Immigration Removal Centres (IRCs) are deeply contested institutions that rarely open their doors to independent research. In this article we discuss some of the complications we faced in conducting the first national study of everyday life in them. As we will set out, research relationships were difficult to forge due to low levels of trust, and unfamiliarity with academic research. At the same time, many participants had unrealistic expectations about our capacity to assist while most exhibited high levels of distress. We were not immune from the emotional burden of the field sites. Such matters were compounded by the limited amount of published information about life in IRCs and a lack of ethical guidelines addressing such places. Drawin...
This chapter draws on six months of fieldwork in IRC Yarl’s Wood, Britain’s primary immigration remo...
This article examines institutional practices designed to control criminalized migrants in the UK an...
A perspective that has often been absent in criminal justice research is that of former prisoners. T...
Immigration Removal Centres (IRCs) are deeply contested institutions that rarely open their doors to...
This chapter offers a critical discussion of, and reflection upon, some of the challenges and opport...
Mary Bosworth‘s research investigates immigration detentions centres in the UK. She argues that the ...
The challenges of research ethics and methodologies have been reflected on extensively, but – aside ...
In this article we draw on research conducted in a British immigration removal centre (IRC) to explo...
In a time of mass displacement, countries across the globe are seeking to protect borders through co...
Research can contribute to better understanding of the forced migration experience to inform policy ...
Over 29,000 foreign nationals are detained yearly in British Immigration Removal Centres (IRCs) for ...
This article presents a sequence of reflexive observations based on my experiences as a lone researc...
IMPACT STATEMENT: Findings of this study can provide healthcare providers, in particular nurses, an ...
In this dissertation I add nuance to our understanding of the experiences of immigration enforcement...
Gaining access to formal institutions can be problematic for ethnographers. This is especially so wh...
This chapter draws on six months of fieldwork in IRC Yarl’s Wood, Britain’s primary immigration remo...
This article examines institutional practices designed to control criminalized migrants in the UK an...
A perspective that has often been absent in criminal justice research is that of former prisoners. T...
Immigration Removal Centres (IRCs) are deeply contested institutions that rarely open their doors to...
This chapter offers a critical discussion of, and reflection upon, some of the challenges and opport...
Mary Bosworth‘s research investigates immigration detentions centres in the UK. She argues that the ...
The challenges of research ethics and methodologies have been reflected on extensively, but – aside ...
In this article we draw on research conducted in a British immigration removal centre (IRC) to explo...
In a time of mass displacement, countries across the globe are seeking to protect borders through co...
Research can contribute to better understanding of the forced migration experience to inform policy ...
Over 29,000 foreign nationals are detained yearly in British Immigration Removal Centres (IRCs) for ...
This article presents a sequence of reflexive observations based on my experiences as a lone researc...
IMPACT STATEMENT: Findings of this study can provide healthcare providers, in particular nurses, an ...
In this dissertation I add nuance to our understanding of the experiences of immigration enforcement...
Gaining access to formal institutions can be problematic for ethnographers. This is especially so wh...
This chapter draws on six months of fieldwork in IRC Yarl’s Wood, Britain’s primary immigration remo...
This article examines institutional practices designed to control criminalized migrants in the UK an...
A perspective that has often been absent in criminal justice research is that of former prisoners. T...