This article draws on ethnographic research that I conducted in five British immigration removal centres from November 2009 to June 2011, and considers the challenges these institutions pose to our understanding of penal power. These centres contain a complex mix of foreign national citizens including former and current asylum seekers, those without visas, visa over-stayers and post-sentence foreign national prisoners. For many non-British offenders, a period of confinement in an immigration detention centre is now, effectively, part of their punishment. What are the implications of this dual confinement and (how) can we understand it within the intellectual framework of punishment and society? © The Author(s) 2012
Over 29,000 foreign nationals are detained yearly in British Immigration Removal Centres for undefin...
The article explores the relationship between immigration detention and criminal justice by presenti...
In the second part of his article on Scandinavian exceptionalism, John Pratt identified certain deve...
This article examines the detention and deportation of time-served foreign-national prisoners in Eng...
This collection of articles addresses the interconnections between punishment, citizenship and ident...
In this article, I examine the changing nature of punishment under conditions of mass mobility. Draw...
In this paper I draw on qualitative material from the first complete data set of the ‘Measure of the...
The use of detention for immigration purposes is a carceral trend that continues to increase across ...
The United Kingdom (UK) has taken an increasingly punitive stance towards ‘foreign criminals’ using ...
Immigration detention and deportation are being increasingly utilised in many countries as key state...
Over 29,000 foreign nationals are detained yearly in British Immigration Removal Centres (IRCs) for ...
This thesis examines the treatment and experiences of foreign national prisoners in England and Wale...
This article considers the future of punishment in a world shaped by competing and reinforcing force...
Mary Bosworth‘s research investigates immigration detentions centres in the UK. She argues that the ...
In this article we draw on research conducted in a British immigration removal centre (IRC) to explo...
Over 29,000 foreign nationals are detained yearly in British Immigration Removal Centres for undefin...
The article explores the relationship between immigration detention and criminal justice by presenti...
In the second part of his article on Scandinavian exceptionalism, John Pratt identified certain deve...
This article examines the detention and deportation of time-served foreign-national prisoners in Eng...
This collection of articles addresses the interconnections between punishment, citizenship and ident...
In this article, I examine the changing nature of punishment under conditions of mass mobility. Draw...
In this paper I draw on qualitative material from the first complete data set of the ‘Measure of the...
The use of detention for immigration purposes is a carceral trend that continues to increase across ...
The United Kingdom (UK) has taken an increasingly punitive stance towards ‘foreign criminals’ using ...
Immigration detention and deportation are being increasingly utilised in many countries as key state...
Over 29,000 foreign nationals are detained yearly in British Immigration Removal Centres (IRCs) for ...
This thesis examines the treatment and experiences of foreign national prisoners in England and Wale...
This article considers the future of punishment in a world shaped by competing and reinforcing force...
Mary Bosworth‘s research investigates immigration detentions centres in the UK. She argues that the ...
In this article we draw on research conducted in a British immigration removal centre (IRC) to explo...
Over 29,000 foreign nationals are detained yearly in British Immigration Removal Centres for undefin...
The article explores the relationship between immigration detention and criminal justice by presenti...
In the second part of his article on Scandinavian exceptionalism, John Pratt identified certain deve...