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CONTEMPORARY IMMIGRATION (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   127057


Private detention and the immigration industrial complex / Doty, Roxanne Lynne; Wheatley, Elizabeth Shannon   Journal Article
Doty, Roxanne Lynne Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract This study draws upon the insights of Michel Foucault to examine the contemporary immigration industrial complex in the United States. We focus on the involvement of private prison corporations in this complex, as well as the factors that have been essential to its creation and that perpetuate its continuance. We argue that four key aspects of the system (the legal apparatus, worldviews/ideas, private corporations, and webs of influence) converge to create an immigration industrial complex and that this complex functions as an economy of power that works to manage the existing system and discourages fundamental reform.
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2
ID:   132509


Securitizing immigration in the age of terror / Messina, Anthony M   Journal Article
Messina, Anthony M Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract In the context of the evidence presented in both the collected scholarship under review and other select works, this article asks if and to what extent migration-related issues have been securitized in Europe and the United States. In addressing these questions it executes three tasks. First, it critically assesses the four major dimensions across which contemporary immigration purportedly is securitized: on one side, rhetorically addressing immigration-related issues through political elite discourse, public opinion, and the mass media; and on the other, the policy processes through which immigration is securitized. Second, this article identifies the strengths and weaknesses of securitization theory as it has been applied to immigration. Finally, it draws mostly negative conclusions about the veracity of the central claims of the securitization of immigration literature and, specifically, its causal story.
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