Criminalisation of People Smuggling in Indonesia and Australia

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A01=Antje Missbach
anti-smuggling legislation impact
Ashmore Reef
asylum seeker policy
Australian Border Force
Australian Government
Author_Antje Missbach
Border Protection Service
Category=GTM
Category=JBFH
Category=JBSL
Combat People Smuggling
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Indonesian Fishermen
IOM 2010b
irregular migration
Irregularised Migration
Manus Island
Maritime Arrivals
maritime border enforcement
Maritime Interceptions
Migrants Protocol
Migration Industry
Oceanic Viking
Offshore Detention
Offshore Detention Centres
Offshore Processing
Operation Sovereign Borders
Pacific Solution
People Smuggling
Pushback Operations
qualitative fieldwork
Rote Island
Smuggling Networks
Southeast Asian law
Tanjung Pinang
transnational crime studies
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032078496
  • Weight: 410g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Jan 2024
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book offers an ethnographically informed critique of the hyper-politicised debate on the facilitation of irregularised migration for people seeking asylum between Indonesia and Australia. While state authorities decry such facilitation as “people smuggling” and push for its criminalisation, the book’s focal points are the need for unsanctioned passages for people seeking asylum and the detrimental consequences of the criminalisation of “people smuggling” for both the facilitators and the people seeking asylum.

Drawing on court verdicts and interviews with convicted facilitators and law enforcement officials in Indonesia, this book provides a unique and holistic picture of the causes, conditions, procedures and intricacies surrounding the facilitation of irregularised maritime journeys between Indonesia and Australia covering almost four decades. It scrutinises the micro-level operational and place-specific characteristics of people smuggling and the consequences of anti-people-smuggling policies in Indonesia and relates those consequences to changes in the macroenvironment, which include relevant legal, political, social and economic factors that determine the overarching conditions of irregularised mobility. Compared to other states in the Global North, Australia has claimed to be more “successful” with its comprehensive approach to eliminate unsanctioned migration at sea by combining punitive, communicative–reventive and interceptive measures. This book challenges key achievements and objectives in regard to criminalising the facilitation of irregularised migration by foregrounding the many negative side effects that have emanated from “stopping the boats”.

The book will be of interest to researchers in the fields of anthropology and sociology, law and criminology, Asia-Pacific Studies, Southeast Asian Studies and international migration.

Antje Missbach is Professor of Sociology at Bielefeld University, Germany, specialising in global and transnational migration and mobility. She is the author of Separatist conflict in Indonesia: The long-distance politics of the Acehnese diaspora (Routledge 2012) and Troubled Transit: Asylum seekers stuck in Indonesia (2015) and co-author of Indonesia: State and Society in Transition (2019).

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