Race, Criminal Justice, and Migration Control
Enforcing the Boundaries of Belonging
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 18 January 2018
- ISBN 9780198814887
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages276 pages
- Size 241x164x23 mm
- Weight 594 g
- Language English 120
Categories
Short description:
In an era of mass mobility, those who are permitted to migrate and those criminalized, controlled, and prohibited from migrating are heavily patterned by race. This volume places race at the centre of its analysis; fourteen chapters examine, question, and explain the growing intersection between criminal justice and migration control.
MoreLong description:
The criminalization of migration is heavily patterned by race. By placing race at the centre of its analysis, this volume examines, questions, and explains the growing intersection between criminal justice and migration control. Through the lens of race, we see how criminal justice and migration enmesh in order to exclude, stop, and excise racialized citizens and non-citizens from societies across the world within, beyond, and along borders.
Race and the meaning of race in relation to citizenship and belonging is excavated through the chapters presented in the book, and the book as a whole, thereby transforming the way we think about migration. Neatly organized in four sections, the book begins with chapters that present a conceptual analysis of race, borders, and social control, moving to the institutions that make up and shape the criminal justice and migration complex. The remaining chapters are convened around the key sites where criminal justice and migration control intersect: policing, courts, and punishment. Together the volume presents a critical and timely analysis of how race shapes and complicates mobility and how racism is enabled and reanimated when criminal justice and migration control coalesce.
Race, Criminal Justice, and Migration Control "seeks to reorient the burgeoning field of literature on migration control in criminology and criminal law around issues of race" (p.4). Together, the contributors do much toward achieving this goal as they explore, test, and analyze the many ways in which racism drives migration control and migration controls, tied to criminal justice systems, perpetuate racial subordination.
Table of Contents:
Prologue
Race, Criminal Justice, and Migration Control: Enforcing the Boundaries of Belonging
I. RACE, BORDERS, AND SOCIAL CONTROL
Race, Gender, and Surveillance of Migrant Domestic Workers in Asia
Portrait of a Human Smuggler: Race, Class, and Gender among Facilitators of Irregular Migration on the US- Mexico Border
Gender, Race, and the Cycle of Violence of Female Asylum Seekers from Honduras
II. RACE, POLICING, AND SECURITY
Racism, immigration, and Policing
Race, Gender, and Border Control in the Western Balkans
Visible Policing of Subjects and Low-Visibility Policing: Migration and Race in Australia
Policing Belonging: Race and Nation in the UK
III. RACE, COURTS, AND THE LAW
Strangers in our Midst: The Construction of Difference through Cultural Appeals in Criminal Justice Litigation
Enforcing the Politics of Race and Identity in Migration and Crime Control Policies
Racialization Through Enforcement
Refugee Law in Crisis: Decolonizing the Architecture of Violence
IV. RACE, DETENTION, AND DEPORTATION
Understanding Muslim Prisoners through a Global Lens
'Working in this place turns you racist': Staff, Race, and Power in Detention
Raced and Gendered Logics of Immigration Law Enforcement in the United States
Epilogue: When Citizenship Means Race