This paper examines discourses of ‘sham marriage’ as a technology of everyday bordering in the UK. We argue that everyday bordering needs to be seen as a growing hegemonic political project of belonging experienced in complex ways as differently situated individuals negotiate proliferating internal and external borders. We explore how the process of marriage registration, especially when it concerns citizens of ex-Empire states marrying British or EEA citizens, has been transformed, under evolving UK Immigration Acts, from a celebration into a security interrogation. The discourses and practices associated with ‘sham marriage’ have become important elements in bordering control, which has become a major technology of managing diversity and ...
In this chapter we deconstruct the moral panic around ‘sham marriage’—otherwise known as marriages o...
International migration continues to rise, resulting in the reification of (and resistance to) sover...
The UK continues to see increasingly restrictive and repressive immigration policies aiming to secur...
This paper examines discourses of ‘sham marriage’ as a technology of everyday bordering in the UK. W...
The paper argues that everyday bordering has become a major technology of control of both social div...
The paper argues that everyday bordering has become a major technology of control of both social div...
Bordering intimacy is a study of how borders and dominant forms of intimacy, such as family, are cen...
This paper argues that a two-tier system has evolved dividing intra-UK/EU marriages from extra-UK/EU...
This special issue of Political Geography marks a contribution to the fields of feminist geopolitics...
This chapter analyses the evolution of regulation in the UK of transnational marriages since they fi...
This chapter argues that healthcare is not only a key emerging site of everyday bordering in the UK,...
This is the author pre-print version. The final version is available from Hart Publishing via the li...
Building on the notion of intersectional borderings, this book examines how discourses and policies ...
The Utrecht Law Review is an open access, peer-reviewed journal. Articles published in the Utrecht L...
This article introduces the notion of appropriation in debates on how to account for migrants’ capac...
In this chapter we deconstruct the moral panic around ‘sham marriage’—otherwise known as marriages o...
International migration continues to rise, resulting in the reification of (and resistance to) sover...
The UK continues to see increasingly restrictive and repressive immigration policies aiming to secur...
This paper examines discourses of ‘sham marriage’ as a technology of everyday bordering in the UK. W...
The paper argues that everyday bordering has become a major technology of control of both social div...
The paper argues that everyday bordering has become a major technology of control of both social div...
Bordering intimacy is a study of how borders and dominant forms of intimacy, such as family, are cen...
This paper argues that a two-tier system has evolved dividing intra-UK/EU marriages from extra-UK/EU...
This special issue of Political Geography marks a contribution to the fields of feminist geopolitics...
This chapter analyses the evolution of regulation in the UK of transnational marriages since they fi...
This chapter argues that healthcare is not only a key emerging site of everyday bordering in the UK,...
This is the author pre-print version. The final version is available from Hart Publishing via the li...
Building on the notion of intersectional borderings, this book examines how discourses and policies ...
The Utrecht Law Review is an open access, peer-reviewed journal. Articles published in the Utrecht L...
This article introduces the notion of appropriation in debates on how to account for migrants’ capac...
In this chapter we deconstruct the moral panic around ‘sham marriage’—otherwise known as marriages o...
International migration continues to rise, resulting in the reification of (and resistance to) sover...
The UK continues to see increasingly restrictive and repressive immigration policies aiming to secur...