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Session Submission Type: Complete Thematic Panel
When the European Union (EU) institutions set up the basic architecture of border control policies in Europe back in the late 1990s they could not have envisioned the heated political and public debates on migration enforcement currently witnessed in the EU – and elsewhere. In Europe, supranational, national and subnational actors converge to form a multi-scalar model of asylum and migration governance, contributing to shape migration policies by agonistically pursuing their own interests and goals. These agonistic relations take place in a migration enforcement field that has significantly changed over the last decade, both at the continental and national level. The New EU Pact on Migration and Asylum, which should be passed in the coming months, is expected to have a major impact on this already politically charged and unstable field. This two-panel session aims to scrutinise recent changes in this field and the potential impact of the passage of the New EU Pact, gathering presentations from various EU countries that have been particularly active in shielding external EU borders.
A criminological reading of the new EU Pact on Migration and Asylum - Giuseppe Campesi, University of Bari Aldo Moro
Further than “crimmigration”: Criminological cares about the changing detention landscape after the new European Pact on Migration and Asylum - George Nikolopoulos, Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences
The Changing archipelago of Detention and Containment at Spain's Southern Border - Ana Ballesteros-Pena, Complutense University of Madrid; Cristina Fernández-Bessa, University of A Coruna