This paper considers the treatment of ‘marriages of convenience’ or ‘sham marriages’ in UK immigration law. Such measures inevitably involve a degree of moral and cultural gate-keeping as decision-makers are obliged to measure the alleged sham marriage against the template of a ‘genuine’ relationship. However, the paper argues that the function of such measures has often been to enhance the ability to exclude or remove unwanted immigrants
This article uses Finch's (2007) idea of 'display' to analyse the process in which autobiographical ...
This paper argues that a two-tier system has evolved dividing intra-UK/EU marriages from extra-UK/EU...
The Utrecht Law Review is an open access, peer-reviewed journal. Articles published in the Utrecht L...
In this chapter we deconstruct the moral panic around ‘sham marriage’—otherwise known as marriages o...
This chapter presents the current discourse on ‘sham marriage’ – marriages of convenience for immigr...
Marriage migration is a controversial and problematic issue in the UK as elsewhere in Europe. This t...
This paper examines discourses of ‘sham marriage’ as a technology of everyday bordering in the UK. W...
This chapter analyses the evolution of regulation in the UK of transnational marriages since they fi...
This thesis is concerned with the British state's response to marriage immigration after 1962. Admis...
This is the author pre-print version. The final version is available from Hart Publishing via the li...
The tension between the right to family reunification as laid down in European Directives and Member...
In a changing and increasingly globalized world, in which migration is on the rise, more and more fr...
In both policy and academic debates in Britain, as elsewhere in Europe, concern is increasingly expr...
Spouses form the largest single category of migrant settlement in the UK, but research and policy ma...
Spouses form the largest single category of migrant settlement in the UK, but research and policy ma...
This article uses Finch's (2007) idea of 'display' to analyse the process in which autobiographical ...
This paper argues that a two-tier system has evolved dividing intra-UK/EU marriages from extra-UK/EU...
The Utrecht Law Review is an open access, peer-reviewed journal. Articles published in the Utrecht L...
In this chapter we deconstruct the moral panic around ‘sham marriage’—otherwise known as marriages o...
This chapter presents the current discourse on ‘sham marriage’ – marriages of convenience for immigr...
Marriage migration is a controversial and problematic issue in the UK as elsewhere in Europe. This t...
This paper examines discourses of ‘sham marriage’ as a technology of everyday bordering in the UK. W...
This chapter analyses the evolution of regulation in the UK of transnational marriages since they fi...
This thesis is concerned with the British state's response to marriage immigration after 1962. Admis...
This is the author pre-print version. The final version is available from Hart Publishing via the li...
The tension between the right to family reunification as laid down in European Directives and Member...
In a changing and increasingly globalized world, in which migration is on the rise, more and more fr...
In both policy and academic debates in Britain, as elsewhere in Europe, concern is increasingly expr...
Spouses form the largest single category of migrant settlement in the UK, but research and policy ma...
Spouses form the largest single category of migrant settlement in the UK, but research and policy ma...
This article uses Finch's (2007) idea of 'display' to analyse the process in which autobiographical ...
This paper argues that a two-tier system has evolved dividing intra-UK/EU marriages from extra-UK/EU...
The Utrecht Law Review is an open access, peer-reviewed journal. Articles published in the Utrecht L...