“…Furthermore, research in criminology (Logan et al., 2017; Shalev, 2013), law (Lobel, 2008; Schlanger, 2020), and ‘punishment and society’ (Franco et al., 2020; Reiter, 2016), problematises the application of administrative power to normalise the exceptional through routinised/bureaucratised solitary confinement decision-making (Reiter, 2016; Rhodes, 2009; Shalev, 2013). Prison officials’ discretion had been criticised as largely hidden, generic, arbitrary, racially-biased, and imposed through perfunctory discretionary hearings that lack ‘external oversight’ (Coppola, 2019; Franco et al., 2020; Reiter et al., 2020: 56; Schlanger, 2020; Shalev, 2013). Scholars also highlight the ongoing U.S. constitutional courts’ reluctance to ‘second-guess’ prison officials’ discretion, even where solitary confinement posed a risk of very significant harm to the prisoner (Coppola, 2019; Haney and Lynch, 1997; Schlanger, 2020).…”