This thesis examines the treatment and experiences of foreign national prisoners in England and Wales. It contains two main arguments. First, I contend that dominant prison theories rely on an outmoded understanding of the nation-state, and as a result, tend to ignore the effects of globalisation. Second, I argue that current prison practices reaffirm the boundaries of the British nation-state and promote an exclusionary notion of British citizenship. I conclude that research attuned to the affective, embodied dimensions of incarceration can help criminologists to develop a more ‘global’ perspective on state power. This argument begins and builds from ethnographic research. As a whole, the thesis is based on more than 200 interviews conduct...
This thesis is a qualitative study into the lived experiences of Irish prisoners in England and Wale...
With the expansion of the use of private prisons and detention centres worldwide and the increasing ...
In my time as a researcher, I have walked amongst ‘the graves of the living’ (Minshull, 1618/1821) i...
This article draws on ethnographic research that I conducted in five British immigration removal cen...
This collection of articles addresses the interconnections between punishment, citizenship and ident...
At the end of March 2015 there were 10,481 foreign nationals (defined as non-UK passport holders) he...
Prison life both fascinates and repels. As with many aspects of punishment, it attracts the interest...
The United Kingdom (UK) has taken an increasingly punitive stance towards ‘foreign criminals’ using ...
This article examines the detention and deportation of time-served foreign-national prisoners in Eng...
The central claim of this article is that microsociological accounts of prison life should not be d...
The second edition of the Handbook on Prisons provides a completely revised and updated collection o...
In the second part of his article on Scandinavian exceptionalism, John Pratt identified certain deve...
The Palgrave Handbook of Prison Ethnography provides an expansive overview of the challenges present...
In Portugal, the proportion of foreign nationals among women inmates rose significantly in the firs...
This thesis is an exploration of the classed and gendered trajectories that lead to 'revolving door'...
This thesis is a qualitative study into the lived experiences of Irish prisoners in England and Wale...
With the expansion of the use of private prisons and detention centres worldwide and the increasing ...
In my time as a researcher, I have walked amongst ‘the graves of the living’ (Minshull, 1618/1821) i...
This article draws on ethnographic research that I conducted in five British immigration removal cen...
This collection of articles addresses the interconnections between punishment, citizenship and ident...
At the end of March 2015 there were 10,481 foreign nationals (defined as non-UK passport holders) he...
Prison life both fascinates and repels. As with many aspects of punishment, it attracts the interest...
The United Kingdom (UK) has taken an increasingly punitive stance towards ‘foreign criminals’ using ...
This article examines the detention and deportation of time-served foreign-national prisoners in Eng...
The central claim of this article is that microsociological accounts of prison life should not be d...
The second edition of the Handbook on Prisons provides a completely revised and updated collection o...
In the second part of his article on Scandinavian exceptionalism, John Pratt identified certain deve...
The Palgrave Handbook of Prison Ethnography provides an expansive overview of the challenges present...
In Portugal, the proportion of foreign nationals among women inmates rose significantly in the firs...
This thesis is an exploration of the classed and gendered trajectories that lead to 'revolving door'...
This thesis is a qualitative study into the lived experiences of Irish prisoners in England and Wale...
With the expansion of the use of private prisons and detention centres worldwide and the increasing ...
In my time as a researcher, I have walked amongst ‘the graves of the living’ (Minshull, 1618/1821) i...