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dc.contributor.editorO'CONNELL DAVIDSON, Julia
dc.contributor.editorHOWARD, Neil P.
dc.date.accessioned2016-02-02T13:52:24Z
dc.date.available2016-02-02T13:52:24Z
dc.date.issued2015
dc.identifier.citation[S.L.], Open Democracy, 2015en
dc.identifier.isbn9780997050745
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1814/38807
dc.descriptionThis collection was published in 2015 under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 licence.en
dc.description.abstractMobility is and always has been an essential part of humanity’s economic, social, cultural and political life. To be able to move freely is a good. Yet in our unjust world, it is also an unearned and unequally distributed privilege. This volume reflects on that privilege, and on the suffering that results when states restrict access to it. The articles included here will explode the spurious contemporary binary between ‘smuggling’ and ‘trafficking’, and will argue that anti-trafficking discourse hides more than it reveals. Most crucially, it hides how state restrictions on the freedom of movement are the true threat to human wellbeing. Open the borders!en
dc.description.tableofcontents-- On freedom and (im)mobility: how states create vulnerability by controlling human movement, Julia O’Connell Davidson and Neil Howard --- Section one: the state construction of (im)mobility -- Overcoming space: mobility and history, Laura Brace -- The border spectacle of migrant ‘victimisation’, Nicholas De Genova -- Illegalised migrants and temporary foreign workers: the international segmentation of labour, Harald Bauder -- Fascist legacies: Italy’s approach to mobility and mobile labour, Patrizia Testai -- Rethinking (im)mobilities of Roma in Europe, Julija Sardelic --- Section two: the consequences of mobility controls -- Families in detention, Roxanne Lynn Doty -- Slave state: how UK immigration controls create ‘slaves’, Lucy Williams -- The UK: the far shore for torture survivors, Rhian Beynon -- Slavery, asylum, and the face of social death in modern day Britain, Roda Madziva -- At any cost: the injustice of the “4 and 4 rule” in Canada, Stephanie J. Silverman -- New mobility regimes, new forms of exploitation in Sicily, Letizia Palumbo and Alessandra Sciurba -- No agency: laying the groundwork to exploit of migrant workers, Kirsten Han -- Freedom fighters: freelancing as direct action, Mark Johnson --- Section three: trafficking and slavery -- Bound and determined: new abolitionism and the campaign against modern slavery, Edlie Wong -- Rights talk, wrong comparison: trafficking and transatlantic slavery, Julia O’Connell Davidson -- Silencing the challenging voices of the global ‘subalterns’ in antitrafficking discourse, Lucrecia Rubio Grundell -- Safe migration as an emerging anti-trafficking agenda?, Sverre Molland -- ‘Foreign criminals’ and victims of trafficking: fantasies, categories, and control, Luke de Noronha -- North Korean migrants in China: neither trafficked nor smuggled, Kyunghee Kook -- When spring comes, smugglers are in the news, Inka Stock -- Criminalising traffickers is an alibi for state-produced vulnerability, Lyndsey P. Beutin --- Section four: a future beyond bordering? -- Ferries not Frontex! 10 points to end the deaths of migrants at sea, The Alarm Phone -- The case for open borders, Joseph H. Carens -- Thinking about open borders, Antoine Pécoud -- Contributors -- Beyond Trafficking and Slavery Editorial Board -- The Beyond Trafficking and Slavery short courseen
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdfen
dc.language.isoenen
dc.relation.urihttps://www.opendemocracy.net/beyondslaveryen
dc.relation.urihttp://cameronthibos.com/bts/BTS-5-Migration-and-Mobility.pdf
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessen
dc.titleMigration and mobility : beyond trafficking and slavery short course. Volume 5en
dc.typeBooken
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