Working in this Place Turns You Racist: Staff, Race, and Power in Detention
in M. Bosworth, A. Parmar and Y. Vázquez. (Eds). Boundaries of Belonging: Race, Migration and Criminal Justice. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 214 – 228
Criminal Justice, Borders and Citizenship Research Paper No. 3080975
26 Pages Posted: 4 Dec 2017
Date Written: 2017
Abstract
In this chapter, drawing on fieldwork in two British immigration removal centres (IRCs), I will discuss staff accounts of race and racism in detention. Designed as places to expel unwanted foreign citizens, IRCs are highly racialised institutions as nearly all resident within them are members of an ethnic minority. What is it like to work in such places? How, if at all, do staff members internalise or promote ideas about race and racialization. What happens when the staff members themselves are migrants or second-generation British citizens? How do they view and interpret ideas of race? What is their status within the workforce? By focusing on staff accounts rather than detainees’ this chapter seeks to widen our understanding of the ways in which these institutions of confinement rest, reinforce and maybe sometimes, disrupt, ideas of race and belonging in British society.
Keywords: Immigration detention, race, staff, nationality, UK, belonging
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