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Make way
for inside voices, make way for jailhouse lawyers. Even those of
us who have daily contact with prisoners and prisons will never
understand the full extent of the dehumanising process that
takes place behind those walls. The daily abuses of power. The
daily humiliations. The powerlessness to make one's voice heard
and believed. This book brings us closer to this understanding.
Everybody should read it. — Flo Krause, barrister
working with UK jailhouse lawyers
“When you
find someone who, like Mumia, makes it his business to learn the
law and put their finger on the often blatant dishonesty and
bias of the courts and judges, then you have an outstanding text
book. This is such a book. — Ian Macdonald QC
Jailhouse
Lawyers
is not a collection of legal anecdotes, a compendium of
courtroom gloating, but a rare glimpse into the motives and
struggles of the individual prisoners who refuse to surrender to
the State which is attempting to crush them.
Shorn of
worldly honours and bereft of any social status, and squeezing
the most benefit from the most meagre resources jailhouse
lawyers are a new breed of legal gladiators. They are an
increasing force in changing the penal landscape of the nation
that incarcerates more people than any other.
Mumia and the
American experience illuminate what is possible for jailhouse
lawyers in Britain, who are also turning to the law to defend
themselves against the increasingly oppressive security
paradigm.
They do so
knowing the personal risks and with little support, least of all
from groups which dress themselves in the clothing of prison
reform, accept honours and silver; and are enamoured with
gracing the courtyards of power and publicity.
Jailhouse
lawyers foment hope for change, which everywhere rests in the
hands of prisoners. — Ben Gunn, jailhouse lawyer, in
prison for 30 years
Jailhouse
Lawyers is a must read for prisoners generally, and
jailhouse lawyers in particular. Prison reform groups should
also take the time to read it, as should any lawyer engaged in
criminal and prison law. I still recall receiving a letter from
a mother who said the courts refused her son’s appeal. My advice
led to a second appeal, and his conviction for murdering a
police sergeant was quashed. The government may cut legal aid to
prevent qualified lawyers from representing prisoners. But
nothing will stop jailhouse lawyers taking on other prisoners’
cases for free. — John Hirst, former jailhouse lawyer
This book
tells of a courageous struggle for individual and collective
justice and continues in the grand tradition of prison writing,
the call from the cell to all of us outside to question
everything about the criminal justice system, here and in the
United States. — Frances Crook, Howard League for
Penal Reform
Sometimes
when I have lost a case I tell a client that ‘they cannot
imprison your mind.’ -- easy for a lawyer to say, but incredibly
difficult to live it in a degrading penal institution. Mumia
Abu-Jamal’s mind and spirit have remained free through nearly
thirty years of unjust imprisonment. In this book he writes of
the achievement of men and women who through their legal
ingenuity have transformed the lives of thousands. All this in
the context of a brilliant analysis of the nature of law and the
role of lawyers as instruments of injustice in the United
States. Human rights lawyers everywhere can learn from this
book. — Lord Anthony Gifford QC, UK Barrister and
Jamaican Attorney
The first
importance of Jailhouse Lawyers is that it records,
reviews and analyses the extremely important creative,
innovative political work that has been ongoing for many years
in the United States, but which had never been documented
before.
It is a
merciless critique of the shortcomings of traditional lawyers.
It can now become an international learning tool of particular
importance in the Caribbean. — Richard Small, civil
rights attorney, Jamaica
Jailhouse
Lawyers
is a must-read for everyone connected in any fashion to the
criminal justice system. The book explores the ongoing legal
attack by underground lawyers on an unfair legal system. —
Tony Serra, US
civil
rights attorney |
They just
cannot stop Mumia. He is passionate and relentless,
intellectual and revolutionary. This brother is a champion of
law in an institution that is lawless. He has written another
book that shall go down in history.
We don’t have
the death penalty in Britain but we do have prisoners whose
lives are stolen. This book should be distributed throughout
the prisons. — Benjamin Zephaniah, ex-prisoner, poet
These lives
of resistance and what they accomplish inside are absent from
almost every account of prisons, official and unofficial. Who
would know that in Yarl’s Wood Removal Centre, a prison in all
but name, African women who have survived rape and genocide are
organising legal training and submitting judicial reviews to
stop deportations?
Most prison
reformers don’t seem to have noticed, and certainly haven’t
taken their lead from, this prison reform movement. Spelling
out what prisoners make happen undermines the cult of
professionalism and the mystique of the superior professional
mind.
This book
fortifies those of us in Europe against any future calls for the
death penalty to be reinstated by telling the truth about death
row and its distinguished inhabitants. — Legal Action for
Women
US prisoners
serving a sentence of life without the possibility of parole
have no right to legal aid to challenge his conviction. More
often than not, he must rely on a ‘jailhouse lawyer’, a fellow
prisoner. Jailhouse Lawyers tells us the stories of these
gallant prisoners who do battle with the authorities,
challenging the abuse of their peers, often provoking
recriminations from the guards they sue.
This book helps to highlight the truth. — Clive
Stafford Smith, Founder of Reprieve
Mumia is a
dramatic example of how the criminal justice system can be
brought to bear on someone who is African American, articulate,
and involved in change in society. The system is threatened by
someone like Mumia. A voice as strong and as truthful as his—the
repression against him is intensified. — Sister Helen Prejean,
author Dead Man Walking
Mumia
Abu-Jamal's 28 years on death row for a murder he did not commit
would have turned almost anyone else into an embittered,
defeated man. Instead, he has remained what he always was, "the
voice of the voiceless," Jailhouse Lawyers opens a
tightly shut door into the operations of the U.S. penal system
by chronicling the exploits of dozens of jailhouse lawyers –
both men and women. Their story is a story never before told. —
J. Patrick O'Connor, author of “The framing of Mumia
Abu-Jamal”
Abu-Jamal
reminds the reader of the more than two million Americans behind
bars in similar situations to himself, and that those in the
free world have a responsibility to those trapped 'in the bowels
of the slave ship, in the hidden dank dungeons of America.' —
Jaisal Noor, The Indypendent
The first of its kind, Mumia has written a book that is
revolutionary because it breaks new ground, enlightening us
about the courageous, unorthodox resistance to the system (and
its inherent injustices) posed by jailhouse lawyers. — Kiilu
Nyasha, ZNet
Mumia
Abu-Jamal has once more enlightened us, he has once more offered
us new ways of thinking about law, democracy, and power. He
allows us to reflect upon the fact that transformational
possibilities often emerge where we least expect them. —
Angela Y. Davis, from the Foreword
Jailhouse
Lawyers
enables the public to glimpse a crucial aspect of the growing
movement against the prison-industrial complex hidden by high
walls and steel doors, one which Mumia knows inside out.
Mumia
uncovers what extraordinary lives of resistance some prisoners
have created from need, imagination, and determination. Drawing
on his experience, compassion, and extensive correspondence, he
sketches portraits of great jailhouse lawyers focussed on
beating justice out of the system. Often spurred by the need to
repair the damage to their own cases inflicted by lazy and
uncaring “street lawyers,” Mumia describes how jailhouse lawyers
learn the law, the precedents, the jargon, and mount an often
formidable legal defense. In the process they carve out a life
for themselves, a victory in itself. — Selma James,
from the Introduction to the UK Edition |