From Pelican Bay to Palestine: The Legal Normalization of Force-Feeding Hunger-Strikers

Azadeh Shahshahani, P. A. Patel
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Hunger-strikes present a challenge to state authority and abuse from powerless individuals with limited access to various forms of protest and speech—those in detention. For as long as hunger-strikes have occurred throughout history, governments have force-fed strikers out of a stated obligation to preserve life. Some of the earliest known hunger-strikers, British suffragettes, were force-fed and even died as a result of these invasive procedures during the second half of the 19th century. This Article examines the rationale and necessity behind hunger strikes for imprisoned individuals, the prevailing issues behind force-feeding, the international public response to force-feeding, and the legal normalization of the practice despite public sentiment and condemnation from medical associations. The Article will examine these issues through the lens of two governments that have continued to endorse force-feeding: the United States and Israel. This examination will show that the legal normalization of force-feeding is repressive and runs afoul of international human rights principles and law.
从鹈鹕湾到巴勒斯坦:强制喂食绝食者的法律正常化
绝食抗议是对国家权威的挑战,也是对无权无势的个人的虐待,这些人在各种形式的抗议和言论中受到限制。在历史上,只要绝食抗议时有发生,政府就会强迫罢工者放弃保护生命的既定义务。在19世纪下半叶,一些已知最早的绝食者,英国的女权主义者,因为这些侵入性的手术而被强迫喂食,甚至死亡。本文探讨了被监禁者绝食抗议背后的理由和必要性,强迫喂食背后的普遍问题,国际公众对强迫喂食的反应,以及尽管公众情绪和医学协会的谴责,这种做法的法律正常化。本文将通过美国和以色列这两个继续支持强迫喂养的政府的视角来审视这些问题。这项审查将表明,强迫喂食的法律正常化是压制性的,违反了国际人权原则和法律。
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