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Gendering detention: (re)producing vulnerability for migrant women in British Immigration Removal Centres

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Gendering detention: (re)producing vulnerability for migrant women in British Immigration Removal Centres. / Crossley, Megan.
In: Justice, Power and Resistance, Vol. 6, No. 3, 05.10.2023, p. 295-312.

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Crossley M. Gendering detention: (re)producing vulnerability for migrant women in British Immigration Removal Centres. Justice, Power and Resistance. 2023 Oct 5;6(3):295-312. Epub 2023 Oct 5. doi: 10.1332/26352338Y2023D000000002

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@article{4d192f82a4a84db5abe07c2e85d81b4b,
title = "Gendering detention: (re)producing vulnerability for migrant women in British Immigration Removal Centres",
abstract = "Less than 10% of migrants in immigration detention in the UK are women, despite high-profile cases such as Yarl{\textquoteright}s Wood IRC, and so previous research concerned with the experience of detention focuses on the general migrant population which consists mainly of men. Therein lies an uncomfortable gendered nexus between a feminised vulnerability which sustains anti-detention narratives and the somatic masculinity of the detention estate. The experiences of men are treated as the norm, despite the differing and gendered experiences of detained women. This article addresses this gap by drawing together theoretical and empirical literature focusing on the experiences of migrant women detained in the UK and conceptualising Immigration Removal Centres (IRCs) as a microcosm through which to theorise the control and dehumanisation of migrant bodies within the contemporary context of the {\textquoteleft}Hostile Environment{\textquoteright}. In particular, this article pays close attention to the intersection of gender and immigration status for migrant detainees as their experiences of pregnancy, sex work and sexual violence implicate how they experience detention.",
author = "Megan Crossley",
year = "2023",
month = oct,
day = "5",
doi = "10.1332/26352338Y2023D000000002",
language = "English",
volume = "6",
pages = "295--312",
journal = "Justice, Power and Resistance",
issn = "2635-2338",
publisher = "Bristol Policy Press",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Gendering detention

T2 - (re)producing vulnerability for migrant women in British Immigration Removal Centres

AU - Crossley, Megan

PY - 2023/10/5

Y1 - 2023/10/5

N2 - Less than 10% of migrants in immigration detention in the UK are women, despite high-profile cases such as Yarl’s Wood IRC, and so previous research concerned with the experience of detention focuses on the general migrant population which consists mainly of men. Therein lies an uncomfortable gendered nexus between a feminised vulnerability which sustains anti-detention narratives and the somatic masculinity of the detention estate. The experiences of men are treated as the norm, despite the differing and gendered experiences of detained women. This article addresses this gap by drawing together theoretical and empirical literature focusing on the experiences of migrant women detained in the UK and conceptualising Immigration Removal Centres (IRCs) as a microcosm through which to theorise the control and dehumanisation of migrant bodies within the contemporary context of the ‘Hostile Environment’. In particular, this article pays close attention to the intersection of gender and immigration status for migrant detainees as their experiences of pregnancy, sex work and sexual violence implicate how they experience detention.

AB - Less than 10% of migrants in immigration detention in the UK are women, despite high-profile cases such as Yarl’s Wood IRC, and so previous research concerned with the experience of detention focuses on the general migrant population which consists mainly of men. Therein lies an uncomfortable gendered nexus between a feminised vulnerability which sustains anti-detention narratives and the somatic masculinity of the detention estate. The experiences of men are treated as the norm, despite the differing and gendered experiences of detained women. This article addresses this gap by drawing together theoretical and empirical literature focusing on the experiences of migrant women detained in the UK and conceptualising Immigration Removal Centres (IRCs) as a microcosm through which to theorise the control and dehumanisation of migrant bodies within the contemporary context of the ‘Hostile Environment’. In particular, this article pays close attention to the intersection of gender and immigration status for migrant detainees as their experiences of pregnancy, sex work and sexual violence implicate how they experience detention.

U2 - 10.1332/26352338Y2023D000000002

DO - 10.1332/26352338Y2023D000000002

M3 - Journal article

VL - 6

SP - 295

EP - 312

JO - Justice, Power and Resistance

JF - Justice, Power and Resistance

SN - 2635-2338

IS - 3

ER -