#ERSBookReviews 📚 Last week we've published 5 reviews on issues of identity, migration, asylum, and black history. Follow the thread to know more! 🧶
@MichPeterie demonstrates the fundamental flaws of Australia’s policy of mandatory detention. It does so from the compelling and novel perspective of those visitors who so closely observe its detrimental effects. @BrisUniPress Read review by L Moran here: doi.org/10.1080/014198…
@MichPeterie @BrisUniPress @hamlinr1 shows how the logic of a strict migrant/refugee binary is a legal fiction servicing the re-inscription of global relations of wealth and power – and confronts this binary head-on. Read the review by @Schlebruegge_S from @PAISWarwick here:doi.org/10.1080/014198…
@MichPeterie @BrisUniPress @hamlinr1 @Schlebruegge_S @PAISWarwick "@PhilHubbard1latest book is certainly one of the most inspiring and cogent contributions to critical border studies published in the past years", concludes @almeida_dimitri in a review for us of Borderland. @ManchesterUP Read more here: doi.org/10.1080/014198…
@MichPeterie @BrisUniPress @hamlinr1 @Schlebruegge_S @PAISWarwick @almeida_dimitri @ManchesterUP This book centres on the agentic, collection action of #immigrant communities like the #Hmong and offers insights into the racialized nature of the American state. @RutgersUPress Read here the review by @hartm021 @UMNSociology doi.org/10.1080/014198…