Description
Deportation limbo offers a political ethnography of deportation enforcement in Denmark and Sweden. It takes place in a time when deportation has emerged as a key priority in Northern European states’ migration policy regimes, and when states are stepping up their efforts to address the socalled deportation gap. The book takes the reader inside detention centres, deportation camps and migration offices, and explores how frontline officials deal with their task of pressuring nondeported migrants to leave, and the injurious effects of these efforts. Using the analytical frame of a continuum of state violence, the book details the tensionridden enforcement of policy measures which, rather than enhancing deportations, render nondeported people stuck in precarious limbo. It brings up questions of the violence endemic to border regimes, and about racism, and bureaucratic exclusion in the Nordic welfare states.An electronic edition of this book is freely available under a Creative Commons (CC BYNCND) licence.




