“Detention Power” asks how immigrant incarceration became a critical tool in constructing American sovereignty, and how the federal government convinced local governments, businesses, and communities to become collaborators in immigration policing. It illustrates how the U.S. immigration service built both ideological and economic relationships with municipalities, enabling the federal government to jail thousands of migrants awaiting hearings and deportations long before the advent of federal immigration detention centers in 1980. As early as 1900, the immigration service relied on an expansive system of contracts with county sheriffs to “board out” immigrants in county jails. Towns capitalized on these contracts by expanding their jails a...
This thesis is a collection of four papers that analyze interior immigration detention and carceral ...
This Article offers a new interpretation of the modern federal immigration power. At the end of the ...
The immigrant detention system in the United States is civil, rather than criminal, and therefore no...
“Detained Immigrants, Excludable Rights” analyzes how plenary power, as a form of discretionary auth...
As undocumented immigration has come to the forefront of mainstream political priorities in the last...
This dissertation provides a history of non-citizen detention and exclusion in the second half of th...
This dissertation provides a history of non-citizen detention and exclusion in the second half of th...
ington Post reported that since 2001, the number of immigrant detainees over the course of each year...
This paper studies the dynamics of detention, deportation, and the criminalization of immigrants. We...
related detention has become an established policy apparatus that counts on dedicated facilities and...
During the McCarthy era, Congress passed an obscure law authorizing detained immigrants to work for ...
ICE arrests have a direct relationship to the availability and capacity of immigration detention cen...
The operation of the Voluntary Work Program in U.S detention centers remains widely hidden from the ...
This article presents the findings of the first research study of the Institutional Hearing Program ...
Over the past two decades, the US government has expanded immigration detention to unprecedented lev...
This thesis is a collection of four papers that analyze interior immigration detention and carceral ...
This Article offers a new interpretation of the modern federal immigration power. At the end of the ...
The immigrant detention system in the United States is civil, rather than criminal, and therefore no...
“Detained Immigrants, Excludable Rights” analyzes how plenary power, as a form of discretionary auth...
As undocumented immigration has come to the forefront of mainstream political priorities in the last...
This dissertation provides a history of non-citizen detention and exclusion in the second half of th...
This dissertation provides a history of non-citizen detention and exclusion in the second half of th...
ington Post reported that since 2001, the number of immigrant detainees over the course of each year...
This paper studies the dynamics of detention, deportation, and the criminalization of immigrants. We...
related detention has become an established policy apparatus that counts on dedicated facilities and...
During the McCarthy era, Congress passed an obscure law authorizing detained immigrants to work for ...
ICE arrests have a direct relationship to the availability and capacity of immigration detention cen...
The operation of the Voluntary Work Program in U.S detention centers remains widely hidden from the ...
This article presents the findings of the first research study of the Institutional Hearing Program ...
Over the past two decades, the US government has expanded immigration detention to unprecedented lev...
This thesis is a collection of four papers that analyze interior immigration detention and carceral ...
This Article offers a new interpretation of the modern federal immigration power. At the end of the ...
The immigrant detention system in the United States is civil, rather than criminal, and therefore no...