This article examines the detention and deportation of time-served foreign-national prisoners in England and Wales. Drawing on penal policy and interviews with staff and detainees in prisons and immigration removal centres, it critically assesses the growing interdependence of the UK Border Agency and HM Prison Service. While the removal of failed asylum seekers has generated widespread concern and activism, the deportation of foreign ex-prisoners is rarely noted. The foreign offender, it seems, has few advocates. For anyone interested in immigration control, however, the treatment of foreign-national prisoners, both during and after their sentence, is compelling. On the one hand, they reveal a wider and deeper border, one that includes pen...
Immigration detention and deportation are being increasingly utilised in many countries as key state...
Mary Bosworth‘s research investigates immigration detentions centres in the UK. She argues that the ...
This article analyses the recent expansion of immigration offences in Britain. Drawing on criminal l...
At the end of March 2015 there were 10,481 foreign nationals (defined as non-UK passport holders) he...
This article draws on ethnographic research that I conducted in five British immigration removal cen...
At the end of March 2015 there were 10,481 foreign nationals (defined as non-UK passport holders) he...
The United Kingdom (UK) has taken an increasingly punitive stance towards ‘foreign criminals’ using ...
The United Kingdom (UK) has taken an increasingly punitive stance towards ‘foreign criminals’ using ...
In recent years, the prospect of deportation after sentence has become an almost inevitable part of ...
As at 30 September 2013 13 per cent of the prison population in England and Wales were foreign nati...
Irish prisoners are one of the oldest minority groups and one of the most represented foreign nation...
Irish prisoners are one of the oldest minority groups and one of the most represented foreign nation...
Irish prisoners are one of the oldest minority groups and one of the most represented foreign nation...
Irish prisoners are one of the oldest minority groups and one of the most represented foreign nation...
There is a long tradition of blaming foreigners for crime problems in England and Wales. The contemp...
Immigration detention and deportation are being increasingly utilised in many countries as key state...
Mary Bosworth‘s research investigates immigration detentions centres in the UK. She argues that the ...
This article analyses the recent expansion of immigration offences in Britain. Drawing on criminal l...
At the end of March 2015 there were 10,481 foreign nationals (defined as non-UK passport holders) he...
This article draws on ethnographic research that I conducted in five British immigration removal cen...
At the end of March 2015 there were 10,481 foreign nationals (defined as non-UK passport holders) he...
The United Kingdom (UK) has taken an increasingly punitive stance towards ‘foreign criminals’ using ...
The United Kingdom (UK) has taken an increasingly punitive stance towards ‘foreign criminals’ using ...
In recent years, the prospect of deportation after sentence has become an almost inevitable part of ...
As at 30 September 2013 13 per cent of the prison population in England and Wales were foreign nati...
Irish prisoners are one of the oldest minority groups and one of the most represented foreign nation...
Irish prisoners are one of the oldest minority groups and one of the most represented foreign nation...
Irish prisoners are one of the oldest minority groups and one of the most represented foreign nation...
Irish prisoners are one of the oldest minority groups and one of the most represented foreign nation...
There is a long tradition of blaming foreigners for crime problems in England and Wales. The contemp...
Immigration detention and deportation are being increasingly utilised in many countries as key state...
Mary Bosworth‘s research investigates immigration detentions centres in the UK. She argues that the ...
This article analyses the recent expansion of immigration offences in Britain. Drawing on criminal l...