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This book contributes to and broadens the field of Border Criminology, by bringing together a collection of chapters from leading scholars engaged in cross-national and comparative conversations on bordered penality and crimmigration practices.
List of contents
Introduction.Border criminologies from the periphery: An Introduction.
Part One - Entrenched Borders. 1.Mexico's air deportation. 2.No deportation but no leniency here: Multi-faceted bordered penality in Italy. 3.A crimmigration stronghold in southern Europe? Bordered penality in Spain. 4.The continuum of the immigration detention and violence in Greece. 5.Penalizing migration and a culture of impunity: The case of Turkey's unwanted noncitizens.
Part Two - Emerging Borderlands. 6.Violence and the policing of mobility in South Africa. 7.Crimmigration and Re-bordering in Post-hukou China. 8.Refugee reception in Indonesia: From encampment to detention to containment and back. 9.Consistently inconsistent: The crimmigration facets of the Ecuadorian migration regime. 10.The Criminalization of Migration in Chile: Disruptions and Continuities, Before and After the Pandemic. 11.Detention and deportation in Portugal: the colonial legacies of a racialised governing of mobility.
Part Three - Evolving and Unanticipated Borders. 12.Enforcement of public order and security: Immigration controls as a police matter in Finland. 13.Bordering Denmark: Deportation, differentiation and racial formation. 14.Immigration enforcement in the German asylum system: Contested practices after 2015. 15.Slovenia: Pushbacks of Unwanted Migration. 16.Eastern Europe - Adrift between the North and the South: Deportation practices from the Polish perspective. Conclusion.Border criminologies in the periphery: Conclusions, limitations and future research agenda.
About the author
José A. Brandariz is Professor of Criminal Law and Criminology at the University of A Coruña, Spain.
Giulia Fabini is Assistant Professor in Sociology of Law and Deviance at the University of Bologna, Italy.
Cristina Fernández-Bessa is Ramón y Cajal Distinguished Research Fellow and Lecturer in Criminal Law and Criminology at the University of A Coruña, Spain.
Valeria Ferraris is Associate Professor of Sociology of Law and Deviance at the University of Turin, Italy.
Summary
This book contributes to and broadens the field of Border Criminology, by bringing together a collection of chapters from leading scholars engaged in cross-national and comparative conversations on bordered penality and crimmigration practices.