1st Edition
Intimate Economies of Immigration Detention Critical perspectives
Foreword: On the depth and importance of intimate economies
Alison Mountz
Chapter 1: Introduction: Intimate economies of immigration detention
Deirdre Conlon and Nancy Hiemstra
PART 1: ENGAGING THE INTIMATE
Chapter 2: Detained beyond the sovereign: conceptualising non-state actor involvement in immigration detention
Michael Flynn
Chapter 3: Discretion, contracting, and commodification: privatisation of US immigration detention as a technology of government
Lauren Martin
Chapter 4: In the market of morality: international human rights standards and the immigration detention "improvement" complex
Julia Morris
Chapter 5: Bearing witness and the intimate economies of immigration detention centres in Australia
Caroline Fleay
Chapter 6: Managing capacity, shifting burdens: social reproduction and the intimate economies of immigrant family detention
Jill Williams and Vanessa Massaro
Chapter 7: On exterior and interior detention regimes: governing, bordering, and economy in transit migration across Mexico
Mario Bruzzone
PART 2: EXPOSING INTIMATE ECONOMIES
Chapter 8: Captive consumers and coerced labourers: intimate economies and the expanding US detention regime
Nancy Hiemstra and Deirdre Conlon
Chapter 9: Intimate economies of ambiguity and erasure: Darwin as Australia’s 2011-2012 ‘capital of detention’
Kate Coddington
Chapter 10: Pocket money: everyday precarities in the Danish asylum system
Malene Jacobsen
Chapter 11: Health and intimacies in immigration detention
Nick Gill
Chapter 12: Intimate encounters with immigrant criminalisati
Biography
Deirdre Conlon is a Lecturer in Critical Human Geography at the University of Leeds, UK. Her research examines immigration enforcement and detention in policy and practice, their effects on migrant (in)security, citizenship and everyday life, as well as the wider reverberations of immigration control.
Nancy Hiemstra is Assistant Professor of Migration Studies at Stony Brook University in New York, USA. Her research analyses the geopolitical and socio-cultural reverberations of restrictive immigration policies and practices in the United States and Latin America, with a focus on US detention and deportation.
‘This impressive and wide-ranging collection brings together leading scholars to expose the intimate economies, experiences, and processes that shape immigration detention. From the pocket money provided for asylum seekers in Danish detention centres, to the growing capacity of the detention estate across Europe, this collection traces a series of politically astute linkages between intimate experiences and global processes. By placing detention at the heart of contemporary migration, Conlon and Hiemstra have produced a volume that makes a critical intervention into debates over mobility, governance, and the politics of citizenship. In foregrounding the entangled relationships of detention, this volume contributes both a theoretically innovative focus on the intimate, whilst also calling attention to the political and ethical urgency of challenging detention across the world. Anyone interested in understanding the immigration detention industry, and in actively contesting it, will find inventive, insightful, and powerful resources in this book.’ — Jonathan Darling, Senior Lecturer in Human Geography, University of Manchester, UK
‘Deirdre Conlon and Nancy Hiemstra have pulled together an astonishing collection of essays which focus on the intimate economies of immigration detention and shed light on the lived experiences of being detained in several countries. The wide geographic range presented in this collection is impressive and helps give the reader a sense of the extent to which immigration detention has become a global phenomenon. The collection is theoretically and empirically innovative, providing us both with new ways of thinking about the increasingly-common practice of detention as well as new insights into the significant physical and emotional toll detention takes on migrants’ lives. The editors creatively build on concepts of accumulation and dispossession to advance our conceptual understanding of the intimate economie






