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Policing Undocumented Migrants: Law, Violence and Responsibility [Kõva köide]

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Migration policing experiments such as boat turn-backs and offshore refugee processing have been criticised as unlawful and have been characterised as exceptional. Policing Undocumented Migrants explores the extraordinarily routine, powerful, and above all lawful practices engaged in policing status within state territory. This book reveals how the everyday violence of migration law is activated by making people illegal. It explains how undocumented migrants are marginalised through the broad discretion underpinning existing frameworks of legal responsibility for migration policing.

Drawing on interviews with people with lived experience of undocumented status within Australia, perspectives from advocates, detailed analysis of legislation, case law and policy, this book provides an in-depth account of the experiences and legal regulation of undocumented migrants within Australia. Case studies of street policing, immigration raids, transitions in legal status such as release from immigration detention, and character based visa determination challenge conventional binaries in migration analysis between the citizen and non-citizen and between lawful and unlawful status. By showing the organised and central role of discretionary legal authority in policing status, this book proposes a new perspective through which responsibility for migration legal practices can be better understood and evaluated.

Policing Undocumented Migrants will be of interest to scholars and practitioners working in the areas of criminology, criminal law, immigration law and border studies.

Arvustused

"A field that remains underresearched is the crossroads of different legal areas and practices. This makes Policing Undocumented Migrants: Law, Violence and Responsibility a welcome contribution, both theoretically and empirically. This book is of general interest for research trying to understand what migration law tells police and immigration officers to do in the name of justice, and its unintended and often unseen consequences Four case studies examine the complex practices of illegalization, which have become routine in the everyday activities of diverse institutions and legislative frameworks as well as in their intersection. Although the context is Australian, there are many lessons to be learned from a Northern European standpoint Policing Undocumented Migrants, as I see it, is an excellent illustration of a legal cartographic analysis"

Social & Legal Studies (2018) 27(5) 661-664

Acknowledgements vi
List of abbreviations
vii
Introduction: migrant illegality in legal records 1(20)
1 Borders of responsibility
21(26)
2 `You're just kidnapped': immigration `arrests' and detention
47(36)
3 Raids, searches and rapid removals
83(30)
4 `Mums', `mafia' and `ransom money': release from immigration detention
113(29)
5 Profiling bad character
142(39)
Conclusion: `the umbrella of legality' 181(10)
Bibliography 191(22)
Index 213
Louise Boon-Kuo is a Lecturer at the University of Sydney Law School. Louise researches in the areas of border policing, race and criminal justice.