In this article, I draw on ongoing qualitative research on immigration detention and deportation in the UK, to explore the contribution of criminology to debates over citizenship. I pay particular attention to the interdependence of the state and the private sector in enforcing border control, examining how public-private collaboration both legitimates but also depends on a shifting, racialised criminalisation of foreigners. In so doing, I show how the criminal justice system has been put to work in defining and restricting the membership of the community of value within the UK
The concept of crimmigration recognizes the growing convergence of criminal law and immigration law ...
Citizenship in the UK has in recent times been explicitly framed as a privilege not a right, granted...
This article examines the detention and deportation of time-served foreign-national prisoners in Eng...
In this article I examine ‘Operation Nexus’, a collaborative initiative between the police and immig...
This chapter draws on six months of fieldwork in IRC Yarl’s Wood, Britain’s primary immigration remo...
As has been widely recognized and commented upon, border controls across Europe and America have bee...
This article examines immigration detention as a racialized practice of governing illegality in the ...
As border policing is no longer circumscribed to external borders and increasingly performed inland,...
The merger between familiar modes of policing with the impetus for migration control is reorganizing...
This article analyses the recent expansion of immigration offences in Britain. Drawing on criminal l...
This chapter considers the impact of the police’s increased involvement in migration control. How (...
This article assesses how the discriminatory practice of racial profiling exists and can undermine a...
A critical consideration is given of the problematic construction of crimes as scientifically racial...
The relationship between citizenship and immigration law is often conceived as a conceptual dichotom...
Taking the growing use of deportation by many states, including the UK and the USA, as its point of ...
The concept of crimmigration recognizes the growing convergence of criminal law and immigration law ...
Citizenship in the UK has in recent times been explicitly framed as a privilege not a right, granted...
This article examines the detention and deportation of time-served foreign-national prisoners in Eng...
In this article I examine ‘Operation Nexus’, a collaborative initiative between the police and immig...
This chapter draws on six months of fieldwork in IRC Yarl’s Wood, Britain’s primary immigration remo...
As has been widely recognized and commented upon, border controls across Europe and America have bee...
This article examines immigration detention as a racialized practice of governing illegality in the ...
As border policing is no longer circumscribed to external borders and increasingly performed inland,...
The merger between familiar modes of policing with the impetus for migration control is reorganizing...
This article analyses the recent expansion of immigration offences in Britain. Drawing on criminal l...
This chapter considers the impact of the police’s increased involvement in migration control. How (...
This article assesses how the discriminatory practice of racial profiling exists and can undermine a...
A critical consideration is given of the problematic construction of crimes as scientifically racial...
The relationship between citizenship and immigration law is often conceived as a conceptual dichotom...
Taking the growing use of deportation by many states, including the UK and the USA, as its point of ...
The concept of crimmigration recognizes the growing convergence of criminal law and immigration law ...
Citizenship in the UK has in recent times been explicitly framed as a privilege not a right, granted...
This article examines the detention and deportation of time-served foreign-national prisoners in Eng...