Results 21 to 30 of about 3,218 (231)
This article seeks to expand debates about Southernising border criminology to include an ontological dimension. In the context of increasingly technological border control practices, critical analysis of the global circuits of mobility control requires ...
Samuel Singler
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Guest Editorial: Transforming Borders and the Discretionary Politics of Migration Control
The eight articles in this issue promise us a global journey around transformed borders, multiscalar bordering, and discretionary practices within these migration controls.
Maartje van der Woude, Richard Staring
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The Exceptional Becomes Everyday: Border Control, Attrition and Exclusion from Within
This article examines processes of migration and border control, illustrating the ways by which everyday housing and welfare services function as mechanisms of exclusion in both direct and indirect ways.
Regina C. Serpa
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Past research shows that crises reveal the sensitive spots of established ideologies and practices, thereby providing opportunities for social change. We investigated immigration control amid the pandemic crisis, focusing on potential openings for both ...
Wenjie Liao +3 more
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Abstract This article uses a historical case study to significantly advance theoretical debates on path dependence in institutional change and continuity. In particular, it argues that the heuristic of ‘jumping tracks’ can be productively developed to explain how institutional arrangements can shift into different policy arenas.
Emma Watkins
wiley +1 more source
Governing Migration through COVID-19? Dutch Political and Media Discourse in Times of a Pandemic
This article explores the political and media discourse in The Netherlands around COVID-19 and migration. In so doing, it asks to what extent the dynamics of ‘governing COVID-19 through migration’ are visible in this discourse.
Maartje Van Der Woude, Nanou Van Iersel
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Multigenerational punishments on the children of Salvadoran immigrant and deported fathers
Abstract Drawing on qualitative research conducted in the United States and in El Salvador, the author examines the experiences of the children of 40 immigrant men and 40 deported men. This study reveals the harmful effects of U.S. immigration policies and enforcement practices on the children of Salvadoran immigrant and deported fathers.
Jose Alfredo Torres
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The new grounds for deportation of European Union citizens in the United Kingdom
Abstract Politicians often mention immigration enforcement, and deportation in particular, as a means to assert state sovereignty. This article looks at deportation through exiting the European Union, an event that was interpreted as regaining sovereignty from the supra‐national organisation. New immigration regulations in the United Kingdom were meant
Agnieszka Radziwinowiczówna +1 more
wiley +1 more source
What if the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), instead of developing a ‘coercive human rights doctrine’ concerning state duties to criminalise serious human rights violations, had focused on decriminalisation? The ECtHR has never developed a coherent case law on protecting human rights by removing, rather than adding, criminal regulation.
Mattia Pinto
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The involvement of the criminal justice system in immigration control is nowadays a global phenomenon that has called the attention of academics and practitioners.
Byron Villagómez Moncayo
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