Results 21 to 30 of about 3,087 (235)

Religio-Crimmigration: The Intertwinement of Religion, Crime, and Migration in Lebanon [PDF]

open access: hybridInternational Criminal Justice Review, 2022
The forced movement of people grew progressively fast due to wars happening worldwide engendering with it an important number of refugees. The adaptation of the immigrant civilizations to that of the host countries has been a growing challenge and ...
Reeda Al Sabri Halawi
semanticscholar   +5 more sources

Future citizens between interest and ability: A systematic literature review of the naturalization and crimmigration scholarship

open access: hybrid, 2022
The determinants of whether or not an immigrant seeks to become a citizen are still largely invisible to scholars; as are the decisions made during the naturalization process by street-level bureaucrats.
Hannah Bliersbach
semanticscholar   +2 more sources

From 'Crimmigration' to 'Enemy Under-Criminalization': the Greek Case of Immigration Control

open access: diamondSocial Science Research Network
This essay examines the Greek immigration control system, starting with a brief overview of crimmigration and enemy penology literature. It combines insights from these concepts to introduce the theory of “enemy under-criminalization” which emphasizes ...
Filippos Kourakis
semanticscholar   +3 more sources

A Place of Safety? Women, Crimmigration Control and a Stigmatised Identity

open access: hybridCritical Criminology
Asylum claimants’ experiences of crimmigration controls are shaped by gender, race, and class. This article seeks to show how intersecting identities of women seeking asylum interact with stigma.
Amy Cortvriend
semanticscholar   +2 more sources

Perpetual banishment: The transcarceral crimmigration case of Mary Masako Akimoto

open access: yesGender &History, Volume 36, Issue 3, Page 874-889, October 2024.
Abstract The case of Mary Masako Akimoto illuminates how carceral systems based on immigrant criminalisation, known as crimmigration, intersected with gendered notions of decent and indecent work in 1930s America. Mary Akimoto was deported from the USA in compliance with US anti‐sex trafficking law for the crime of selling sex in a brothel (indecent ...
Jessica R. Pliley
wiley   +2 more sources

‘But the Dutch would call it exploitation’. [PDF]

open access: hybrid, 2016
Based on qualitative research into the Chinese catering industry in the Netherlands, this article describes labour relations between Chinese employers and their (undocumented) employees against the background of a society in which criminal ...
Hiah, J.W. (Jing)   +1 more
core   +4 more sources

Crimmigration in Slovenia [PDF]

open access: diamond, 2019
Avtorici v članku obravnavata »krimigracijo« (tj. kriminalizacijo migracij) v Sloveniji. Raziskujeta elemente kriminalizacije migracij v pravnem okviru, institucijah in politikah.
Bajt, Veronika, Frelih, Mojca
core   +3 more sources

Expulsion or Imprisonment? Criminal Law Sanctions for Breaching an Entry Ban in the Light of Crimmigration Law

open access: diamondBergen Journal of Criminal Law and Criminal Justice, 2017
At EU-level, the use of substantive criminal law as a response to illegal migration is materialised by both the EU legislator and the Member States individually. EU involvement in criminalizing illegal migration takes place in a twofold manner: directly,
Jim Waasdorp, Aniel Pahladsingh
doaj   +3 more sources

Challenging Crimmigration Racialising Politics Through Co-creative Filmmaking with Migrant Sex Workers

open access: hybridCritical Criminology
This article analyses how co-creative filmmaking with migrant sex workers challenges the racialised politics of representation and dynamics of crimmigration framing and intervening on them as either criminals or victims. The contribution will draw on two
Nick Mai
semanticscholar   +2 more sources

Bordered penality in the Netherlands: The experiences of foreign national prisoners and prison officers in a crimmigration prison [PDF]

open access: hybridPunishment & Society, 2020
In recent years there has been growing attention for so-called crimmigration prisons: all-foreign prisons with immigration staff embedded where not rehabilitation, but deportation is the ultimate aim.
Jelmer Brouwer
semanticscholar   +2 more sources

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy