For too long, criminal law scholars overlooked immigration-based offences. Claims that these offences are not ‘true crimes’ or are a ‘mere camouflage’ to pursue non- criminal law aims deflect attention from questions concerning the limits of criminalization and leave unchallenged contradictions at the heart of criminal law theory. My purpose in this paper is to examine these offences through some of the basic tenets of criminal law. I argue that the predominant forms of liability for the most often used immigration offences are, at least in principle, controversial and depart from what is often presented as the paradigm in criminal law. Above all, immigration offences are objectionable because they fall short in fulfilling the harm principl...
Deportation, and immigration control generally, are held not to enjoy the protections of article 6 E...
This Chapter critically explores the justifications, scope and limits of immigration detention in Au...
Book review: Crimes of Mobility. Criminal Law and the Regulation of Immigration, written by Ana Aliv...
This article analyses the recent expansion of immigration offences in Britain. Drawing on criminal l...
This thesis is an enquiry into the regulation of immigration through criminal law and its institutio...
Asylum seekers and refugees are some of the most vulnerable people in the world. The sad reality is,...
Should we use the language of international criminal law (ICL) to discuss, analyze, and address West...
This article explores the challenges that (cr)immigration practices pose to draw the boundaries of ...
In recent years, an increasing number of scholars and commentators have turned their attention to th...
The aim of this paper is to question, from the perspective of a principled theory of criminalization...
Border criminology authors have recently called for an expansion of criminological conceptions on pe...
There is a long tradition of blaming foreigners for crime problems in England and Wales. The contemp...
In recent years, few offences have taken up as much government time as the prohibition against the e...
This paper discusses the increasing importance of administrative punishment in the penal field, usin...
At EU-level, the use of substantive criminal law as a response to illegal migration is materialised ...
Deportation, and immigration control generally, are held not to enjoy the protections of article 6 E...
This Chapter critically explores the justifications, scope and limits of immigration detention in Au...
Book review: Crimes of Mobility. Criminal Law and the Regulation of Immigration, written by Ana Aliv...
This article analyses the recent expansion of immigration offences in Britain. Drawing on criminal l...
This thesis is an enquiry into the regulation of immigration through criminal law and its institutio...
Asylum seekers and refugees are some of the most vulnerable people in the world. The sad reality is,...
Should we use the language of international criminal law (ICL) to discuss, analyze, and address West...
This article explores the challenges that (cr)immigration practices pose to draw the boundaries of ...
In recent years, an increasing number of scholars and commentators have turned their attention to th...
The aim of this paper is to question, from the perspective of a principled theory of criminalization...
Border criminology authors have recently called for an expansion of criminological conceptions on pe...
There is a long tradition of blaming foreigners for crime problems in England and Wales. The contemp...
In recent years, few offences have taken up as much government time as the prohibition against the e...
This paper discusses the increasing importance of administrative punishment in the penal field, usin...
At EU-level, the use of substantive criminal law as a response to illegal migration is materialised ...
Deportation, and immigration control generally, are held not to enjoy the protections of article 6 E...
This Chapter critically explores the justifications, scope and limits of immigration detention in Au...
Book review: Crimes of Mobility. Criminal Law and the Regulation of Immigration, written by Ana Aliv...