
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Despite international standards such as the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners, and the Nelson Mandela Rules, which obligate states to treat incarcerated individuals with respect for human dignity, Solitary Watch estimates that 120,000 people in the US are living in solitary confinement. These individuals are isolated in small, closed cells with no meaningful human contact for 22-24 hours per day.
We invite you to check out other episodes of Human Rights Chat on Apple, Spotify, Google, or Soundcloud as well as the New Tactics library of more than 260 innovative human rights tactics for change at newtactics.org.
By New Tactics in Human RightsDespite international standards such as the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners, and the Nelson Mandela Rules, which obligate states to treat incarcerated individuals with respect for human dignity, Solitary Watch estimates that 120,000 people in the US are living in solitary confinement. These individuals are isolated in small, closed cells with no meaningful human contact for 22-24 hours per day.
We invite you to check out other episodes of Human Rights Chat on Apple, Spotify, Google, or Soundcloud as well as the New Tactics library of more than 260 innovative human rights tactics for change at newtactics.org.