Detention and its discontents: punishment and compliance within the U.K. detention estate through the lens of the withdrawal of Assisted Voluntary Return

Walker, Sarah. 2018. Detention and its discontents: punishment and compliance within the U.K. detention estate through the lens of the withdrawal of Assisted Voluntary Return. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, pp. 1-18. ISSN 1369-183X [Article]

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Abstract or Description

Detention centres and return programmes are increasingly important instruments of border control across Europe. In 2014, the UK Home Office removed Assisted Voluntary Return (AVR) from detention, meaning it is no longer available to detainees. Drawing on both secondary data analysis of interviews with welfare staff in an Immigration Removal Centre (IRC) and Home Office senior managers and primary data from follow-on interviews with welfare staff and NGO workers, the paper analyses the Home Office rationale behind this withdrawal. Using this policy change as a lens reveals how through a responsibilization discourse inherent in Home Office policy the subject of the ‘detainee’ is criminalised and framed as non-compliant and thus undeserving of ‘privileges’, such as AVR, in an increasingly punitive space. In contrast, both welfare officers and NGO workers frame detainees in a more nuanced, sometimes contradictory, manner; recognising the role of the state in creating vulnerabilities. By examining how dominant forms of discrimination are held in place by the banal ways categories are repeated in everyday discourse, this paper highlights the increasing pathologization of deviance and framing of detainees as criminal ‘other’. As such it contributes to debates on the contradictory world of detention and the sociology of punishment.

Item Type:

Article

Identification Number (DOI):

https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2018.1443805

Keywords:

detention, immigration control, voluntary return, punishment, secondary data analysis

Departments, Centres and Research Units:

Sociology

Dates:

DateEvent
16 February 2018Accepted
28 February 2018Published

Item ID:

23071

Date Deposited:

23 Mar 2018 11:07

Last Modified:

16 Aug 2019 01:26

Peer Reviewed:

Yes, this version has been peer-reviewed.

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/23071

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