NCJ Number
231156
Journal
Punishment and Society Volume: 12 Issue: 2 Dated: April 2010 Pages: 169-186
Date Published
April 2010
Length
18 pages
Annotation
Set against an increasing capacity for the detention of irregular migrants and a decreasing number of effective expulsions, this article tries to determine the nature and function of the administrative detention of irregular migrants in Germany and the Netherlands.
Abstract
The expulsion of irregular migrants has become a political priority in many (northern) EU member states. In countries such as Germany and the Netherlands this has resulted in a rather puzzling situation in which the capacity for the administrative detention of irregular migrants is increasing, while the number of effective expulsions seems to be decreasing. In this article two theoretical perspectives are used to analyse these developments: a perspective emanating from the criminological framework of the 'new penology' and one resulting from the 'migration control literature'. These perspectives combined offer explanations for this paradoxical situation by highlighting the importance of identification and the frustration thereof by irregular migrants and countries of origin and for the apparent irrationality of the use of, sometimes very lengthy, administrative detention of irregular migrants. Notes and references (Published Abstract)