Solitary Confinement on Trial --An interview with law professor Angela A. Allen-Bell
administrators, african american, african americans, albert woodfox, alfreda bester, amnesty international, angela a. allen, angola, angola 3, angola prison, baton rouge, baton rouge chapter, become, bell on, black panther party, black pantherism, black panthers, burl cain, chairman dick durbin, civil rights, confinement, everette thompson, george jackson, governor jindal, hastings constitutional law quarterly, herman wallace, hugo pinell, human, human rights, hurricane katrina, inmate, international coalition, judges become visually challenged, justice become legally blind, katrina louisiana, louisiana legislative black caucus, louisiana state capitol, louisiana state penitentiary, monthly review, national action network, panthers, pastor kathleen bacon, pelican bay, pelican bay state prison, perception profiling, prison, prisons, process, prolonged, prolonged solitary, prolonged solitary confinement, prolonged solitary confinement viewed through, reassessing solitary confinement, review, robert king, safety consequences, secretary james m. le, senate judiciary committee, slidell chapter, solitary, solitary confinement, southern university, state representative patricia haynes, when king, when prison officials become judges