4.2 Article

Multiple functions of immigration detention: Police measures in the governance of mobile populations

相关参考文献

注意:仅列出部分参考文献,下载原文获取全部文献信息。
Article Criminology & Penology

Foreigners' crime and punishment: Punitive application of immigration law as a substitute for criminal justice

Jukka Kononen

Summary: Despite the emergence of 'crimmigration' systems, immigration law and criminal law utilize different tools to control foreign nationals. This article examines removal orders in Finland and highlights the autonomous use of administrative powers in immigration enforcement. Immigration law grants the police and immigration officials the ability to issue removal orders for (suspected) minor offences without obtaining criminal convictions. This punitive application of immigration law creates a distinct administrative system for visiting third-country nationals, bypassing criminal justice procedures.

THEORETICAL CRIMINOLOGY (2023)

Article Demography

Collectivized Discretion: Seeking Explanations for Decreased Asylum Recognition Rates in Finland After Europe's 2015 Refugee Crisis

Johanna Vanto et al.

Summary: This article discusses the reasons behind the significant drop in positive asylum decisions in Finland during the 2015 refugee crisis in Europe and examines the use of discretion by immigration control authorities in asylum credibility assessment. The study found that inconsistent assessment by asylum caseworkers and lack of faith in the truthfulness of applicants' claims were essential factors in the mass denial of young Iraqi asylum applicants in Finland. The research highlights how asylum officers can influence asylum decision-making on a large scale through collective discretion, emphasizing the importance of anchoring asylum status determinations in individual assessments to avoid arbitrary outcomes in the application of asylum law.

INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION REVIEW (2022)

Article Law

Immigration detention as a routine police measure: Discretionary powers in preemptive detention of noncitizens in Finland

Jukka Kononen

Summary: This article discusses how administrative practices shape immigration detention policies, addressing both administrative discretion in detention orders and their judicial supervision. The findings show that immigration detention is not a measure of last resort, but is used routinely with little individual assessment, for noncompliant and criminalized noncitizens.

LAW & SOCIETY REVIEW (2022)

Article International Relations

Qualifying deportation: How police translation of 'dangerous foreign criminals' led to expansive deportation practices in Spain

Barak Kalir

Summary: This article ethnographically traces the enforcement of deportation by a central police unit in Madrid, showing that a policy aimed at limiting deportation to ‘foreign criminals’ actually led to increased and racially biased deportation practices against all categories of illegalized migrants. The police interpreted the policy as targeting anyone with a police record, resulting in the enforcement of deportation according to racialized and racist ideas of police agents.

SECURITY DIALOGUE (2022)

Article Anthropology

The absent presence of the deportation apparatus: methodological challenges in the production of knowledge on immigration detention

Jukka Kononen

Summary: Accessing detention facilities is challenging, impacting the discussion on immigration detention which requires attention to the diversity of the detained population and their stakes in removal. Methodological choices, theoretical assumptions, and circumstantial factors all influence the production of knowledge on immigration detention.

SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY (2021)

Article Demography

The waiting game: Immigration detention as the waiting room of immigration law

Jukka Kononen

Summary: This article investigates the negotiations of detained third-country nationals with the immigration system during detention, highlighting that waiting in immigration detention is a relational concept that varies based on individuals' immigration cases and country of removal. It argues that immigration detention serves as a "waiting room" where detainees negotiate with authorities and participate in border struggles, impacting their attitudes and compliance depending on their migration preferences and temporal horizons.

MIGRATION STUDIES (2021)

Article Criminology & Penology

Immigration detention as social defence: Policing 'dangerous mobility' in Italy

Giuseppe Campesi et al.

THEORETICAL CRIMINOLOGY (2020)

Article Criminology & Penology

Immigration Detention, Punishment and the Transformation of Justice

Mary Bosworth

SOCIAL & LEGAL STUDIES (2019)

Article Criminology & Penology

Penal power and border control: Which thesis? Sovereignty, governmentality, or the pre-emptive state?

Leanne Weber et al.

PUNISHMENT & SOCIETY-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PENOLOGY (2019)

Article Criminology & Penology

Punishment, globalization and migration control: 'Get them the hell out of here'

Mary Bosworth et al.

PUNISHMENT & SOCIETY-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PENOLOGY (2018)

Article Criminology & Penology

Managing illegality at the internal border: Governing through differential inclusion' in Italy

Giulia Fabini

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CRIMINOLOGY (2017)

Article Criminology & Penology

From prison to detention: The carceral trajectories of foreign-national prisoners in the United Kingdom

Sarah Turnbull et al.

PUNISHMENT & SOCIETY-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PENOLOGY (2017)

Article Criminology & Penology

Crimmigration checks in the internal border areas of the EU: Finding the discretion that matters

Maartje van der Woude et al.

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CRIMINOLOGY (2017)

Article Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary

Stuck in the middle': Waiting and uncertainty in immigration detention

Sarah Turnbull

TIME & SOCIETY (2016)

Article Criminology & Penology

The price of prevention: The preventative turn in crime policy and its consequences for the role of the state

Rik Peeters

PUNISHMENT & SOCIETY-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PENOLOGY (2015)

Article Demography

Out of Time: The Temporal Uncertainties of Refused Asylum Seekers and Immigration Detainees

Melanie B. E. Griffiths

JOURNAL OF ETHNIC AND MIGRATION STUDIES (2014)

Article Criminology & Penology

Beyond criminocentric dogmatism: Mapping institutional forms of punishment in contemporary societies

Joao Gustavo Vieira Velloso

PUNISHMENT & SOCIETY-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PENOLOGY (2013)

Article Criminology & Penology

A CASE OF MIXED MOTIVES? Formal and Informal Functions of Administrative Immigration Detention

Arjen Leerkes et al.

BRITISH JOURNAL OF CRIMINOLOGY (2010)

Article Criminology & Penology

Immigration control, post-Fordism, and less eligibility A materialist critique of the criminalization of immigration across Europe

Alessandro De Giorgi

PUNISHMENT & SOCIETY-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PENOLOGY (2010)

Article Criminology & Penology

Return to sender? Administrative detention of irregular migrants in Germany and the Netherlands

Dennis Broeders

PUNISHMENT & SOCIETY-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PENOLOGY (2010)

Article Criminology & Penology

Valiant beggars and global vagabonds - Select, eject, immobilize

Leanne Weber et al.

THEORETICAL CRIMINOLOGY (2008)

Article Anthropology

Embarking on an anthropology of removal

Nathalie Peutz

CURRENT ANTHROPOLOGY (2006)