Privatising Border Control: Law at the Limits of the Sovereign State 1st edition Mary Bosworth – Ebook Instant Download/Delivery ISBN(s): 9780192857163,0192857169,9780192671417, 0192671413
Product details:
- ISBN 10:0192671413
- ISBN 13:9780192671417
- Author:Mary Bosworth; Lucia Zedner
In recent years, many breaches of immigration law have been criminalised. Foreign nationals are now routinely identified in court and in prison as subjects for deportation. Police at the border and within the territory refer foreign suspects to immigration authorities for expulsion. Within the immigration system, new institutions and practices rely on criminal justice logic and methods. In these examples, it is not the state that controls the national border: instead, it is often privately contracted companies.
This collection of essays explores the growing use of the private sector and private actors in border control and its implications for our understanding of state sovereignty and citizenship. Privatising Border Control is an important empirical and theoretical contribution to the growing, interdisciplinary body of scholarship on border control. It also contributes to the academic inquiry into the growing privatisation of policing and punishment. These domains, once regarded as central to the state’s police power and its monopoly on violence, are increasingly outsourced to private providers.
Table contents:
Part I: The Limits of State Sovereignty
1. Same As It Ever Was? Race, Capital, and Privatised Immigration Enforcement
2. Contested Sovereignty in Preventive Border Control: Civil Society, the ‘Hostile Environment’, and the Rule of Law
3. The Borders of Sovereignty
Part II: Legitimacy and the Rule of the Law at the Border
4. Roles and Offices at the Border: Is Privatising Border Control Intrinsically Illegitimate?
5. Towards Legitimacy at the Border
6. Privatised Immigration Detention: Morality, Economics, and Transparency
Part III: Outsourcing or Undermining State Authority
7. ‘Because we are Deportable People’: Privatisation, Citizenship, and Race in US All-foreign Prisons
8. The Marketisation of ‘Legitimate’ Violence: Inducing Deportation through Public–Private Cooperation
9. A Mundane Spectacle? (In)visibility, Normalisation, and State Power in the UK’s Migrant Escorting Contract
Part IV: Practices of Privatisation at the Border
10. Outsourcing Deterrence: The Humanitarian Border, Asylum Seekers, and Non-Government Organisations in Australia
11. Outsourcing the Border Within: Private Citizens as Border Guards, State Sovereignty, and Civil Peace
12. The Digitalisation of Border Controls and their Corporate Actors
The Privatisation of Border Controls and the Limits of State Sovereignty: An Afterword
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