This article explores the declining state of and increasing threat to human rights in the UK, through an analysis of the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill (PCSC) and the Nationality and Borders Bill (NB). It focusses on the ostracisation, demonisation and criminalisation of marginalised groups, and how this has been achieved through a regime of right-wing populism, capitalising on crises within the elite to direct public anger at economic suffering and perceived erosion of social values towards the most marginalised in society by proposing that they are favoured by the elite over 'the people'. This has created an ‘other’ of many minorities, allowing them to be more easily dehumanised and their human rights to be more easily eroded, ...
In this article I examine ‘Operation Nexus’, a collaborative initiative between the police and immig...
This article examines how three spheres of hostility intersect to prevent effective access to justic...
In many ways, writing about the economic crisis in the UK is telling a story about the past. Recentl...
This article explores the declining state of and increasing threat to human rights in the UK, throug...
This article is an examination of some of the key aspects of the new Commission for Equality and Hum...
In many ways his article confronts the Sociologist C. Wright Mills’s famous injunction on turning pr...
In many ways his article confronts the Sociologist C. Wright Mills’s famous injunction on turning pr...
In response to the rise of IS and the growing problem of foreign fighters, deprivation of citizenshi...
Theories of post-national rights for non-citizens presuppose a general trend in expansion of rights ...
In May 2016, two flagship measures of the current Conservative UK government, the Housing and Planni...
This article evokes the contradictions of the English judicial system and the political class with r...
Austerity measures have raised multiple human rights concerns. However, limited attention has been p...
This Article examines the European Court of Human Rights’ intervention in the detention of involunta...
This Article examines the European Court of Human Rights\u27 intervention in the detention of involu...
Racialization is frequently deployed but seldom defined precisely. The agent(s) and mechanisms of th...
In this article I examine ‘Operation Nexus’, a collaborative initiative between the police and immig...
This article examines how three spheres of hostility intersect to prevent effective access to justic...
In many ways, writing about the economic crisis in the UK is telling a story about the past. Recentl...
This article explores the declining state of and increasing threat to human rights in the UK, throug...
This article is an examination of some of the key aspects of the new Commission for Equality and Hum...
In many ways his article confronts the Sociologist C. Wright Mills’s famous injunction on turning pr...
In many ways his article confronts the Sociologist C. Wright Mills’s famous injunction on turning pr...
In response to the rise of IS and the growing problem of foreign fighters, deprivation of citizenshi...
Theories of post-national rights for non-citizens presuppose a general trend in expansion of rights ...
In May 2016, two flagship measures of the current Conservative UK government, the Housing and Planni...
This article evokes the contradictions of the English judicial system and the political class with r...
Austerity measures have raised multiple human rights concerns. However, limited attention has been p...
This Article examines the European Court of Human Rights’ intervention in the detention of involunta...
This Article examines the European Court of Human Rights\u27 intervention in the detention of involu...
Racialization is frequently deployed but seldom defined precisely. The agent(s) and mechanisms of th...
In this article I examine ‘Operation Nexus’, a collaborative initiative between the police and immig...
This article examines how three spheres of hostility intersect to prevent effective access to justic...
In many ways, writing about the economic crisis in the UK is telling a story about the past. Recentl...