For this assignment you are asked to review a Home Office policy document:

    Home Office (2010). Protecng Our Border, Protecng the Public. The UK Border Agencys Five Year
    Strategy for Enforcing our Immigraon Rules and Addressing Immigraon and Cross Border Crime
    (London: Home Office). Available at:
    hps://webarchive.naonalarchives.gov.uk/20100303205641/hp:/www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/sit
    econtent/documents/managingourborders/crime-strategy/protecng-border.pdf?view=Binary

    you are asked to make a
    judgement on the policy put forward by the UK government in 2010. Make sure you comment
    crically on the document. Idenfy the purpose, the main points, and the polical movaons
    behind the policy. Then evaluate them. Think about the arcles and chapters that you have read,
    what are the results of this policy? What impact has it had? Was it a good policy? A bad one? Was it
    well informed? Are there any unstated assumpons in the document? Are there any addional
    purposes of the policy that are not explicitly stated?
    We want to know your opinion, BUT, you must always back it up with academic sources. If you think
    it was a great policy, why? Who else supports this? What research has shown the posive impact of
    it? If you disagree with the policy, also, why? Have any academics provided evidence of a negave
    impact of it in their research? Tell us about it.

    Reading list:
    Who Counts as a Migrant? Definitions and their Consequences
    Webpage  by The Migration Observatory  2019  Essential
    Globalization & crime
    Book  by Katja Franko Aas  2013  Recommended
    Read Chapter 4: ‘The Deviant Immigrant’: Migration and Discourse about Crime.
    ‘An Inspection into the extent to which the police are identifying and flagging arrested foreign nationals to the Home Office and checking their status
    Document  by Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration  2016  Essential
    Frontex Risk Analysis 2019
    Webpage  by Frontex  2019  Recommended
    Policing Humanitarian Borderlands: Frontex, Human Rights and the Precariousness of Life in British Journal of Criminology
    Article  by Katja Franko Aas; Helene O. I. Gundhus  01/2015  Recommended

    Enlisting the Public in the Policing of Immigration in British Journal of Criminology
    Article  by Ana Aliverti  03/2015  Recommended
    Hubs and Spokes: The Transformation of the British Prison in The borders of punishment: migration, citizenship, and social exclusion
    Chapter  by Emma Kaufman  Essential

    still no way out – Foreign national women and trafficked women in the criminal justice system
    Document  by Prison Reform Trust  2018  Recommended
    Read pages 5 through 13 as minimum

    Immigration Detention in the UK
    Webpage  by The Migration Observatory  Essential
    Can Immigration Detention Centres be Legitimate? Understanding Confinement in a Global World in The borders of punishment: migration, citizenship, and social exclusion
    Chapter  by Mary Bosworth  Recommended

    Inside Immigration Detention
    Book  by Mary Bosworth  2014; 881438158  Recommended
    Google Books Logo
    Introduction as minimum

    Citizenship Deprivation, Security and Human Rights in European Journal of Migration and Law
    Article  by Lucia Zedner  2016  Recommended
    Interdiction and Indoctrination: The Counter-Terrorism and Security Act 2015 in The Modern Law Review
    Article  by Jessie Blackbourn; Clive Walker  09/2016  Recommended

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