This paper examines a series of visual representations of illegalized migration in order to consider how they respond to the presence of labor within global systems of economic exchange. Through an examination of the aesthetic qualities of these images it suggests that the worker’s body is repeatedly represented as a kind of specter or ghost. The paper considers how far this depiction is a product of the technical limitations on imaging migrants as they covertly pass across national borders and also how far it is a result of the bureaucratic restriction upon the attempts to record such images. It concludes that while these images partly demonstrate the forms of power that are exercised in policing the border they also question some of the k...
This contribution aims at investigating the relationship between the production of images on the sla...
This essay examines several contemporary articulations of the figure of the migrant, exploring both ...
Close your eyes for a moment and focus on the image that emerges when you hear the word ‘refugee’. M...
This paper unpacks the contested inter-connections between neoliberal work and welfare regimes, asyl...
Although labor exploitation has been criminalized as human trafficking, also known as labor traffick...
This dissertation examines the cultural condition of migrant "illegality" and "temporariness" refrac...
This thesis examines how labour associated with the reproductive sphere—labour historically consigne...
The authors acknowledge the ESRC Centre for Population Change RES 62528001 for sponsoring this resea...
The article presents haptic visuality as a counterpoint to the stragiht line in order to reframe rep...
This article deepens our understanding of agency in the context of (in)securitized migration by enga...
This article examines the increasing use of technologies of surveillance and identification by both ...
In this article, we approach the news photojournalism of the 2015 European migration ‘crisis’ as a p...
Unauthorized workers are foundational to neoliberal production regimes in the United States. The eco...
This paper explores the production of ‘ideal’ migrant workers by recruitment agencies in the context...
The turnover of labour and its significance for workers and employers has usually been considered at...
This contribution aims at investigating the relationship between the production of images on the sla...
This essay examines several contemporary articulations of the figure of the migrant, exploring both ...
Close your eyes for a moment and focus on the image that emerges when you hear the word ‘refugee’. M...
This paper unpacks the contested inter-connections between neoliberal work and welfare regimes, asyl...
Although labor exploitation has been criminalized as human trafficking, also known as labor traffick...
This dissertation examines the cultural condition of migrant "illegality" and "temporariness" refrac...
This thesis examines how labour associated with the reproductive sphere—labour historically consigne...
The authors acknowledge the ESRC Centre for Population Change RES 62528001 for sponsoring this resea...
The article presents haptic visuality as a counterpoint to the stragiht line in order to reframe rep...
This article deepens our understanding of agency in the context of (in)securitized migration by enga...
This article examines the increasing use of technologies of surveillance and identification by both ...
In this article, we approach the news photojournalism of the 2015 European migration ‘crisis’ as a p...
Unauthorized workers are foundational to neoliberal production regimes in the United States. The eco...
This paper explores the production of ‘ideal’ migrant workers by recruitment agencies in the context...
The turnover of labour and its significance for workers and employers has usually been considered at...
This contribution aims at investigating the relationship between the production of images on the sla...
This essay examines several contemporary articulations of the figure of the migrant, exploring both ...
Close your eyes for a moment and focus on the image that emerges when you hear the word ‘refugee’. M...