Supply Chain Justice: The Logistics of British Border Control
By (Author) Mary Bosworth
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
26th March 2025
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Society and culture: general
Refugees and political asylum
Political economy
Immigration law
Hardback
216
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
How the UKs immigration detention and deportation system turns people into monetized, measurable units on a supply chain
In the UKs fully outsourced immigration detainee escorting system, private sector security employees detain, circulate and deport foreign national citizens. Run and organized like a supply chain, this system dehumanises those who are detained and deported, treating them as if they were packages to be moved from place to place and relying on poorly paid, minimally trained staff to do so. In Supply Chain Justice, Mary Bosworth offers the first empirically grounded, scholarly analysis of the British detention and deportation system. Drawing on four years of extensive ethnographic research, Bosworth examines what keeps the system in place and whether it might be effectively challenged.
Told by a senior manager that this is a logistics business, Bosworth documents how the public and private sectors have built a supply chain in which peoples humanity is transformed both symbolically and tangibly through administrative processes and bureaucracy into monetized, measurable units. Like all logistics, the system has failure built into it. The contract does not seek to eradicate risk but rather to manage it, determining responsibility and apportioning a financial value to such failures as delay, escape, aborted flight or death in custody. Front-line workers and managers depoliticise and normalise their efforts by casting their duties in familiar bureaucratic terms, with targets, service level agreements and key performance indicators. Focusing on first-hand accounts from workers and lengthy observation and document analysis, Bosworth explores the impact of border logistics in order to ask what it would it take to build inclusive infrastructures rather than those designed to exclude.
Mary Bosworth is professor of criminology and the founder and codirector of the research network and website Border Criminologies at the University of Oxford. She is the coauthor of Bordered Lives: Immigration Detention Archive and the author of Inside Immigration Detention, Engendering Resistance: Agency and Power in Womens Prisons, Explaining U.S. Imprisonment and The U.S. Federal Prison System.