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Outside Justice - by David C Brotherton & Daniel L Stageman & Shirley P Leyro (Hardcover)

Outside Justice - by  David C Brotherton & Daniel L Stageman & Shirley P Leyro (Hardcover)
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Last Price: 159.99 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Drawing on data from the U.S. and elsewhere, this book discusses the conceptual overlap between popular perceptions of immigration and criminality, and its reflection in the increasing practical overlap between criminal justice and immigration control systems.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>Part 1: Procedural Justice: Immigrants in Interaction with Agents of the State.- Driving While Immigrant: Driver's License Policy and Immigration Enforcement.- Local Democracy on ICE: The Arizona Laboratory.- Removal Roulette: Secure Communities and Immigration Enforcement in the United States (2008-2012).- Part 2: Social Justice: The Collateral Consequences of Enforcement for Immigrant Families and Communities.- Collateral Consequences: The Impact of Local Immigration Policies on Latino Immigrant Families in North Central Indiana.- The Syndication of Removal: Trauma and Substance Abuse.- US Citizen Children of Deportees: Picking Up the Broken Pieces of a Bulimic Society.- Exploring Deportation as a Causal Mechanism of Social Disorganization.- Part 3: Criminal Justice: Crime and Its Correlates in Immigrant Communities.- Local Context and National Consequences: Homicide Variations Across Time.- Clandestine Tales from Tuscany.- Profits on the Margins: Private Language Service Providers and Limited-English-Proficient Immigrants in Irish Courts.- Part 4: Economic Justice: Immigrants as Actors and Objects of Economic Activity.- Exploring the Applicability of Group Threat Theory in Respect of Majority Group Support for Punitive Criminal Justice Policy in the Context of Large-Scale Immigration in the United States and Germany.- "These Illegals': Personhood, Profit, and the Political Economy of Punishment in Federal-Local Immigration Enforcement Partnerships.- Tyrannizing Strangers for Profit: Wage Theft, Cross-Border Migrant Workers, and the Politics of Exclusion in an Era of Global Economic Integration.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> From the Back Cover </b></p></br></br><p><i>Outside Justice: <b> </b>Immigration and the Criminalizing Impact of Changing Policy and Practice</i> fills a clear gap in the scholarly literature on the increasing conceptual overlap between popular perceptions of immigration and criminality, and its reflection in the increasing practical overlap between criminal justice and immigration control systems. <p/>Drawing on data from the United States and other nations, scholars from a range of academic disciplines examine the impact of these trends on the institutions, communities, and individuals that are experiencing them. Individual entries address criminal victimization and labor exploitation of undocumented immigrant communities, the effects of parental detention and deportation on children remaining in destination countries, relations between immigrant communities and law enforcement agencies, and the responses of law enforcement agencies to drastic changes in immigration policy, among other topics. <p/>Taken as a whole, these essays chart the ongoing progression of social forces that will determine the well-being of Western democracies throughout the 21st century. In doing so, they set forth a research agenda for reexamining and challenging the goals of converging criminal justice and immigration control policy, and raise a number of carefully considered, ethical alternatives to the contemporary policy status quo. ​​Contemporary immigration is the focus of highly charged rhetoric and policy innovation, both attempting to define the movement of people across national borders as fundamentally an issue of criminal justice. <br></p><p>This realignment has had profound effects on criminal justice policy and practice and immigration control alike, and raises far-reaching implications for social inclusion, labor economies, community cohesion, and a host of other areas of immediate interest to social science researchers and practitioners. </p>

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