ABSTRACT

The Routledge Handbook on Crime and International Migration is concerned with the various relationships between migration, crime and victimization that have informed a wide criminological scholarship often driven by some of the original lines of inquiry of the Chicago School. Historically, migration and crime came to be the device by which Criminology and cognate fields sought to tackle issues of race and ethnicity, often in highly problematic ways. However, in the contemporary period this body of scholarship is inspiring scholars to produce significant evidence that speaks to some of the biggest public policy questions and debunks many dominant mythologies around the criminality of migrants.

The Routledge Handbook on Crime and International Migration is also concerned with the theoretical, empirical and policy knots found in the relationship between regular and irregular migration, offending and victimization, the processes and impact of criminalization, and the changing role of criminal justice systems in the regulation and enforcement of international mobility and borders. The Handbook is focused on the migratory ‘fault lines’ between the Global North and Global South, which have produced new or accelerated sites of state control, constructed irregular migration as a crime and security problem, and mobilized ideological and coercive powers usually reserved for criminal or military threats.

Offering a strong international focus and comprehensive coverage of a wide range of border, criminal justice and migration-related issues, this book is an important contribution to criminology and migration studies and will be essential reading for academics, students and practitioners interested in this field.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part I|46 pages

Immigration and crime

chapter |15 pages

Immigration and crime

chapter |15 pages

Understanding immigration, crime and victimization in the United States

Patterns and paradoxes in traditional and new destination sites

part II|84 pages

Crime control, criminal justice and migration

chapter |16 pages

Bordering citizenship in ‘an open and generous society'

The criminalization of migration in Canada

chapter |18 pages

Reinventing ‘the stain'

Bad character and criminal deportation in contemporary Australia

part III|81 pages

The politics of migration, security and crime

chapter |13 pages

(Un)knowing and ambivalence in migration

Temporary migration status and its impacts on the everyday life of insecure communities

chapter |14 pages

Intuiting illegality in sex work

part IV|52 pages

Migration, law and crime

chapter |14 pages

Crimmigration

Encountering the leviathan

chapter |8 pages

War crimes and asylum in Canada

Reflections on the Ezokola decision and the barriers courts face in protecting refugees

part V|78 pages

Crimes of mobility

chapter |15 pages

Stopped in the traffic, not stopping the traffic

Gender, asylum and anti-trafficking interventions in Serbia

chapter |22 pages

Enclosing the commons

Predatory capital and forced evictions in Papua New Guinea and Burma

part VI|45 pages

Criminology and the border

chapter |15 pages

Shifting borders

Crime, borders, international relations and criminology