Table of Contents:
  • Volume 86A [Volume 1] Introduction / Devyani Prabhat Section 1, Conceptual framework for understanding private participation. Chapter 1. 'A hotel with guaranteed occupancy' : to what extent does an immigration-industrial complex exist in the UK? / Rebecca Flynn
  • Chapter 2. National security immigration market in the United States following 9/11 / Alexandra McKelvie
  • Chapter 3. If the state has a blind spot, it also turns a blind eye (Vasanthakumar) : an analysis of the unaddressed and unintended consequences of privatising migration control / Mariam Tapponi Section 2, Immigration detention and deportation. Chapter 4. 'Institutionalised uncertainty' : the extent to which indefinite detention affects immigration detainees' acceptance of precarious 'paid activities' / Samuel l'Anson
  • Chapter 5. How is accountability determined when private actors are involved in the deportation of irregular migrants? / Martha Price
  • Chapter 6. To what extent does the privatisation of UK detention centres cause the erosion of the Article 3 ECHR rights of female migrant detainees and the accountability of the state in relation to this? / Rebecca Chapman
  • Chapter 7. In whose best interests? The UK's implementation of child rights for unaccompanied minors amidst competing legal, economic, social and humanitarian considerations / Katharina Lee.
  • Volume 86B [Volume 2] Introduction / Devyani Prabhat Section 1, Private stakeholders in migration control. Chapter 1. 'How are migrants, especially male asylum seekers, deterred from safe journeys and lawful entry into the UK through carrier sanctions? / Aleksandra Wegera-- Chapter 2. By what means are medical professionals able to reject hostile environment policy within the NHS? / Isabella Bertolini-- Chapter 3. Twenty-two years of employer sanctions: to what extent has deputising employers woven ethnocentrism into the UK's approach to controlling irregular migration?/ Emily Rigler Chapter 4. In the context of the agricultural industry, to what extent does the UK government's 'hostile environment' agenda outweigh the impact of the modern slavery act 2015 on irregular workers? / Harriet Parfitt-- Section 2, The political economy and commodification of migration. Chapter 5. To what extent did the private hybridity of the East India Company result in lack of accountability? / Akosua-Rose Oppon
  • Chapter 6. Migration as a commodity: do you posess the golden ticket...? An assessment of the tier1 (investor) visa's social and economic effect on the UK's migration system. / Isobel Kamber.