Criminal Justice Research in an Era of Mass Mobility
In: Routledge Studies in Criminal Justice, Borders and Citizenship Ser
Cover -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Series editors' introduction -- List of contributors -- Acknowledgements -- List of abbreviations -- Criminal justice research in an era of mass mobility: a brief introduction -- Part 1 Producing and presenting knowledge in an era of mass mobility -- 1 Taking the border for a walk: a reflection on the agonies and ecstasies of exploratory research -- 2 Manoeuvring in tricky waters: challenges in being a useful and critical migration scholar -- 3 'Crimmigration' statistics: numbers as evidence and problem -- 4 Funnel politics: framing an 'irreal' space -- Part 2 Epistemological and methodological accounts in practice -- 5 Expectations and realities of fieldwork by a nascent qualitative researcher -- 6 Spotting foreigners inside the courtroom: race, crime and the construction of foreignness -- 7 Migrant voices in the Global South: challenges of recruitment, participation and interpretation -- 8 Life and death in immigration detention -- 9 Making sense of the shifting 'field': ethical and practical considerations in researching life after immigration detention -- Part 3 The politics of positionality, ethics and emotions -- 10 Researching vulnerable women: sharing distress and the risk of secondary and vicarious trauma -- 11 In the absence of sympathy: serious criminal offenders and the impact of border control measures -- 12 Reflexivity and theorizing: conceptualizing the police role in migration control -- 13 Race at the border -- 14 One of us or one of them? Researcher positionality, language, and belonging in an all-foreign prison -- 15 Voices in immigration detention centres in Greece: different actors and possibilities for change -- Criminal justice research in an era of mass mobility: concluding remarks -- Index