ISBN-13: 9789462369887 / Angielski / Miękka / 2019 / 224 str.
ISBN-13: 9789462369887 / Angielski / Miękka / 2019 / 224 str.
Border control has changed significantly in recent decades. Whereas globalisation appears to have diminished the relevance of international borders, states have simultaneously sought ways to regain some form of control over cross-border mobility. In this process, novel means of border enforcement have emerged. What do these bordering practices look like in practice? How are they implemented on the ground and experienced by those subjected to them? These are the main questions this dissertation aims to answer. To that end, it looks at bordering practices in the Netherlands through the lens of crimmigration, the term used to refer to the growing merger of criminal justice and migration control. Relying on extensive empirical fieldwork, the dissertation examines two bordering practices: intra-Schengen migration policing and the punishment and deportation of criminally convicted non-citizens. It highlights the various ways in which contemporary bordering practices are shaped by, and shape the criminal justice system, and how this ultimately results in considerable challenges for the legitimacy of both the migration control and the criminal justice system.