Journal article 1034 views 252 downloads
Towards a Political Economy of Charging Regimes: Fines, Fees and Force in Uk Immigration Control
The British Journal of Criminology, Volume: 60, Issue: 3, Pages: 579 - 599
Swansea University Author: Jon Burnett
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DOI (Published version): 10.1093/bjc/azz070
Abstract
This article examines the political economy of charging regimes within immigration control in the UK, focusing its attention on UKVI fees and charges, carrier sanctions, charges related to accessing services and civil penalties administered though immigration enforcement. While distinct charging reg...
Published in: | The British Journal of Criminology |
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ISSN: | 0007-0955 1464-3529 |
Published: |
Oxford
Oxford University Press (OUP)
2020
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa52322 |
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2020-10-13T17:12:10.8425230 v2 52322 2019-10-03 Towards a Political Economy of Charging Regimes: Fines, Fees and Force in Uk Immigration Control 3c4e0496f3701567ac4a28536ff237f9 0000-0002-9229-897X Jon Burnett Jon Burnett true false 2019-10-03 SOSS This article examines the political economy of charging regimes within immigration control in the UK, focusing its attention on UKVI fees and charges, carrier sanctions, charges related to accessing services and civil penalties administered though immigration enforcement. While distinct charging regimes have been analysed in their individual guises, to date there has been little substantive analysis bringing these regimes together and locating them at the centre of its enquiry. Drawing on data obtained through the Freedom of Information Act 2000, this paper consequently examines the functions and prevalence of charging regimes, arguing that they contribute to an economy of financial power which has significant implications for understandings of criminalisation and immigration enforcement. Journal Article The British Journal of Criminology 60 3 579 599 Oxford University Press (OUP) Oxford 0007-0955 1464-3529 charging regimes, civil penalties, immigration fees, immigration enforcement, carrier sanctions 1 3 2020 2020-03-01 10.1093/bjc/azz070 COLLEGE NANME Social Sciences School COLLEGE CODE SOSS Swansea University 2020-10-13T17:12:10.8425230 2019-10-03T14:59:38.1488698 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Social Sciences - Criminology, Sociology and Social Policy Jon Burnett 0000-0002-9229-897X 1 Fidelis Chebe 2 52322__15667__821059bef140437f81a84b3d79ab97fd.pdf 52322.pdf 2019-10-17T17:42:48.1500000 Output 311426 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true 2021-11-26T00:00:00.0000000 true eng |
title |
Towards a Political Economy of Charging Regimes: Fines, Fees and Force in Uk Immigration Control |
spellingShingle |
Towards a Political Economy of Charging Regimes: Fines, Fees and Force in Uk Immigration Control Jon Burnett |
title_short |
Towards a Political Economy of Charging Regimes: Fines, Fees and Force in Uk Immigration Control |
title_full |
Towards a Political Economy of Charging Regimes: Fines, Fees and Force in Uk Immigration Control |
title_fullStr |
Towards a Political Economy of Charging Regimes: Fines, Fees and Force in Uk Immigration Control |
title_full_unstemmed |
Towards a Political Economy of Charging Regimes: Fines, Fees and Force in Uk Immigration Control |
title_sort |
Towards a Political Economy of Charging Regimes: Fines, Fees and Force in Uk Immigration Control |
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3c4e0496f3701567ac4a28536ff237f9 |
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3c4e0496f3701567ac4a28536ff237f9_***_Jon Burnett |
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Jon Burnett |
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Jon Burnett Fidelis Chebe |
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The British Journal of Criminology |
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This article examines the political economy of charging regimes within immigration control in the UK, focusing its attention on UKVI fees and charges, carrier sanctions, charges related to accessing services and civil penalties administered though immigration enforcement. While distinct charging regimes have been analysed in their individual guises, to date there has been little substantive analysis bringing these regimes together and locating them at the centre of its enquiry. Drawing on data obtained through the Freedom of Information Act 2000, this paper consequently examines the functions and prevalence of charging regimes, arguing that they contribute to an economy of financial power which has significant implications for understandings of criminalisation and immigration enforcement. |
published_date |
2020-03-01T04:52:31Z |
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11.3749895 |