for a truce: Secretary of State Marco Rubio of the U.S. said that a cease-fire between Russia and Ukraine could take ...
The book was given to him by the military guards ... During his two weeks at the Guantánamo Bay naval station, Uzcátegui, 27, said he was rarely let outside. Both times, he was shackled and ...
Postmaster General Louis DeJoy plans to cut 10,000 workers and billions of dollars from the U.S. Postal Service budget and he ...
Most clicked yesterday: Scientists are beginning to understand how Covid can sometimes cause invisible damage to the body.
A victim of a Winter Park hate crime, now an activist, writes, “There has never been a more important time, in modern history ...
Traveling for spring break might actually be cheaper than around upcoming holidays. Hopper’s lead economist for travel ...
“ The Invention of Immigration Exceptionalism ,” published in November by Adam Cox in the Yale Law Journal, runs 117 pages.
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