Immigration Detention Inc The big business of locking up migrants

Nancy Hiemstra

Book - 2025

The United States has the most extensive immigration detention system in the world, expanding from a capacity of less than 5,000 detainees per day in the 1980s to 52,000 by 2019. While the most vociferous anti-immigrant rhetoric may be attributed to Republicans, US detention infrastructure has grown exponentially regardless of the political party in power, as reports of abysmal detention conditions pile up. Nancy Hiemstra and Deirdre Conlon provide a damning exposé of the ways immigration detention generates income while those detained are starved, sickened, and exploited as a matter of routine detention operation. Drawing on over a decade of research and focusing on detention centers in New Jersey and New York, the authors map public-priv...ate financial relationships and trace how detention contracts for food, medical care, and in-facility stores are fought over to the penny. By dissecting the inner workings of immigration detention, they show a system governed by a capitalist logic that produces sickening and corrupting dependencies in communities across the US. Coming at a pivotal social and political moment, Immigration Detention Inc. makes the case for dismantling immigration detention regimes everywhere.

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  • Acknowledgements
  • List of Figures and Tables
  • Abbreviations and Acronyms
  • Introduction: Immigration Detention Inc.'s Deep Dependencies
  • 1. Probing U.S. Detention's Unhealthy Growth
  • The spread of immigration detention in the United States
  • The business of detention
  • Facilities of focus and major contractors
  • Researching detention's inner workings from the outside
  • 2. "Meatballs that smell like fecal matter": When Bad Food is the Business Model
  • Cut-throat competition in the "corrections" food industry
  • What's (not) on the plates
  • A system based on bad food, working as designed
  • 3. "Cost Containment" and Litigation: The Institutionalization of Medical Neglect
  • Issues with detention medical care
  • Competitive contracting: litigation, influence, cost over care
  • The ICE Health Services Corps and "public" health
  • Issues that add up to the institutionalization of medical neglect
  • 4. Starved for Profit: How Migrants Become Captive Consumers and Coerced Workers
  • Detention conditions that drive demand for high-cost commissaries
  • The high cost of relying on commissaries
  • Commission rates and county contracts
  • Keefe, private equity, and profiting from detention
  • Captive consumers, exploitable labor, and "voluntary" work programs
  • Saving on labor costs
  • Pushing back against the cycle of exploitation
  • 5. The Accountability Industry: Rubber-stamping Bad Care
  • National Detention Standards
  • ICE inspections
  • Accreditations for sale
  • 6. Breaking Unjust Detention Dependencies
  • Webs of dependence: Private companies
  • Webs of dependence: Local governments and communities
  • Lobbying and revolving doors
  • Breaking the webs depending on detention
  • The deceptive appeal of "Alternatives to Detention"
  • What now?
  • Afterword: Chaos and Cruelty in the First Month of the Second Trump Administration
  • Implications for "immigration detention inc."
  • Private companies continue to drive detention
  • Sorting fact from fiction in the frenzy to expanddetention and deportation
  • Fighting and ending "immigration detention inc."
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Geographers Hiemstra (Detain and Deport) and Conlon provide a revealing overview of the American business of for-profit migrant incarceration. Drawing from a wide array of sources--including interviews with lawyers and former detainees--the authors delineate the disturbing scope of the problem. The federal government pays "more than $3 billion per year to lock up... immigrants," and while some of that funding goes to municipalities that host detention centers, the vast majority goes to the private companies who run them, such as GEO Group and CoreCivic, whose combined income from ICE contracts was over $1.5 billion in 2022. The profit incentive drives such firms to provide the cheapest possible services, like spoiled food (the authors describe meatballs that smell like feces) and to deny detainees medical care. Hiemstra and Conlonn trace how this corrupt system got started under Ronald Reagan, who began incarcerating some asylum seekers and made 10,000 detention beds permanently available, a windfall for "prison corporations' army of lobbyists" who "collaborated with political representatives from places looking to host" detention centers, further "driving new policies and laws that made more immigrants detainable." The authors forcefully argue that these detention centers, which saw a dramatic increase in the number of beds available under the Biden administration, from 15,000 to 40,000, must be decommissioned. This shines an urgent spotlight on an inhumane system. (June)

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