Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Other: An Asian & Pacific Islander Prisoners’ Anthology


Below is my new review that appears in the November/December issue of
ColorLines Magazine.

Other: An Asian & Pacific Islander Prisoners’ Anthology (AK Press) is
an impressive book featuring writing and art by 22 people imprisoned
in the U.S. The publisher, the Asian Prisoner Support Committee, writes
that it “works with API (Asian and Pacific Islander) prisoners to educate
the broader community about the growing number of APIs in the U.S. being
imprisoned, detained and deported.”

Other contributes significantly to both prison-abolitionist and ethnic-studies
literature, each of which has badly neglected this issue. In the preface, journalist
Helen Zia argues that the resulting invisibility of API prisoners extends to the
“mainstream media and ethnic media alike,” where they essentially “do not exist.”
While the arrest rate among API youth is increasing, APIs still do have a lower
arrest and incarceration rate than other racial groups; however, in 2004, the
Services and Advocacy for Asian Youth Consortium in San Francisco reported that the
API conviction rate is 28 percent higher than other racial groups.

The plight of API prisoners who were legal residents with green cards at the time of
their arrest is illustrated by the story of coeditor Eddy Zheng. When granted parole
in March 2005, Zheng was ordered deported and was immediately transferred to
immigration detention. He promptly appealed the deportation order but was held in
detention until February 2007, when he was released after an outpouring of public
support. As of this writing, his deportation appeal was pending at the Ninth Circuit
Court.

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