Captive labour: asylum seekers, migrants and employment in UK immigration removal centres JON BURNETT and FIDELIS CHEBE Abstract: The steady growth in the use of immigration detention under the UK’s New Labour government has been, it is argued here, mirrored by the concurrent development of a new form of labour market within immigration removal centres (IRCs). This market has grown out of the long history of what some label as exploitative employment practices used amongst the wider prison population. It relies upon a subtle form of coercion which ensures compliance and discipline and, in so doing, provides a cheap and easily exploitable pool of labour for private sector companies. The research for this article draws on findings from prison...
At the peak of the migration crisis in Europe in 2015, the United Kingdom (UK) received 32,733 asylu...
The operation of the Voluntary Work Program in U.S detention centers remains widely hidden from the ...
This report responds to rising interest amongst policy makers and the media in the phenomenon of ill...
The steady growth in the use of immigration detention under the UK's New Labour government has been ...
The vast majority of asylum seekers and irregular migrants in Britain are forbidden from working, ho...
This paper focuses on labour within immigration detention in the United Kingdom, offering an origina...
In this chapter, we wish to advance the knowledge of the workings of Britain’s hostile border regime...
The topic of forced labour is receiving a growing amount of political and policy attention across th...
In this paper I argue that the transitional controls placed upon access to the UK labour market for ...
Immigration detention and deportation are being increasingly utilised in many countries as key state...
This paper: investigates the links between immigration status and migrants’ vulnerability to forced ...
This article examines the detention and deportation of time-served foreign-national prisoners in Eng...
Detention centres and return programmes are increasingly important instruments of border control ac...
Mary Bosworth‘s research investigates immigration detentions centres in the UK. She argues that the ...
The movements of peoples across the world are causing grave concern for politicians, government agen...
At the peak of the migration crisis in Europe in 2015, the United Kingdom (UK) received 32,733 asylu...
The operation of the Voluntary Work Program in U.S detention centers remains widely hidden from the ...
This report responds to rising interest amongst policy makers and the media in the phenomenon of ill...
The steady growth in the use of immigration detention under the UK's New Labour government has been ...
The vast majority of asylum seekers and irregular migrants in Britain are forbidden from working, ho...
This paper focuses on labour within immigration detention in the United Kingdom, offering an origina...
In this chapter, we wish to advance the knowledge of the workings of Britain’s hostile border regime...
The topic of forced labour is receiving a growing amount of political and policy attention across th...
In this paper I argue that the transitional controls placed upon access to the UK labour market for ...
Immigration detention and deportation are being increasingly utilised in many countries as key state...
This paper: investigates the links between immigration status and migrants’ vulnerability to forced ...
This article examines the detention and deportation of time-served foreign-national prisoners in Eng...
Detention centres and return programmes are increasingly important instruments of border control ac...
Mary Bosworth‘s research investigates immigration detentions centres in the UK. She argues that the ...
The movements of peoples across the world are causing grave concern for politicians, government agen...
At the peak of the migration crisis in Europe in 2015, the United Kingdom (UK) received 32,733 asylu...
The operation of the Voluntary Work Program in U.S detention centers remains widely hidden from the ...
This report responds to rising interest amongst policy makers and the media in the phenomenon of ill...