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Chaotic Economies of Confinement: Profit, Dependency, and Extraction in U.S. Immigration Detention

Disrupting the financial logics of U.S. detention growth

Chaotic Economies of Confinement: Profit, Dependency, and Extraction in U.S. Immigration Detention 
Disrupting the financial logics of U.S. detention growth

Thursday, November 20, 2025 | 4 - 6pm | AOK Library Gallery

Associate Professor
Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
Stony Brook University

Abstract:
Drawing on two decades of research, this presentation examines how the U.S. detention system operates through—and benefits from—chaos, producing disordered geographies that obscure responsibility and extend confinement. It shows how this manufactured disorder enables and conceals the system's core profit-making logics, where expansion is driven less by policy effectiveness than by opportunities for revenue generation. Companies providing food, medical care, commissary goods, and oversight mechanisms generate income through confinement, creating webs of economic dependency that blur public and private boundaries. The presentation also considers how recent shifts in immigration enforcement are fueling explosive growth in immigrant confinement and concludes by outlining strategies to cut through the chaos and disrupt the financial logics sustaining detention's expansion across the United States

Hosted by the Department of Geography and Environmental Systems.   See original event post.  

Posted: November 18, 2025, 11:03 AM

Professional photo of woman with long hair and glasses, large necklace, and gray sweater.