Kniha Custodial Killings Fazal Abubakkar Esaf

Custodial Killings

Jazyk: Angličtina
Vazba: Brožovaná
Dostupnost: Skladem u dodavatele
Odesíláme za 14-21 dnů
939
Custody represents one of the greatest powers a state can exercise over an individual. When a person...

Informace o knize

Jazyk
Angličtina
Vazba
Kniha - Brožovaná
Vydáno
2026
Stránek
990
EAN
9798235632134
Enbook ID
53239956
Hmotnost
1124
Rozměry
140 x 216 x 56

Kompletní popis

Custody represents one of the greatest powers a state can exercise over an individual. When a person is arrested, detained, or confined, they enter an environment where their freedom depends almost entirely on institutions that hold authority over them.

With this power comes an extraordinary responsibility.

Custodial death is among the most serious failures of governance because the person who loses their life was already under the protection and control of the state. Whether caused by deliberate violence, negligence, denial of medical care, unlawful procedures, or institutional failure, every custodial death raises fundamental questions about justice, accountability, and the value placed on human life.

This book examines custodial killings through a global framework. It explores not only how deaths occur inside systems of detention, but also what happens afterward: how evidence is preserved, how families seek truth, how institutions respond, how investigations succeed or fail, and how societies can prevent future tragedies.

The purpose of this work is not merely to document suffering. It is to examine solutions.

Accountability requires more than punishment after a tragedy. It requires transparent investigations, independent oversight, ethical policing, effective legal remedies, responsible public institutions, and a culture that recognizes every detained person as a human being with rights.

The chapters that follow explore the journey from custody to accountability-from the moment state power is exercised over an individual to the broader search for justice, reform, and dignity.

A society committed to justice must ask difficult questions:
Who protects those who cannot protect themselves?
Who investigates those who hold power?
And how can institutions earn public trust when that trust has been broken?

The answers define the strength of democracy, the rule of law, and humanity itself.