Securing Borders: Detention And Deportation in Canada (Law and Society)
Book Details
Description
Securing Borders explores, in the context of immigration penality, a number of themes which cross traditional disciplinary boundaries, including: adminstrative discretion, law, and liberalism; transitions from welfare to neoliberal regimes of rule; intersections of sovereign and governmental, risk-based, governing strategies; "governing through crime" as central to contemporary public policy; and the border as heterogenous and artful accomplishment that constitutes citizens and national identities, and regulates populations. This work is thus a rich interdisciplinary study which promises to be of interest to scholars in a range of disciplines including criminology, socio-legal studies, law, history, sociology, political science, international relations, and public administration. It will also be of interest to non-governmental advocates as well as to government representatives who work in the areas of immigration, refugee determination, and related fields.
