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Border Criminologies
Oxford University
21 episodes
1 month ago
Annika Lindberg Shahram Khosravi and Victoria Canning give a talk for the Border Criminologies series on 22nd January 2019. Northern European approaches to immigration are in flux. In Denmark, Sweden and the UK, legislation and policy have seen gradual shifts toward intensified policing and internalised restrictions in welfare allowance, housing benefits and civil liberties. In the aftermath of the increase in asylum applications in 2015, the rights of migrants were curtailed through a series of legal amendments, including restrictions in family reunification and employment rights, whilst expectations for migrant integration continued and - in many areas of welfare and support – allocated funding reduced. This workshop brings together scholars and activists working on or affected by borders. Victoria Canning (University of Bristol), Shahram Khosravi (Stockholm University) and Annika Lindberg (University of Bern) highlight the exacerbations in harmful practice, including the use of immigration detention, welfare restrictions and deportation, and the implications these have on migrant groups. Drawing from various research and activist projects, each will outline key issues in contemporary border regimes in Scandinavia and the UK.
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Education
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Annika Lindberg Shahram Khosravi and Victoria Canning give a talk for the Border Criminologies series on 22nd January 2019. Northern European approaches to immigration are in flux. In Denmark, Sweden and the UK, legislation and policy have seen gradual shifts toward intensified policing and internalised restrictions in welfare allowance, housing benefits and civil liberties. In the aftermath of the increase in asylum applications in 2015, the rights of migrants were curtailed through a series of legal amendments, including restrictions in family reunification and employment rights, whilst expectations for migrant integration continued and - in many areas of welfare and support – allocated funding reduced. This workshop brings together scholars and activists working on or affected by borders. Victoria Canning (University of Bristol), Shahram Khosravi (Stockholm University) and Annika Lindberg (University of Bern) highlight the exacerbations in harmful practice, including the use of immigration detention, welfare restrictions and deportation, and the implications these have on migrant groups. Drawing from various research and activist projects, each will outline key issues in contemporary border regimes in Scandinavia and the UK.
Show more...
Education
Episodes (20/21)
Border Criminologies
Northern Borders: Addressing Immigration Detention, Deportation, and Degradation in Scandinavia and the UK
Annika Lindberg Shahram Khosravi and Victoria Canning give a talk for the Border Criminologies series on 22nd January 2019. Northern European approaches to immigration are in flux. In Denmark, Sweden and the UK, legislation and policy have seen gradual shifts toward intensified policing and internalised restrictions in welfare allowance, housing benefits and civil liberties. In the aftermath of the increase in asylum applications in 2015, the rights of migrants were curtailed through a series of legal amendments, including restrictions in family reunification and employment rights, whilst expectations for migrant integration continued and - in many areas of welfare and support – allocated funding reduced. This workshop brings together scholars and activists working on or affected by borders. Victoria Canning (University of Bristol), Shahram Khosravi (Stockholm University) and Annika Lindberg (University of Bern) highlight the exacerbations in harmful practice, including the use of immigration detention, welfare restrictions and deportation, and the implications these have on migrant groups. Drawing from various research and activist projects, each will outline key issues in contemporary border regimes in Scandinavia and the UK.
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6 years ago
1 hour 27 minutes

Border Criminologies
Words Matter: The Politics of Identity in Increasingly Harsh Migration and Crime Control Policies
Yolanda Vazquez, University of Cincinnati - 24 Nov 2016
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8 years ago
1 hour

Border Criminologies
Counter-terrorism as Border Control: Contest, Prevent, and all the legislation in between
Maria Norris, LSE - 29 Nov 2016
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8 years ago
51 minutes

Border Criminologies
Banished to Jamaica: Portraits of Deportation
Luke de Noronha, University of Oxford - 24 Jan 2017
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8 years ago
43 minutes

Border Criminologies
Human Trafficking: The Rise (and Fall?) of The Strasbourg Case
Marie-Benedicte Dembour, University of Brighton - 5/10/2016 Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK: England & Wales; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/
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9 years ago
45 minutes

Border Criminologies
Stuck in the middle: Waiting and Uncertainty in Immigration Detention
Sarah Turnbull - Centre for Criminology - 7 October 2014 at National Law University, Delhi
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10 years ago
21 minutes

Border Criminologies
Immigration Enforcement
Prof Jennifer Chacon, School of Law, University of California - 12 November 2014
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10 years ago
51 minutes

Border Criminologies
Undocumented: The Architecture of Migrant Detention
Tings Chak - 8 December 2014
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10 years ago
55 minutes

Border Criminologies
Excision, Exclusion and Exile: Australia's Refugee Policy and Responsibility Shifting in the Asia-Pacific
Dr Michelle Foster, Melbourne Law School Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK: England & Wales; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/
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11 years ago
47 minutes

Border Criminologies
Women’s experiences of detention
Sarah Campbell (Bail for Immigration Detainees (BID), UK) Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK: England & Wales; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/
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11 years ago
21 minutes

Border Criminologies
So many ways to love you: Negotiating love in a prison
Rimple Metha (Jadavpur University, India)
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11 years ago
22 minutes

Border Criminologies
A prison that isn't a prison: Globalization, mobility control, and state power
Thomas Ugelvik (University of Oslo, Norway) Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK: England & Wales; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/
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11 years ago
21 minutes

Border Criminologies
Time, space, and trust: Some methodological challenges of researching immigration detention
Sarah Turnbull (University of Oxford, UK) Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK: England & Wales; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/
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11 years ago
20 minutes

Border Criminologies
Experiencing immigration detention
Kizza Musinguizi (London, UK)
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11 years ago
20 minutes

Border Criminologies
Prisons as places to negotiate ‘illegality’
Steven De Ridder (Vrije Universiteit Brussel) Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK: England & Wales; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/
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11 years ago
19 minutes

Border Criminologies
Borders: A view from ‘nowhere’
Rimple Metha (Jadavpur University, India)
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11 years ago
25 minutes

Border Criminologies
From banlieue youth to undocumented migrant: Illegalized foreign-nationals in penal institutions and public space
Carolina Sanchez Boe (Aarhus University)
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11 years ago
21 minutes

Border Criminologies
Strengths and constraints of the prison life: Identity and sense of belonging of imprisoned maras in Honduras
Lirio Gutiérrez Rivera
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11 years ago
18 minutes

Border Criminologies
Trajectories and identities of foreign national women: Rethinking prison through the lens of gender and citizenship
Raquel Matos (Catolica University) Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK: England & Wales; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/
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11 years ago
22 minutes

Border Criminologies
The neocolonial prison and the ‘mark’ of whiteness in current Argentina: Race, gender and chronopolitics in media accounts of incarcerated immigrant population
Victoria Pereyra (Warwick University) Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK: England & Wales; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/
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11 years ago
20 minutes

Border Criminologies
Annika Lindberg Shahram Khosravi and Victoria Canning give a talk for the Border Criminologies series on 22nd January 2019. Northern European approaches to immigration are in flux. In Denmark, Sweden and the UK, legislation and policy have seen gradual shifts toward intensified policing and internalised restrictions in welfare allowance, housing benefits and civil liberties. In the aftermath of the increase in asylum applications in 2015, the rights of migrants were curtailed through a series of legal amendments, including restrictions in family reunification and employment rights, whilst expectations for migrant integration continued and - in many areas of welfare and support – allocated funding reduced. This workshop brings together scholars and activists working on or affected by borders. Victoria Canning (University of Bristol), Shahram Khosravi (Stockholm University) and Annika Lindberg (University of Bern) highlight the exacerbations in harmful practice, including the use of immigration detention, welfare restrictions and deportation, and the implications these have on migrant groups. Drawing from various research and activist projects, each will outline key issues in contemporary border regimes in Scandinavia and the UK.