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This book explores the ways in which the state and private security
firms contribute to the direct and structural harm of asylum
seekers through policies and practices that result in states of
perpetual destitution, exclusion, and neglect. By synthesising
historic and contemporary public policy, criminological and
sociological perspectives, political philosophy, and the direct
experiential accounts of asylum seekers living within dispersed
accommodation, this text exposes the complex and co-dependent
relationship between the state's social control aims and neoliberal
imperatives of market expansion into the immigration control
regime. The title borrows from former Home Secretary Theresa May's
pronouncement that the UK government aimed to foster a 'hostile
environment' in its response to illegal immigration. While the Home
Office later attempted to rebrand its hostile environment policy as
a 'compliant environment', this book illustrates how aggressive
approaches toward the management of asylum-seeking populations has
effectively extended the hostile environment to those legally
present within the UK. Through an examination of the expanded
privatisation of dispersed asylum housing and the UK government's
reliance on contracts with private security firms like G4S and
Serco, this book explores the lived realities of hostile
environments as asylum seekers' accounts reveal the human costs of
marketised asylum accommodation programmes.
This book explores the ways in which the state and private security
firms contribute to the direct and structural harm of asylum
seekers through policies and practices that result in states of
perpetual destitution, exclusion, and neglect. By synthesising
historic and contemporary public policy, criminological and
sociological perspectives, political philosophy, and the direct
experiential accounts of asylum seekers living within dispersed
accommodation, this text exposes the complex and co-dependent
relationship between the state's social control aims and neoliberal
imperatives of market expansion into the immigration control
regime. The title borrows from former Home Secretary Theresa May's
pronouncement that the UK government aimed to foster a 'hostile
environment' in its response to illegal immigration. While the Home
Office later attempted to rebrand its hostile environment policy as
a 'compliant environment', this book illustrates how aggressive
approaches toward the management of asylum-seeking populations has
effectively extended the hostile environment to those legally
present within the UK. Through an examination of the expanded
privatisation of dispersed asylum housing and the UK government's
reliance on contracts with private security firms like G4S and
Serco, this book explores the lived realities of hostile
environments as asylum seekers' accounts reveal the human costs of
marketised asylum accommodation programmes.
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Paperback
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