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Stolen
Youth: The Politics of Israel's Detention of Palestinian Children
by Catherine Cook, Adam Hanieh, Adah Kay
Paperback: 200 pages
Publisher: Pluto Press; (March 2004)
Stolen Youth
Stolen Youth is the first book to explore Israel's incarceration of
Palestinian children. Based on first-hand information from
international human rights groups and NGO workers in the West Bank and
Gaza Strip, it also features interviews with children who have been
imprisoned. The result
is a disturbing and often shocking account of the abuses that are
being carried out by Israel, and that have been widely documented by
human rights groups such as Amnesty, but yet have never been addressed
by the international community.
The book presents a critical analysis of the international legal
framework and the UN system, arguing that a major failure of these
instuitutions is their appeal to neutrality while ignoring the reality
of power. The book attempts to address the inadequacy of these
institutions by placing the issue of Palestinian child prisoners
within the framework of Israeli strategy and the overall system of
control.
The book is divided into three main sections:
the first chapters
introduce the major issues, and propose a framework for understanding
Israel's policy towards Palestinian detainees, particularly children.
The second section examines the actual experience of children from the
moment of arrest until their release from prison based on hundreds of
affidavits collected from children released from prison.
The final section of
the book analyses in detail the reasons underlying Israel's
incarceration of children and the impact on Palestinian society.
It outlines Israel's system of institutionalized discrimination and
state torture, challenges the legitimacy of Israel's 'security'
argument, and argues that Israel's treatment of Palestinian detainees
forms one pillar of a policy designed to quash resistance to the
occupation.
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