This article critically examines techniques employed by the Australian state to expand its control of refugees and asylum seekers living in Australia. In particular, it analyses the operation of Australia’s unique Asylum Seeker Code of Behaviour, which asylum seekers who arrive by boat must sign in order to be released from mandatory immigration detention, with reference to an original dataset of allegations made under the Code. We argue that the Code and the regime of visa cancellation and re-detention powers of which it forms a part are manifestations of what Beckett and Murakawa call the ‘shadow carceral state’, whereby punitive state power is extended beyond prison walls through the blurring of civil, administrative and criminal legal a...
In late 2001, the Australian government put asylum seekers at the centre of its re-election campaign...
Conflicts in several countries in Asia resulted in increasing number of refugees and asylum seekers....
Detention and the dwelling: Lévinas and the refuge of the asylum seeker The Australian government in...
Australia’s status as the only state with a policy of mandatory indefinite detention of all unlawful...
Under international refugee law, there is provision for a State to deny protection to persons who mi...
Australia’s mandatory detention policy allows for non-citizens without a valid visa to be held in si...
During the last decade measures of overt and covert surveillance, information sharing and deterrence...
The Australian government has spent over a billion dollars a year on managing offshore detention (Bu...
In the wake of the Coalition Government’s narrow victory in the first Australian election since the ...
When refugees displaced to Australia’s offshore detention do speak, it is via violations of privacy ...
In December 2013 the Australian government introduced a code of behaviour for all asylum seekers rel...
The basic tenets of the international refugee protection regime, set out in the UN\u27s 1951 Convent...
When refugees displaced to Australia’s offshore detention do speak, it is through surveillance...
The government of Australia has violated international human rights laws regarding to refugee and as...
The Australian government\u27s response to the \u27unlawful\u27 arrival of asylum seekers has been c...
In late 2001, the Australian government put asylum seekers at the centre of its re-election campaign...
Conflicts in several countries in Asia resulted in increasing number of refugees and asylum seekers....
Detention and the dwelling: Lévinas and the refuge of the asylum seeker The Australian government in...
Australia’s status as the only state with a policy of mandatory indefinite detention of all unlawful...
Under international refugee law, there is provision for a State to deny protection to persons who mi...
Australia’s mandatory detention policy allows for non-citizens without a valid visa to be held in si...
During the last decade measures of overt and covert surveillance, information sharing and deterrence...
The Australian government has spent over a billion dollars a year on managing offshore detention (Bu...
In the wake of the Coalition Government’s narrow victory in the first Australian election since the ...
When refugees displaced to Australia’s offshore detention do speak, it is via violations of privacy ...
In December 2013 the Australian government introduced a code of behaviour for all asylum seekers rel...
The basic tenets of the international refugee protection regime, set out in the UN\u27s 1951 Convent...
When refugees displaced to Australia’s offshore detention do speak, it is through surveillance...
The government of Australia has violated international human rights laws regarding to refugee and as...
The Australian government\u27s response to the \u27unlawful\u27 arrival of asylum seekers has been c...
In late 2001, the Australian government put asylum seekers at the centre of its re-election campaign...
Conflicts in several countries in Asia resulted in increasing number of refugees and asylum seekers....
Detention and the dwelling: Lévinas and the refuge of the asylum seeker The Australian government in...