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By exploring crimmigration at its intersection with international refugee law, this book exposes crimmigration as a system focused on the governance of territorially present migrants, which internalizes the impracticability of removal and replaces expulsion with domestic policing.
List of contents
1. Crimmigration and the impracticability of removal; Part I: Crimmigration under international protection: a comparative perspective; 2. Criminalization of refugees and asylum-seekers under international law; 3. Detention of asylum-seekers: a comparative perspective; Part II: Crimmigration as governmentality; 4. Crimmigration as domestication; 5. Crimmigration as civic stratification; 6. The rise of crimmigration in the "society of control"; Part III: Constructing crimmigration under international protection in Israel; 7. Israel's detention policy towards asylum-seekers: a historical and theoretical perspective; 8. Crimmigration under international protection in Israel; 9. Mechanisms for controlling asylum-seekers involved in criminal activity: crimmigration under international protection as "hyper-crimmigration"; 10. Paradigm shift? Immigration detention's rise and fall as an aid to deportation; 11. Conclusion: lessons from the detention of asylum-seekers in Israel;
About the author
Rottem Rosenberg-Rubins is an Assistant Professor at the College of Law and Business in Ramat Gan. She additionally teaches at Tel Aviv University and serves as the coordinator of the Israeli public committee for preventing and amending wrongful convictions. Her main area of expertise is criminal law, with the bulk of her research pertaining to the interrelations between criminal law, immigration and citizenship. She combines this interdisciplinary study with the study of wrongful convictions, in an attempt to envision new tools for preventing such convictions
ex ante and amending them
ex post.
Summary
By exploring crimmigration at its intersection with international refugee law, this book exposes crimmigration as a system focused on the governance of territorially present migrants, which internalizes the impracticability of removal and replaces expulsion with domestic policing.