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Session Submission Type: Pre-arranged Panel
Understanding the global migration control apparatus means also trying to unravel the perspectives and experiences of those working within these bureaucratic systems. While much of the analysis on these systems of control assume them as monolithic, empirical studies with them suggest a rather more fragmented field. Given the political sensibility and ethical controversies around migration control, it is not surprising that many immigration staff express diverse and contradictory perspectives and experiences of what is like to do their work.
While much has been written about the professional culture of criminal justice workers, including immigration control staff, less attention has been paid to these workers’ moral worlds, understood as the norms and values that shape their worldviews, practical reasoning and actions.
In these panel sessions, we are are exploring these moral worlds to better understand the everyday work of these officers and explore critiques from within. We welcome papers that deal with: methodological insights on exploring this aspect of immigration bureaucracies, theoretical and empirical perspectives on morality and immigration labour, the affective dimension of immigration law implementation, and comparative analysis of the moral worlds of immigration control workers.
Border control and crisis management: police perceptions on the Europe-Africa border - Jacqueline Carvalho da Silva, University of Málaga; Elena Casado Patricio, Universidad de Maálaga; Angie Steffania Rojas Varón, University of Malaga
Fear, Surveillance, and Resistance: Navigating the Spaces of Immigration Enforcement - Leslie Stephanie Molina, University of Glasgow
Performing bureaucratic distance: the case of Belgium’s return counsellors - Laure Deschuyteneer, Vrije Universiteit Brussel (Crime & Society)
“It’s not my job to believe or not to believe. My job is to process”: Exploring the moral worlds of the British ‘Small Boat Operational Command’ - Victoria Taylor, University of Oxford