This collection of articles addresses the interconnections between punishment, citizenship and identity. As immigration and crime control measures have intersected, prisons in a number of countries have ended up housing a growing population of foreign-national offenders and immigration detainees. It is somewhat surprising that criminologists have traditionally spent so little time exploring the relationship between the prison and national identity. With notable exceptions, scholars almost universally treat the prison as an institution bounded by and within the nationstate. This special issue seeks to disrupt that convention of prison studies and criminology more broadly. Focusing on the incarceration of foreign-nationals in diverse contexts...
Immigration Policy in the Age of Punishment takes a critical, interdisciplinary, and transnational l...
An increase in the mobility of persons across national borders coincides with an overrepresentation ...
This article tackles the issue of penitentiary tutors’ work with foreign prisoners. The analysis pro...
This collection of articles addresses the interconnections between punishment, citizenship and ident...
This article draws on ethnographic research that I conducted in five British immigration removal cen...
This thesis examines the treatment and experiences of foreign national prisoners in England and Wale...
In Portugal, the proportion of foreign nationals among women inmates rose significantly in the firs...
This article considers the future of punishment in a world shaped by competing and reinforcing force...
The United Kingdom (UK) has taken an increasingly punitive stance towards ‘foreign criminals’ using ...
The use of detention for immigration purposes is a carceral trend that continues to increase across ...
In this article, I examine the changing nature of punishment under conditions of mass mobility. Draw...
Contra the notion of prisons as discrete, ‘hidden’ spaces, contemporary research has stressed a rang...
My DPhil thesis examines a set of outsourced, all-foreign prisons operated by the US Federal Bureau ...
This article deals with the question of citizenship among prisoners within a framework that sees the...
In the second part of his article on Scandinavian exceptionalism, John Pratt identified certain deve...
Immigration Policy in the Age of Punishment takes a critical, interdisciplinary, and transnational l...
An increase in the mobility of persons across national borders coincides with an overrepresentation ...
This article tackles the issue of penitentiary tutors’ work with foreign prisoners. The analysis pro...
This collection of articles addresses the interconnections between punishment, citizenship and ident...
This article draws on ethnographic research that I conducted in five British immigration removal cen...
This thesis examines the treatment and experiences of foreign national prisoners in England and Wale...
In Portugal, the proportion of foreign nationals among women inmates rose significantly in the firs...
This article considers the future of punishment in a world shaped by competing and reinforcing force...
The United Kingdom (UK) has taken an increasingly punitive stance towards ‘foreign criminals’ using ...
The use of detention for immigration purposes is a carceral trend that continues to increase across ...
In this article, I examine the changing nature of punishment under conditions of mass mobility. Draw...
Contra the notion of prisons as discrete, ‘hidden’ spaces, contemporary research has stressed a rang...
My DPhil thesis examines a set of outsourced, all-foreign prisons operated by the US Federal Bureau ...
This article deals with the question of citizenship among prisoners within a framework that sees the...
In the second part of his article on Scandinavian exceptionalism, John Pratt identified certain deve...
Immigration Policy in the Age of Punishment takes a critical, interdisciplinary, and transnational l...
An increase in the mobility of persons across national borders coincides with an overrepresentation ...
This article tackles the issue of penitentiary tutors’ work with foreign prisoners. The analysis pro...