World Without Cages

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alternatives to immigration detention
Asylum Seekers
Birth Tourism
Birthright Citizenship
Carceral Expansion
Carceral State
carceral studies
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Category=JKVP
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Category=QDTS
CBSA
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Immigration Detention
Immigration Detention Centre
Immigration Detention System
Immigration Enforcement
Internal Revenue Service
Internalise EU Border
International Detention Coalition
intersectional justice
Mass Incarceration
Migrant Justice
migrant rights advocacy
penal abolitionism
Precarious Immigration Status
Premature Labelling
Public Private Partnerships
Readmission Agreement
Reproductive Justice
Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program
Settler Colonial Canada
settler colonialism critique
social movement theory
Social Reproduction
Transit Migration

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032197890
  • Weight: 320g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Apr 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book is the first collection to bring together scholars and activists working to end criminal and immigration detention. Employing an intersectional lens and an impressive variety of case studies, the book makes a compelling case to rethink what justice could mean for refugees, citizens, and everyone in between.

The book connects immigration detention and prison justice towards reimagining a newer, better future. The ten chapters probe the intersections of immigration detention with current and potential forms of citizenship, membership, belonging, and punishments. Deprivation of liberty is one of the most serious harms that someone can experience. Immigration control is a nation-building project where racial, gender, class, ableist, and other lines of discrimination filter and police access to permanent residence. Employing a kaleidoscope of interdisciplinary backgrounds, the contributors bring this focus to bear on case studies spanning North America, Europe, and Asia. In conversation with social movements challenging police brutality, the contributors are thinking through the implications of de-funding the police, overhauling the ‘criminal justice’ system, eradicating prisons (penal abolitionism), and ending all forms of containment (carceral abolitionism). Neither the prison nor the detention centre is an inevitable feature of our social lives. This book collectively argues that abolishing detention could pave the way for new visions of justice to emerge.

The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Citizenship Studies.

Sharry Aiken is Associate Professor at Queen’s University’s Faculty of Law and affiliated with the Queen's Cultural Studies Program. She is a past president of the Canadian Council for Refugees, Co-Editor of the PKI Global Justice Journal, and former Editor-in-Chief of the journal Refuge.

Stephanie J. Silverman is a researcher, consultant, educator, editor, and scholar. She received her DPhil from the University of Oxford (2013) as a commonwealth scholar, served as the SSHRC Bora Laskin National Fellow in Human Rights (2015-2016), on faculty at the University of Toronto for six years, and at the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada.