<p>This timely and important collection casts critical light on the policies, people, and practices that constitute the borders of post-Brexit Britain. Drawing together insights from a range of leading international scholars and activists, <i>UK Borderscapes</i> unpacks the history, evolution, and effects of bordering, illustrating the harms of border enforcement, and tracing the vibrancy of resistance that confronts bordering. In detailing the growth of migrants’ rights movements, forms of everyday solidarity, and the role of materials in contesting borders, the collection illustrates the many and varied sites of everyday resistance that are reshaping borders today.</p><p><b>Jonathan Darling</b><i>, Durham University, UK</i>.</p><p>The book is timely, relevant, and it lifts the veil on how decisions are made by the State and its agents to cap irregular migration via security and border control policies. The equity and fairness of these outcome are evaluated and the conclusion drawn that protection gaps for migrants and asylum seekers exist in law and in policy. Although the focus is on UK Borderscapes, the multi-disciplinary discussion, layered analysis, identification of the power relations which exist, and the proposals offered resonate beyond the UK. It appeals to the Global South audience where natural disasters, poverty, civil war, and gang violence fuel continuous irregular migration, often with inflows to the UK. The book stimulates debate to find balanced and humanitarian solutions and it informs those misled by State propaganda or media headline statements which sensationalise or simplify the plight of migrants.</p><p><b> Dr. Florence Seemungal</b>,<i> Research Associate, Centre for Criminology, University of Oxford</i></p>
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Kahina Le Louvier is a Research Fellow in the Computer and Information Sciences Department at Northumbria University. She is a researcher working on various aspects of migration, including environmental migration, the information needs and barriers experienced by people seeking asylum in the UK and France, drivers and imaginaries of migration, the heritage practices of people in exile, and the ethics of migration research.
Karen Latricia Hough is a Research Fellow at the Centre of Excellence in Terrorism, Resilience, Intelligence and Organised Crime Research at Sheffield Hallam University, UK. She is an expert in migration and refugee studies. She obtained her doctorate in social anthropology from the University of Oxford, and she has worked on several EU-funded projects regarding the development of asylum and immigration law in the Russian Federation and in Europe. Her current research projects focus on modern slavery and anti-trafficking.