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By
Sharon Pickering
RRP
$55.00 (incl gst) ISBN 9781862875418
In the aftermath of World War II, in the shadow of the Holocaust,
the countries of the world signed on for a Convention giving
rights and safeguards to refugees. Forced migration was a
humanitarian not a criminal concern. Being a refugee involved
discussion of human rights and protection rather than developing
processes of criminalization and law enforcement.
Sharon Pickering documents how this has changed. Refugees
and asylum seekers are dressed in the clothes of criminals,
and national sovereignty has become the focus of the response
of the Global North to forced migration.
Pickering adopts a State Crime framework, emerging out of
a critique of law and order refugee politics, to explain policy
responses. The roles of the administration, the justice system
and the media are analysed to highlight the discourses of
criminality which have come to dominate discussion of refugee
and asylum issues.
She shows how the spectacle of the refugee as criminal allied
to the rise of transnational policing, has led to the opening
up of extra-territorial, extra-legal spaces, how contradictions
have emerged as to national 'borders' and how the rule of
law has been debased.
Order the book from The Instute or The
Federation Press.
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