Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-g7gxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-09T15:18:40.509Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 September 2022

Moritz Baumgärtel
Affiliation:
Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands
Sara Miellet
Affiliation:
Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands

Summary

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NC
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

References

Primary Sources

Abraham, David, ‘Law and Migration: Many Constants, Few Changes’, in Brettell, Caroline and Hollifield, James (eds), Migration Theory: Talking across Disciplines (London: Routledge, 2015): 289–317.Google Scholar
Acuto, Michele, ‘City Leadership in Global Governance’, Global Governance, 19 (2013), 481–498.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aho, Alison, ‘Equitable Compensation as a Tool for Reconciliation: Remedying Breach of Fiduciary Duty for Indigenous Peoples’, Lakehead Law Journal, 3 (2019), 55–77.Google Scholar
Aiken, Sharryn J., ‘From Slavery to Expulsion: Racism, Canadian Immigration Law, and the Unfulfilled Promise of Modern Constitutionalism’, in Agnew, Vijay (ed.), Interrogating Race and Racism (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2016): 55–111.Google Scholar
Aiken, Sharryn J., Lyon, David and Thorburn, Malcolm, ‘Introduction: Crimmigration, Surveillance and Security Threats: A Multidisciplinary Dialogue’, Queen’s Law Journal, 40 (2014), i–xii.Google Scholar
Alexander, Michelle, The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness (New York: New Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Alfaro-Velcamp, Theresa and Shaw, Mark, ‘Please GO HOME and BUILD Africa: Criminalising Immigrants in South Africa’, Journal of Southern African Studies, 42 (2016), 983–998.Google Scholar
Alfieri, Anthony V., ‘Reconstructive Poverty Law Practice: Learning Lessons of Client Narrative’, Yale Law Journal, 100 (1991), 2107–2200.Google Scholar
Alper, Ty, et al., ‘Stories Told and Untold: Lawyering Theory Analyses of the First Rodney King Assault Trial’, Clinical Law Review, 12 (2005), 1–50.Google Scholar
Ambrosini, Maurizio, ‘We Are Against a Multi-Ethnic Society’: Policies of Exclusion at the Urban Level in Italy’, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 36 (2013), 136–155.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ambrosini, Maurizio, ‘The Local Governance of Immigration and Asylum: Policies of Exclusion as a Battleground’, in Ambrosini, Maurizio, Cinalli, Manlio and Jacobson, David (eds), Migration, Borders and Citizenship: Between Policy and Public Spheres (Cham: Springer, 2020): 195–215.Google Scholar
Ambrosini, Maurizio, ‘The Battleground of Asylum and Immigration Policies: A Conceptual Inquiry’, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 44 (2021), 374–395.Google Scholar
Amit, Roni, ‘Winning isn’t Everything: Courts, Context, and the Barriers to Effecting Change Through Public Interest Litigation’, South African Journal on Human Rights, 27 (2011), 8–38.Google Scholar
Amrith, Sunil, Crossing the Bay of Bengal: The Furies of Nature and the Fortunes of Migrants (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Anderson, Doug, and Flynn, Alexandra, ‘Indigenous-Municipal Legal and Governance Relationships’, IMFG Papers on Municipal Finance and Governance No. 55, University of Toronto (2021), available at https://munkschool.utoronto.ca/imfg/research/doc/?doc_id=564Google Scholar
Doug, Anderson and Flynn, Alexandra, Indigenous-Municipal Legal and Governance Relationships, Research Paper, Institute for Municipal Finance and Governance (University of Toronto), ••••. Available at https://munkschool.utoronto.ca/imfg/research/doc/?doc_id={~}Google Scholar
Appadurai, Arjun, Fear of Small Numbers: An Essay on the Geography of Anger (Durham: Duke University Press, 2006).Google Scholar
Arendt, Hannah, The Origins of Totalitarianism (San Diego: Harvest Book, 1973).Google Scholar
Armacost, Barbara E., ‘Sanctuary Laws: The New Immigration Federalism’, Michigan State Law Review (2016), 1197–1265.Google Scholar
Armenta, Amada, ‘Racializing Crimmigration: Structural Racism, Colorblindness, and the Institutional Production of Immigrant Criminality’, Sociology of Race and Ethnicity, 3 (2017), 82–95.Google Scholar
Armenta, Amada and Alvarez, Isabela, ‘Policing Immigrants or Policing Immigration? Understanding Local Law Enforcement Participation in Immigration Control’, Sociology Compass, 11 (2017), e12453.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Atak, Idil, ‘Toronto’s Sanctuary City Policy: Rationale and Barriers’, in Darling, Jonathan and Bauder, Harald (eds), Sanctuary Cities and Urban Struggles: Rescaling Migration, Citizenship, and Rights (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2019): 105–130.Google Scholar
Atak, Idil, Hudson, Graham and Nakache, Delphine, ‘The Securitisation of Canada’s Refugee System: Reviewing the Unintended Consequences of the 2012 Reform’, Refugee Survey Quarterly, 37 (2017), 1–24.Google Scholar
Atak, Idil, Hudson, Graham and Nakache, Delphine, ‘Policing Canada’s Refugee System: A Critical Analysis of the Canada Border Services Agency’, International Journal of Refugee Law, 31 (2019), 464–491.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Atak, Idil and Simeon, James C. (eds), The Criminalization of Migration: Context and Consequences (Montreal: Queens-McGill Press, 2018).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
August, Martine and Walks, Alan, ‘Gentrification, Suburban Decline, and the Financialization of Multi-Family Rental Housing: The Case of Toronto’, Geoforum, 89 (2018), 124–136.Google Scholar
August, Martine, ‘The Financialization of Canadian Multi-Family Rental Housing: From Trailer to Tower’, Journal of Urban Affairs, 42 (2020), 975–997.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Back, Les and Sinha, Shamser, Migrant City (London: Routledge, 2018).Google Scholar
Bagelman, Jennifer, ‘Sanctuary: A Politics of Ease?’, Alternatives: Global, Local, Political, 38 (2013), 49–62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bagelman, Jennifer, Sanctuary City: A Suspended State (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016).Google Scholar
Baglay, Sasha and Nakache, Delphine, Immigration Regulation in Federal States: Challenges and Responses in Comparative Perspective (Dordrecht: Springer, 2014).Google Scholar
Bala, Nicholas, Finlay, Judy, De Filippis, Rebecca and Hunter, Katie, ‘Child Welfare Adolescents & the Youth Justice System: Failing to Respond Effectively to Crossover Youth’, Canadian Criminal Law Review, 19 (2015), 129–151.Google Scholar
Balibar, Étienne, ‘The Nation Form: History and Ideology’, in Balibar, Etienne and Wallerstein, Immanuel (eds), Race, Nation, Class: Ambiguous Identities (New York: Verso, 1991): 86–106.Google Scholar
Balibar, Étienne, ‘What is a Border?’, in Jones, Christine, Swenson, James and Turner, Chris (eds), Politics and the Other Scene (London: Verso, 2002): 75–86.Google Scholar
Balibar, Étienne, We, the People of Europe? Reflections on Transnational Citizenship (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Balla, ntyne, Tony, ‘Rereading the Archive and Opening up the Nation-State: Colonial Knowledge in South Asia (and Beyond)’, in Burton, Antoinette (ed.), After the Imperial Turn: Thinking With and Through the Nation (Durham: Duke University Press, 2003): 102–121.Google Scholar
Barkawi, Tarak, Soldiers of Empire: India and British Armies in World War II (London: Cambridge University Press, 2017).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barnes, Mario L., ‘The More Things Change: New Moves for Legitimizing Racial Discrimination in a Post-Race World’, Minnesota Law Review, 100 (2016), 2043–2102.Google Scholar
Bartl, Walter, ‘Institutionalization of a Formalized Intergovernmental Transfer Scheme for Asylum Seekers in Germany: The Königstein Key as an Indicator of Federal Justice’, Journal of Refugee Studies, 34 (2021), 2613–2654.Google Scholar
Bashi, Vilna, ‘Globalized Anti-Blackness: Transnationalizing Western Immigration Law, Policy, and Practice’, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 27 (2004), 584–606.Google Scholar
Bates, Lisa, et al. ‘Race and Spatial Imaginary: Planning Otherwise/Introduction’, Planning Theory & Practice, 19 (2018), 254–288.Google Scholar
Baubö, ck, Rainer, ‘Reinventing Urban Citizenship’, Citizenship Studies, 7 (2003), 139–160.Google Scholar
Bauder, Harald and Gonzalez, Dayana A., ‘Municipal Responses to “illegality”: Urban Sanctuary across National Contexts’, Social Inclusion, 6 (2018), 124–134.Google Scholar
Bauder, Harald, ‘Possibilities of Urban Belonging’, Antipode, 48 (2016), 252–271.Google Scholar
Bauder, Harald, ‘Sanctuary Cities: Policies and Practices in International Perspective’, International Migration, 55 (2017), 174–182.Google Scholar
Bauder, Harald, ‘Urban Sanctuary in Context’, in Darling, Jonathan and Bauder, Harald (eds), Sanctuary Cities and Urban Struggles: Rescaling Migration, Citizenship, and Rights (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2019), 25–49.Google Scholar
Bauder, Harald, ‘Urban Migrant and Refugee Solidarity Beyond City Limits’. Urban Studies, 58 (2021), 3213–3229.Google Scholar
Bauman, Zygmunt, Postmodernity and its Discontents (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Baumgärtel, Moritz and Oomen, Barbara, ‘Pulling Human Rights Back In? Local Authorities, International Law and the Reception of Undocumented Migrants’, The Journal of Legal Pluralism and Unofficial Law, 51 (2019), 172–191.Google Scholar
Benhabib, Seyla and Resnik, Judith, Migrations and Mobilities: Citizenship, Borders, and Gender (New York: New York University Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Benton, Lauren, A Search for Sovereignty: Law and Geography in European Empires, 1400–1900 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Bergen, Heather and Abji, Salina, ‘Facilitating the Carceral Pipeline: Social Work’s Role in Funneling Newcomer Children from the Child Protection System to Jail and Deportation’, Affilia, 35 (2020), 34–48.Google Scholar
Berlit, Uwe, Hoppe, Michael and Kluth, Winfried, Jahrbuch des Migrationsrechts für die Bundesrepublik Deutschland 2020 (Baden-Baden: Nomos, 2021).Google Scholar
Berman, Paul Schiff, Global Legal Pluralism: A Jurisprudence of Law Beyond Borders (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Bernt, Matthias, ‘Migration and Strategic Urban Planning: The Case of Leipzig’, disP – The Planning Review, 55 (2019), 56–66.Google Scholar
Bhuyan, Rupaleem and Smith-Carrier, Tracy, ‘Constructions of Migrant Rights in Canada: Is Subnational Citizenship Possible?’, Citizenship Studies, 16 (2012), 203–221.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bigo, Didier, Isin, Engin and Ruppert, Evelyn, Data Politics: Worlds, Subjects, Rights (London: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2019).Google Scholar
Bigo, Didier, ‘Security and Immigration: Toward a Critique of the Governmentality of Unease’, Alternatives, 27 (2002), 63–92.Google Scholar
Bigo, Didier, ‘Pierre Bourdieu and International Relations: Power of Practices, Practices of Power’, International Political Sociology, 5 (2011), 225–258.Google Scholar
Bishop, Bill and Cushing, Robert G., The Big Sort: Why the Clustering of Like-Minded America Is Tearing Us Apart (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2008).Google Scholar
Blokland, Talja, Hentschel, Christine, Holm, Andrej, Lebuhn, Henrik and Margalit, Talia, ‘Urban Citizenship and Right to the City: The Fragmentation of Claims’, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 39 (2015), 655–665.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bond, Patrick and Ruiters, Greg, ‘Uneven Development and Scale Politics in Southern Africa: What We Learn from Neil Smith’, Antipode, 49 (2017), 171–189.Google Scholar
Bonizzoni, Paola and Marzorati, Roberta, ‘Local Immigrant Incorporation Pathways in Small-Scale Cities. Pakistani Immigrants in a Province of Northern Italy’, Sociologica, 9 (2015), 1–28.Google Scholar
Bosniak, Linda S., ‘Immigrants, Preemption and Equality’, Virginia Journal of International Law, 35 (1994), 179–200.Google Scholar
Bosworth, Mary and Guild, Mhairi, ‘Governing through Migration Control: Security and Citizenship in Britain’, The British Journal of Criminology, 48 (2008), 703–719.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bourbeau, Philippe, ‘Detention and immigration: Practices, Crimmigration, and Norms’, Migration Studies, 7 (2019), 83–99.Google Scholar
Boyd, Reiko, ‘Individual Consequences of Racial Disproportionality and Disparities’, in Dettlaff, Alan J. (ed), Racial Disproportionality and Disparities in the Child Welfare System (Cham: Springer, 2021): 215–233.Google Scholar
Brack, Nathalie, Conan, Ramona and Crespy, Amandine (eds), Understanding Conflicts of Sovereignty in the EU (New York: Routledge, 2021).Google Scholar
Bremer, Emily S. ‘The Unwritten Administrative Constitution’, Florida Law Review, 66 (2014), 1215–1273.Google Scholar
Brenner, Neil, ‘A Thousand Leaves: Notes on the Geographies of Uneven Spatial Development’, in Mahon, Rianne and Keil, Roger (eds), Leviathan Undone? Towards a Political Economy of Scale (Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2009): 27–49.Google Scholar
Brenner, Neil, ‘The Urban Question and the Scale Question: Some Conceptual Clarifications’, in Glick Schiller, Nina and Çağlar, Ayşe (eds), Locating Migration (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2011): 23–41.Google Scholar
Bresser-Pereira, Luiz Carlos, Democracy and Public Management Reform: Building the Republican State (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004).Google Scholar
Brettell, Caroline B. and Nibbs, Faith G., ‘Immigrant Suburban Settlement and the “Threat” to Middle Class Status and Identity: The Case of Farmers Branch, Texas’, International Migration, 49 (2011), 1–30.Google Scholar
Bromwich, Rebecca Jaremko, ‘Cross-Over Youth and Youth Criminal Justice Act Evidence Law: Discourse Analysis and Reasons for Law Reform’, Manitoba Law Journal, 42 (2019), 265–290.Google Scholar
Brown, Jacob R. and Enos, Ryan D., ‘The Measurement of Partisan Sorting for 180 Million Voters’, Nature Human Behavior, 5 (2021), 998–1008.Google ScholarPubMed
Bryan, Catherine and Denov, Myriam, ‘Separated Refugee Children in Canada: The Construction of Risk Identity’, Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies, 9 (2011), 242–266.Google Scholar
Bulman-Pozen, Jessica, ‘Preemption and Commandeering Without Congress’, Stanford Law Review, 70 (2018), 2029–2052.Google Scholar
Cabral, Inês and Swerts, Thomas. ‘Governing Precarious Immigrant Workers in Rural Localities: Emerging Local Migration Regimes in Portugal’, Politics and Governance, 9 (2021), 185–195.Google Scholar
Cade, Jason A. ‘Sanctuaries as Equitable Delegation in an Era of Mass Immigration Enforcement’, Northwestern University Law Review, 113 (2018), 433–504.Google Scholar
Çağlar, Ayşe and Schiller, Nina Glick, Migrants and City-Making: Dispossession, Displacement, and Urban Regeneration (Durham: Duke University Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Campbell, Kristina, ‘The Road to 1070: How Arizona Became Ground Zero for the Immigrants’ Rights Movement and the Continuing Struggle for Latino Civil Rights in America’ Harvard Latino Law Review, 14 (2011), 1–22.Google Scholar
Campomori, Francesca and Ambrosini, Maurizio, ‘Multilevel Governance in Trouble: The Implementation of Asylum Seekers’ Reception in Italy as a Battleground’, Comparative Migration Studies, 8 (2020), 1–19.Google Scholar
Caplan, Bryan, Open Borders: The Science and Ethics of Immigration (New York: First Second, 2019).Google Scholar
Caponio, Tiziana, Scholten, Peter and Zapata-Barrero, Ricard (eds), The Routledge Handbook of the Governance of Migration and Diversity in Cities (New York: Routledge, 2018).Google Scholar
Carpio, Genevieve, Irazábal, Clara and Pulido, Laura, ‘Right to the Suburb? Rethinking Lefebvre and Immigrant Activism’, Journal of Urban Affairs, 33 (2011), 185–208.Google Scholar
Casas-Cortes, Maribel, et al., ‘New Keywords: Migration and Borders’, Cultural Studies, 29 (2015), 55–87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cawthra, Gavin, Policing South Africa: The South African Police & the Transition from Apartheid (Cape Town: Zed Books, 1993).Google Scholar
Chamberlain, Erika. ‘The Crown’s Fiduciary Duties to Aboriginal Peoples as an Aspect of Climate Justice’, Windsor Yearbook on Access to Justice, 30 (2012), 289–318.Google Scholar
Chanock, Martin, Law, Custom, and Social Order: The Colonial Experience in Malawi and Zambia (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985).Google Scholar
Chanock, Martin, The Making of South African Legal Culture, 1902–1936: Fear, Favour, and Prejudice (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001).Google Scholar
Chattopadhyay, Suchetana, Voices of Komagata Maru: Imperial Surveillance and Workers from Punjab in Bengal (New York: Columbia University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Chavez, Jorge M. and Marie Provine, Doris, ‘Race and the Response of State Legislatures to Unauthorized Immigrants’, The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 623 (2009) 78–92.Google Scholar
Cho, Minhae and Hyun Lee, Chi, ‘Childhood Maltreatment and Repeat Offending in Juvenile Delinquents: A Propensity Score Matched-Control Study’, Youth & Society (2021), doi:10.1177/0044118X211001090.Google Scholar
Clapham, Andrew, Human Rights Obligations of Non-State Actors (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006).Google Scholar
Classen, Georg, Ratgeber für Geflüchtete in Berlin (Berlin: Flüchtlingsrat Berlin, 2017).Google Scholar
Cohen, Daniel S., ‘A Gun to Whose Head? Federalism, Localism, and the Spending Clause’, Dickinson Law Review, 123 (2019), 421–480.Google Scholar
Coleman, Mathew and Stuesse, Angela, ‘The Disappearing State and the Quasi-Event of Immigration Control’, Antipode, 48 (2016), 524–543.Google Scholar
Coleman, Mathew, ‘From Border Policing to Internal Controls in the United States’, in Donnan, Hastings and Wilson, Thomas M. (eds), The Companion to Border Studies (Oxford: Blackwell, 2012): 419–437.Google Scholar
Coleman, Mathew and Kocher, Austin, ‘Detention, Deportation, Devolution and Immigrant Incapacitation in the US, post 9/11’, The Geographical Journal 177 (2011), 228–237.Google Scholar
Coleman, Mathew, ‘The ‘Local’ Migration State: The Site-Specific Devolution of Immigration Enforcement in the U.S. South’, Law & Policy, 34 (2012), 159–190.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collingwood, Loren and O’Brien, Benjamin Gonzalez, Cities, Sanctuary: The Politics of Refuge (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Connoy, Laura, ‘(Re)Constructing and Resisting Irregularity: (Non)Citizenship, Canada’s Interim Federal Health Program, and Access to Healthcare’, Studies in Social Justice, 13 (2019), 201–220.Google Scholar
Cooke, Thomas J. and Denton, Curtis. ‘The Suburbanization of Poverty? An Alternative Perspective’, Urban Geography, 36 (2015), 300–313.Google Scholar
Côté-Boucher, Karine, Infantino, Federica and Salter, Mark B.. ‘Border Security as Practice: An Agenda for Research’, Security Dialogue, 45 (2014), 195–208.Google Scholar
Cotterrell, Roger, The Politics of Jurisprudence: A Critical Introduction to Legal Philosophy, 2nd ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Heaven, Crawley, ‘The Politics of Refugee Protection in a Post-Covid-19 World’, Social Sciences, 10 (2021), 81.Google Scholar
Crépeau, François and Hastie, Bethany, ‘The Case for “Firewall” Protections for Irregular Migrants: Safeguarding Fundamental Rights’, European Journal of Migration and Law, 17 (2015), 157–183.Google Scholar
Crul, Maurice, Scholten, Peter and van de Laar, Paul, ‘Conclusions: Coming to Terms with Superdiversity?’, in Scholten, Peter, Crul, Maurice and van de Laar, Peter (eds), Coming to Terms with Superdiversity (Cham: Springer, 2019): 225–235.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crush, Jonathan and Tshitereke, Clarence, ‘Contesting Migrancy: The Foreign Labor Debate in Post-1994 South Africa’, Africa Today, 48 (2001), 49–70.Google Scholar
Crush, Jonathan. ‘Apartheid’s Last Act?’, Democracy in Action, 10 (1996), 35–38.Google Scholar
Crush, Jonathan. ‘The Discourse and Dimensions of Irregularity in Post-Apartheid South Africa’, International Migration, 37 (1999), 125–151.Google Scholar
Danso, Ransford and McDonald, David A, ‘Writing Xenophobia: Immigration and the Print Media in Post-Apartheid South Africa’, Africa Today, 48(2001), 115–137.Google Scholar
Darling, Jonathan and Bauder, Harald (eds), Sanctuary Cities and Urban Struggles: Rescaling Migration, Citizenship, and Rights (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2019).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Darling, Jonathan and Bauder, Harald, ‘Introduction’, in Darling, Jonathan and Bauder, Harald (eds), Sanctuary Cities and Urban Struggles: Rescaling Migration, Citizenship, and Rights. Manchester: Manchester University Press (2019): 1–22.Google Scholar
Darling, Jonathan. ‘Forced Migration and the City: Irregularity, Informality, and the Politics of Presence’, Progress in Human Geography, 41 (2017), 178–198.Google Scholar
Dauvergne, Catherine. ‘Sovereignty, Migration and the Rule of Law in Global Times’, The Modern Law Review, 67 (2004), 588–615.Google Scholar
Davis, Jenna, ‘How Do Upzonings Impact Neighborhood Demographic Change? Examining the Link Between Land Use Policy and Gentrification in New York City’, Land Use Policy, 103 (2021), 105347.Google Scholar
De Bakker, Frank G. A., den Hond, Frank, King, Brayden and Weber, Klaus, ‘Social Movements, Civil Society and Corporations: Taking Stock and Looking Ahead’, Organization Studies, 34 (2013), 573–593.Google Scholar
De Boer, Tom and Marjoleine, Zieck, ‘The Legal Abyss of Discretion in the Resettlement of Refugees: Cherry-Picking and the Lack of Due Process in the EU’, International Journal of Refugee Law, 32 (2020), 54–85.Google Scholar
De Genova, Nicholas and Ananya, Roy, ‘Practices of Illegalisation’, Antipode, 52 (2020), 352–364.Google Scholar
De Genova, Nicholas, ‘Migrant “Illegality” and Deportability in Everyday Life’, Annual Review of Anthropology, 31 (2002), 419–447.Google Scholar
De Genova, Nicholas. ‘The “Migrant Crisis” as Racial Crisis: Do Black Lives Matter in Europe?’, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 41(2018), 1765–1782.Google Scholar
De Graauw, Els, ‘City Government Activists and the Rights of Undocumented Immigrants: Fostering Urban Citizenship within the Confines of US Federalism’, Antipode, 53 (2021), 379–398.Google Scholar
De Graauw, Els, ‘Municipal ID Cards for Undocumented Immigrants: Local Bureaucratic Membership in a Federal System’, Politics & Society, 42 (2014), 309–330.Google Scholar
De Oliveira, Pauline Endres, ‘Humanitarian Admission to Germany – Access vs. Rights?’, in Foblets, Marie-Claire and Leboeuf, Luc (eds), Humanitarian Admission to Europe (Baden-Baden: Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG, 2020): 199–224.Google Scholar
De Orellana, Pablo and Michelsen, Nicholas, ‘Reactionary Internationalism: The Philosophy of the New Right’, Review of International Studies, 45 (2019), 748–767.Google Scholar
De Shalit, Ann, Neoliberal-Paternalism and Displaced Culpability: Examining the Governing Relations of the Human Trafficking Problem (Unpublished PhD Dissertation, Ryerson University, 2021).Google Scholar
Delgado, Richard, ‘Storytelling for Oppositionists and Others: A Plea for Narrative’, Michigan Law Review, 87 (1989), 2411–2441.Google Scholar
Derrida, Jacques, Cosmopolities de tous les pays, encore un effort! (Editions Galilée, 1997).Google Scholar
Derrida, Jacques, ‘The Principle of Hospitality’ (An interview with Dominique Dhombres for Le Monde, December 2, 1997. Translated by Thompson, Ashley). Parallax, 11 (2005), 6–9.Google Scholar
Deshman, Abigail, ‘To Serve Some and Protect Fewer: The Toronto Police Services’ Policy on Non-Status Victims and Witnesses of Crime’, Journal of Law and Social Policy, 22 (2009), 209–235.Google Scholar
Dhamoon, Rita Kaur, Bhandar, Davina, Mawani, Renise and Kaur Bains, Satwinder (eds), Unmooring the Komagata Maru: Charting Colonial Trajectories (Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Dobrowolsky, Alexandra, ‘Nuancing Neoliberalism: Lessons Learned from a Failed Immigration Experiment’, Journal of International Migration and Integration, 14 (2013), 197–218.Google Scholar
Dodson, Belinda, ‘Locating Xenophobia: Debate, Discourse, and Everyday Experience in Cape Town, South Africa’, Africa Today 56: 2–22.Google Scholar
Dörrenbächer, Nora and Strik, Tineke, ‘Implementing Migration Policies: New Research Policies in a Europeanizing Context’, in Weinar, Agnieszka, Bonjour, Saskia and Zhyznomirska, Lyubov (eds), Routledge Handbook on the Politics of Migration in Europe (London: Routledge, 2018): 60–70.Google Scholar
Dorries, Heather and Harjo, Laura, ‘Beyond Safety: Refusing Colonial Violence Through Indigenous Feminist Planning’, Journal of Planning Education and Research, 40 (2020), 210–219.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dorries, Heather, Henry, Robert, Hugill, David, McCreary, Tyler and Tomiak, Julie (eds), Settler City Limits: Indigenous Resurgence and Colonial Violence in the Urban Prairie West (Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Eagly, Ingrid V., ‘Local Immigration Prosecution: A Study of Arizona Before SB 1070’, UCLA Law Review, 58 (2011), 1749–1817.Google Scholar
Ehrenreich, Nancy and Siebrase, Jamie, ‘Breastfeeding on a Nickel and a Dime: Why the Affordable Care Act’s Nursing Mothers Amendment Won’t Help Low-Wage Workers’, Michigan Journal of Race and Law, 20 (2014), 65–116.Google Scholar
Ellermann, Antje, ‘Street-Level Democracy: How Immigration Bureaucrats Manage Public Opposition’, West European Politics, 29 (2006), 293–309.Google Scholar
Ellermann, Antje, ‘Discrimination in Migration and Citizenship’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 46 (2020), 2463–2479.Google Scholar
Emilsson, Henrik, ‘A National Turn of Local Integration Policy: Multi-Level Governance Dynamics in Denmark and Sweden’, Comparative Migration Studies, 3 (2015), 1–16.Google Scholar
Eule, Tobias, Inside Immigration Law: Migration Management and Policy Application in Germany (London: Routledge, 2016).Google Scholar
Everatt, David, ‘Xenophobia, State and Society in South Africa, 2008–2010’, Politikon, 38 (2011), 7–36.Google Scholar
Ferguson, Andrew G., ‘Policing Predictive Policing’, Washington University Law Review, 94 (2017), 1109–1190.Google Scholar
Fernández-Bessa, Cristina, ‘A Theoretical Typology of Border Activism: From the Streets to the Council’, Theoretical Criminology, 23 (2019), 156–174.Google Scholar
Filomeno, Felipe Amin, 2016, ‘Global Cities and Local Immigration Policy in Latin America’, Proceedings of the XXXIV International Congress of the Latin American Studies Association, New York City, May 27–30.Google Scholar
Filomeno, Felipe Amin, Theories of Local Immigration Policy (Cham: Springer, 2016).Google Scholar
Fincher, Ruth and Iveson, Kurt, Planning and Diversity in the City: Redistribution, Recognition and Encounter (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008).Google Scholar
Fincher, Ruth, Iveson, Kurt, Leitner, Helga and Preston, Valerie. ‘Planning in the Multicultural City: Celebrating Diversity or Reinforcing Difference?’, Progress in Planning, 92 (2014), 1–55.Google Scholar
Finlay, Judy, Scully, Brian, Kent, Matthew-Eaton, Farrell, Tara-Rose, Dicks, Peter and Salerno, Jessica, Cross-Over Youth Project: Navigating Quicksand (Toronto: Ryerson University, 2019).Google Scholar
Fischer, Leandros and Bak Jørgensen, Martin, ‘Scale-Switching as a Response to a Shrinking Space for Solidarity: A Comparison of Denmark’s Venligboerne and Germany’s Seebrücke’, in della Porta, Donatella and Steinhilper, Elias (eds), Contentious Migrant Solidarity: Shrinking Spaces and Civil Society Contestation (London and New York: Routledge, 2021): 156–175.Google Scholar
Flores, René D. and Schachter, Ariela, ‘Who are the “Illegals”? The Social Construction of Illegality in the United States’, American Sociological Review, 83 (2018), 839–868.Google Scholar
Flores, René D. and Schachter, Ariela, ‘Examining Americans’ Stereotypes About Immigrant Illegality’, Contexts, 18 (2019), 36–41.Google Scholar
Forcese, Craig and Roach, Kent, False Security: The Radicalization of Canadian Anti-Terrorism (Toronto: Irwin Law, 2015).Google Scholar
Frankel, Philip, ‘The Politics of Police Control’, Comparative Politics, 12 (1980), 481–499.Google Scholar
Frasure-Yokley, Lorrie, Racial and Ethnic Politics in American Suburbs (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Freedom of Expression Institute, Is the Media Contributing to South African Xenophobia? (Johannesburg: Freedom of Expression Institute, 1999).Google Scholar
Friedmann, John, Planning in the Public Domain: From Knowledge to Action (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1987).Google Scholar
Thomas, Gammeltoft-Hansen and Feith Tan, Nikolas, ‘The End of the Deterrence Paradigm? Future Directions for Global Refugee Policy’, Journal on Migration and Human Security, 5 (2017), 28–56.Google Scholar
Gandhi, Mohandas Karamchand, ‘New Bill’, Indian Opinion, 19 April 1913, in The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi, vol. 12. Delhi: Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India, 1958–1994.Google Scholar
Gandhi, Mohandas Karamchand, ‘The Marriage Question’, Indian Opinion, 1 October 1913, in The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi, vol. 12. Delhi: Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India, 1958–1994.Google Scholar
García Agustín, Óscar, ‘New Municipalism as a Space for Solidarity’, Soundings, 74 (2020), 54–67.Google Scholar
Garnier, Adele, ‘Migration Management and Humanitarian Protection: The UNHCR’s “Resettlement Expansionism” and Its Impact on Policy-Making in the EU and Australia’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 40 (2014), 942–959.Google Scholar
Gebhardt, Dirk, ‘Irregular Migration and the Role of Local and Regional Authorities’, in Assessing EU Policy on Irregular Immigration Under the Stockholm Programme (Brussels: CEPS Centre for European Policy Studies, 2010): 15–17.Google Scholar
Gebhardt, Dirk, ‘Re-Thinking Urban Citizenship for Immigrants from a Policy Perspective: The Case of Barcelona’, Citizenship Studies, 20 (2016), 846–866.Google Scholar
Gerken, Heather K., ‘Forward: Federalism All the Way Down’, Harvard Law Review, 124 (2010), 4–74.Google Scholar
Gharabaghi, Kiaras, A Hard Place to Call Home: A Canadian Perspective on Residential Care and Treatment for Children and Youth (Toronto: Canadian Scholars, 2019).Google Scholar
Ghezelbash, Daniel, Refuge Lost: Asylum Law in an Interdependent World (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Ghezelbash, Daniel and Feith Tan, Nikolas, ‘The End of the Right to Seek Asylum? COVID-19 and the Future of Refugee Protection’, International Journal of Refugee Law, 32 (2020), 668–679.Google Scholar
Ghosh, Sahana, ‘“Everything Must Match”: Detection, Deception, and Migrant Illegality in the India-Bangladesh Borderlands’, American Anthropologist, 121 (2019), 870–883.Google Scholar
Gibney, Matthew J., ‘Asylum and the Expansion of Deportation in the United Kingdom’, Government and Opposition, 43 (2008), 146–167.Google Scholar
Gilbert, Liette, ‘Immigration as Local Politics: Re-Bordering Immigration and Multiculturalism through Deterrence and Incapacitation’, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 33 (2009), 26–42.Google Scholar
Gillan, Michael, ‘Refugees or Infiltrators? The Bharatiya Janata Party and “Illegal” Migration from Bangladesh’, Asian Studies Review, 26 (2002), 73–95.Google Scholar
Glick Schiller, Nina and Çağlar, Ayşe, ‘Towards a Comparative Theory of Locality in Migration Studies: Migrant Incorporation and City Scale’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 35 (2009), 177–202.Google Scholar
Glick Schiller, Nina, Basch, Linda and Szanton Blanc, Cristina, ‘From Immigrant to Transmigrant: Theorizing Transnational Migration’, Anthropological Quarterly, 68 (1995), 48–63.Google Scholar
Glorius, Birgit, ‘The Challenge of Diversity in Rural Regions: Refugee Reception in the German Federal State of Saxony’, Hungarian Geographical Bulletin, 66 (2017), 113–128.Google Scholar
Goetz, Edward G., Williams, Rashad A. and Damiano, Anthony. ‘Whiteness and Urban Planning’, Journal of the American Planning Association, 86 (2020), 142–156.Google Scholar
Goldman, Samuel, After Nationalism: Being American in an Age of Division (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2021).Google Scholar
Goodhart, Michael, ‘Human Rights Cities: Making the Global Local’, in Brysk, Alison and Stohl, Michael (eds), Contesting Human Rights (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2019): 142–158.Google Scholar
Goodwin-White, Jamie, ‘“Today We March, Tomorrow We Vote!”: Contested Denizenship, Immigration Federalism, and the Dreamers’, in Ambrosini, Maurizio, Cinalli, Manlio and Jacobson, David (eds), Migration, Borders and Citizenship: Between Policy and Public Spheres (Cham: Springer, 2020): 61–88.Google Scholar
Goonewardena, Kanishka, ‘The Urban Sensorium: Space, Ideology and the Aestheticization of Politics’, Antipode, 37 (2005), 46–71.Google Scholar
Goswami, Manu, Producing India: From Colonial Economy to National Space (Delhi: Permanent Black, 2004).Google Scholar
Griffiths, John, ‘What is Legal Pluralism?’, The Journal of Legal Pluralism and Unofficial Law, 18 (1986), 1–55.Google Scholar
Grobler, Piet, ‘Collective Approach to Border Control: Policing and Refugees’, in Handmaker, Jeff, Anne de la Hunt, Lee and Klaaren, Jonathan (eds), Perspectives on Refugee Protection in South Africa (Pretoria: Lawyers for Human Rights, 2001): 73–76.Google Scholar
Guarnaccia, Cinzia, De Vita, Elisa, Sortino, Loredana and Giannone, Francesca, ‘(2020), doi:10.1177/1477370820941408.Google Scholar
Guild, Elspeth and Groenendijk, Kees (eds), Illiberal Liberal States: Immigration, Citizenship and Integration in the EU (London: Routledge, 2016).Google Scholar
Guiraudon, Virginie and Lahav, Gallya, ‘A Reappraisal of the State Sovereignty debate: The Case of Migration Control’, Comparative Political Studies, 33 (2000), 163–195.Google Scholar
Gulasekaram, Pratheepan and Cuison Villazor, Rose, ‘Sanctuary Policies and Immigration Federalism: A Dialectic Analysis’, WAYNE Law Review, 55 (2009), 1683.Google Scholar
Gulasekaram, Pratheepan and Karthick Ramakrishnan, S., The New Immigration Federalism (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Gulasekaram, Pratheepan, Su, Rick and Cuison Villazor, Rose, ‘Anti-Sanctuary and Immigration Localism’, Columbia Law Review, 119 (2019), 837–894.Google Scholar
Gupta, Charu, ‘“Innocent” Victims/“Guilty” Migrants: Hindi Public Sphere, Caste and Indentured Women in Colonial North India’, Modern Asian Studies, 49 (2015), 1345–1377.Google Scholar
Haidt, Jonathan, The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion (London: Vintage Books, 2013).Google Scholar
Handmaker, Jeff and Parsley, Jennifer, ‘Migration, Refugees & Racism in South Africa’, Refuge, 20 (2001), 40–51.Google Scholar
Handmaker, Jeff, ‘Stop Treating People Unjustly’, Sowetan (3 December 1997).Google Scholar
Handmaker, Jeff, ‘Who Determines Policy: Promoting the Right of Asylum in South Africa’, International Journal of Refugee Law, 11 (1999), 290–309.Google Scholar
Handmaker, Jeff, ‘No Easy Walk: Advancing Refugee Protection in South Africa’, Africa Today, 48 (2001), 91–113.Google Scholar
Haney-López, Ian, ‘Intentional Blindness’, New York University Law Review, 87 (2012), 1779–1877.Google Scholar
Haney-López, Ian, Dog Whistle Politics: How Coded Racial Appeals Have Reinvented Racism and Wrecked the Middle Class (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Hannan, Charity-Ann and Bauder, Harald, ‘Scoping the Range of Initiatives for Protecting the Employment and Labour Rights of Illegalized Migrants in Canada and Abroad’, in Atak, Idil and Simeon, James C. (eds), The Criminalization of Migration: Context and Consequences (Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2018): 313–339.Google Scholar
Hare, Francis, ‘Newcomer, Immigration, and Settlement Sectors’, in Gharabaghi, Kiaras and Charles, Grant (eds), Child and Youth Care across Sectors, Volume 2: Canadian Perspectives (Toronto: Canadian Scholars, 2020): 60–73.Google Scholar
Harris, Karen, ‘Gandhi, the Chinese and Passive Resistance’, in Brown, Judith M. and Prozesky, Martin (eds), Gandhi and South Africa: Principles and Politics (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1996): 69–94.Google Scholar
Harvey, David, Rebel Cities: From the Right to the City to the Urban Revolution (London: Verso, 2012).Google Scholar
Naoko, Hashimoto, ‘Are New Pathways of Admitting Refugees Truly “Humanitarian” and “Complementary”?’, Journal of Human Security Studies, 10 (2021), 15–31.Google Scholar
Hashimoto, Naoko. ‘Refugee Resettlement as an Alternative to Asylum’, Refugee Survey Quarterly, 37 (2018), 162–186.Google Scholar
Hathaway, James C., ‘The Emerging Politics of Non-Entrée’, Refugees, 91 (1992), 40–41.Google Scholar
Havaldar, Anika, ‘Civilizing’ Marriage: British Colonial Regulation of The Marriages Of Indian Indentured Laborers In Natal, 18601891 (Unpublished Senior Thesis, Columbia University, 2015).Google Scholar
Heeren, Geoffrey, ‘Persons Who are Not the People: The Changing Rights of Immigrants in the United States’, Columbia Human Rights Law Review, 44 (2013), 367–436.Google Scholar
Heimann, Christiane, Müller, Sandra, Schammann, Hannes and Stürner, Janina, ‘Challenging the Nation-State from Within: The Emergence of Transmunicipal Solidarity in the Course of the EU Refugee Controversy’, Social Inclusion, 7 (2019), 208–218.Google Scholar
Hepburn, Eve and Zapata-Barrero, Ricard, ‘Introduction: Immigration Policies in Multilevel States’, in Hepburn, Eve and Zapata-Barrero, Ricard (eds), The Politics of Immigration in Multi-Level States: Governance and Political Parties (Basingstoke: Palgrave MacMillan, 2014): 3–18.Google Scholar
Hernández, Cesar Cuauhtemoc García, Crimmigration Law (Chicago: American Bar Association, 2015).Google Scholar
Hershkowitz, Mia, Hudson, Graham and Bauder, Harald, ‘Rescaling the Sanctuary City: Police and Non-Status Migrants in Ontario, Canada’, International Migration, 59 (2020), 38–57.Google Scholar
Herz, Denise C., Ryan, Joseph P. and Bilchik, Shay, ‘Challenges Facing Crossover Youth: An Examination of Juvenile-Justice Decision Making and Recidivism’, Family Court Review, 48 (2010), 305–321.Google Scholar
Hill, Richard Child, ‘Separate and Unequal: Governmental Inequality in the Metropolis’, American Political Science Review, 68 (1974), 1557–1568.Google Scholar
Hinger, Sophie, ‘Integration Through Disintegration? The distinction Between Deserving and Undeserving Refugees in National and Local Integration Policies in Germany’, in Hinger, Sophie and Schweitzer, Reinhard (eds), Politics of (Dis)Integration (Cham: Springer, 2020): 19–39.Google Scholar
Hirota, Hidetaka, ‘Limits of Intolerance: Nativism and Immigration Control in Nineteenth-Century New York’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 47 (2021), 3771–3787.Google Scholar
Asher Lazarus, Hirsch, Khahn, Hoang and Vogl, Anthea, ‘Australia’s Private Refugee Sponsorship Program: Creating Complementary Pathways or Privatising Humanitarianism?’, Refuge: Canada’s Journal on Refugees, 35 (2019), 109–122.Google Scholar
Hirschl, Ran, City, State: Constitutionalism and the Megacity (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Hlophe, John Mandlakayise, ‘South African Ouster Clauses. Meaning and Effect’, The Cambridge Law Journal, 45 (1986), 369–372.Google Scholar
Hoang, Khanh, ‘Human Rights: Private Sponsorship of Refugees and Humanitarian Entrants: Risks and Rewards for Australia’, LSJ: Law Society of NSW Journal, 37 (2017), 74–75.Google Scholar
Hoekstra, Myrte S., ‘Governing Difference in the City: Urban Imaginaries and the Policy Practice of Migrant Incorporation’, Territory, Politics, Governance, 6 (2018), 362–380.Google Scholar
Hofmeyr, Isabel, ‘Building a Nation From Words: Afrikaans Language, Literature and Ethnic Identity, 1902-1924’, in Marks, Shula and Trapido, Stanley (eds), The Politics of Race, Class and Nationalism in Twentieth-Century South Africa (London and New York: Longman, 1987): 95–123.Google Scholar
James, Holston, Insurgent Citizenship: Democracy and Modernity in Brazil (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Holston, James, ‘Metropolitan Rebellions and the Politics of Commoning the City’, Anthropological Theory, 19 (2019), 120–142.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Honey-Rosés, Jordi, et al., ‘The Impact of COVID-19 on Public Space: An Early Review of the Emerging Questions – Design, Perceptions and Inequities’, Cities & Health (2020), 1–17.Google Scholar
Hoye, J. Matthew, ‘Sanctuary Cities and Republican Liberty’, Politics & Society, 48 (2020), 67–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hudson, Graham, ‘City of Hope, City of Fear: Sanctuary and Security in Toronto, Canada’, in Darling, Jonathan and Bauder, Harald (eds), Sanctuary Cities and Urban Struggles (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2019): 77–104.Google Scholar
Hulchanski, David. ‘The Three Cities Within Toronto: Income Polarization Among Toronto’s Neighbourhoods, 1970-2000’, Research Bulletin, 41 (2007), Centre for Urban and Community Studies, University of Toronto.Google Scholar
Human Rights Watch, Slipping Through the Cracks: Unaccompanied Children Detained by the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service (New York: Human Rights Watch, 1997).Google Scholar
Human Rights Watch, Prohibited Persons: Abuse of Undocumented Migrants, Asylum-Seekers, and Refugees in South Africa (New York: Human Rights Watch, 1998).Google Scholar
Humphris, Rachel. 2020. ‘A History of the Memories of the “Sanctuary City” in Toronto, Canada’. Ryerson Centre for Immigration and Settlement and the CERC in Migration and Integration. Working Paper No. 2020/5. 1–28.Google Scholar
Huysmans, Jef and Squire, Vicki. 2015. ‘Migration and Security’, in Balzaqc, Thierry, Cavelty, Myriam Dunn and Mauer, Victor (eds), The Routledge Handbook of Security Studies (Abingdon: Routledge): 161–171.Google Scholar
Inch, Andy, Slade, Jason and Crookes, Lee, ‘Exploring Planning as a Technology of Hope’ Journal of Planning Education and Research (2020), 1–20.Google Scholar
Inniss, Lolita Buckner, ‘Toward a Sui generis View of Black Rights in Canada: Overcoming the Difference-Denial Model of Countering Anti-Black Racism’, Berkeley Journal of African-American Law & Policy, 9 (2007), 32–73.Google Scholar
Isin, Engin F., ‘City.State: Critique of Scalar Thought’, Citizenship Studies, 11 (2007), 211–228.Google Scholar
Jackson, Vicki C., ‘Citizenships, Federalisms, and Gender’, in Benhabib, Seyla and Resnik, Judith (eds), Migrations and Mobilities: Citizenship, Borders, and Gender (New York: New York University Press, 2009): 439–485.Google Scholar
Jain, Prakash C., Racial Discrimination Against Overseas Indians: A Class Analysis (New Delhi: Concept Publishing, 1990).Google Scholar
Jayal, Niraja Gopa, ‘Reconfiguring Citizenship in Contemporary India’, South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies, 42 (2019), 33–50.Google Scholar
Jayal, Niraja Gopal, Citizenship and Its Discontents: An Indian History (Boston: Harvard University Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Jayal, Niraja Gopal, ‘Citizenship’, in Choudhry, Sujit, Khosla, Madhav and Bhanu Mehta, Pratap (eds), The Oxford Handbook of the Indian Constitution (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016): 163–179.Google Scholar
John, Peter, Smith, Graham and Stoker, Gerry, ‘Nudge Nudge, Think Think: Two Strategies for Changing Civic Behaviour’, The Political Quarterly, 80 (2009), 361–370.Google Scholar
Johnson, James, ‘Constructing and Contesting State-Urban Borders: Litigation Over Refugee Reception Offices in Post-Apartheid South African Cities’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies (2020), doi:10.1080/1369183X.2020.1779046.Google Scholar
Johnson, Kenneth M. and Lichter, Daniel T., ‘Rural Depopulation: Growth and Decline Processes Over the Past Century’, Rural Sociology, 84 (2019), 3–27.Google Scholar
Johnson, Kevin R., ‘Lessons About the Future of Immigration Law from the Rise and Fall of DACA’, U.C. Davis Law Review, 52 (2019), 343–390.Google Scholar
Johnson, Kevin R., ‘Immigration and Civil Rights: State and Local Efforts to Regulate Immigration’, Georgia Law Review, 46 (2012), 612–641.Google Scholar
Johnston, Hugh J. M., The Voyage of the Komagata Maru: The Sikh Challenge to Canada’s Colour Bar (Vancouver: UBC Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Johnstone, Nicola and Simbine, Caetano, ‘The Usual Victims: The Aliens Control Act and the Voices of Mozambicans’, in Crush, Jonathan (ed), Beyond Control: Immigration and Human Rights in a Democratic South Africa (Cape Town: IDASA, 1998): 160–180.Google Scholar
Kagan, Michael, ‘What We Talk About When We Talk About Sanctuary Cities’, U.C. Davis Law Review, 52 (2018), 391–406.Google Scholar
Kagan, Michael, ‘Toward Universal Deportation Defense: An Optimistic View’, Wisconsin Law Review (2018), 305–316.Google Scholar
Kaika, Maria, ‘Between Compassion and Racism: How the Biopolitics of Neoliberal Welfare Turns Citizens into Affective “Idiots”’, European Planning Studies, 25 (2017), 1275–1291.Google Scholar
Kale, Madhavi, Fragments of Empire: Capital, Slavery, and Indian Indentured Migration in the British Caribbean (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Kalhan, Anil, ‘Immigration Policing and Federalism Through the Lens of Technology, Surveillance, and Privacy’, Ohio State Law Journal, 74 (2013), 1106–1165.Google Scholar
Kallio, Kirsi Pauliina and Riding, James. ‘Geographies of welcome’, Fennia-International Journal of Geography, 196 (2018), 131–136.Google Scholar
Kaplan, Caran, Alarcon, Norma and Moellem, Minoo (eds), Between Woman and Nation: Nationalisms, Transnational Feminisms, and the State (Durham: Duke University Press, 1999).Google Scholar
Kaufmann, David, ‘Comparing Urban Citizenship, Sanctuary Cities, Local Bureaucratic Membership, and Regularizations’, Public Administration Review, 79 (2019), 443–446.Google Scholar
Kawar, Leila, ‘Contesting Migration Governance Through Legal Mobilization’, in Carmel, Emma, Lenner, Katharina and Paul, Regine (eds), Handbook on the Governance and Politics of Migration (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2021): 380–390.Google Scholar
Kazimi, Ali, Undesirables: White Canada and the Komagata Maru (Vancouver: Douglas and McIntyre, 2011).Google Scholar
Kelly, John D., ‘Fear of Culture: British Regulation of Indian Marriage in Post-Indenture Fiji’, Ethnohistory, 36 (1989), 372–391.Google Scholar
Kelly, John D., A Politics of Virtue: Hinduism, Sexuality, and Countercolonial Discourse in Fiji (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991).Google Scholar
Kennedy, Loraine, ‘Federalism as a Moderating Force? State-level Responses to India’s New Citizenship Law’, South Asia Multidisciplinary Academic Journal, 24/25 (2020), 1–19.Google Scholar
Kipfer, Stefan and Keil, Roger, ‘Toronto Inc? Planning the Competitive City in the New Toronto’, Antipode, 34 (2002), 227–264.Google Scholar
Klaaren, Jonathan and Ramji, Jaya. ‘Inside Illegality: Migration Policing in South Africa after Apartheid’, Africa Today, 48 (2001), 35–47.Google Scholar
Klotz, Audie, ‘Migration After Apartheid: Deracialising South African Foreign Policy’, Third World Quarterly, 21 (2000), 831–847.Google Scholar
Kochenov, Dimitry, Citizenship (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Koser, Khalid, ‘Dimensions and Dynamics of Irregular Migration’, Population, Space and Place, 16 (2010), 181–193.Google Scholar
Kotzé, Hennie and Hill, Lloyd, ‘Emergent Migration Policy in a Democratic South Africa’, International Migration, 35 (1997), 5–35.Google Scholar
Koya, Riyad Sadiq, ‘The Campaign for Islamic Law in Fiji: Comparison, Codification, Application’, Law and History Review, 32 (2014), 853–880.Google Scholar
Labman, Shauna, ‘Queue the Rhetoric: Refugees, Resettlement and Reform’, University of New Brunswick Law Journal, 62 (2011), 55–63.Google Scholar
Lai, Annie and Lasch, Christopher, ‘Crimmigration Resistance and the Case of Sanctuary City Defunding’, Santa Clara Law Review (2017), 539–610.Google Scholar
Lake, Marilyn and Reynolds, Henry, Drawing the Global Color Line: White Men’s Countries and the International Challenge of Racial Equality (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Lake, Marilyn, ‘From Mississippi to Melbourne via Natal: The Invention of the Literacy Test as a Technology for Racial Exclusion’, in Curthoys, Ann and Lake, Marilyn (eds), Connected Worlds: History in Transnational Perspective (Canberra: Australian National University Press, 2006): 209–230.Google Scholar
Lam, Elene, Behind the Rescue: How Anti-Trafficking Investigations and Policies Harm Migrant Sex Workers (Toronto: Butterfly Print, 2018).Google Scholar
Landau, Loren and Amit, Roni, ‘Wither Policy? Southern African Perspectives on Understanding Law, “Refugee” Policy and Protection’, Journal of Refugee Studies, 27 (2014), 534–552.Google Scholar
Landau, Loren, ‘Loving the Alien? Citizenship, Law, and the Future in South Africa’s Demonic Society’, African Affairs, 109 (2010), 213–230.Google Scholar
Landau, Loren, ‘Introducing the Demons’, in Landau, Loren (eds), Exorcising the Demons: Xenophobia, Violence and Statecraft in South Africa (Johannesburg: Wits University Press, 2011): 1–25.Google Scholar
Landolt, Patricia and Goldring, Luin, ‘The Social Production of Non-Citizenship: The Consequences of Intersecting Trajectories of Precarious Legal Status and Precarious Work’, in Goldring, Luin and Landolt, Patricia (eds), Producing and Negotiating Non-Citizenship (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2013): 154–174.Google Scholar
Landolt, Patricia and Goldring, Luin, ‘Assembling Noncitizenship Through the Work Of Conditionality’, Special issue: Theorising Noncitizenship: Citizenship Studies, 19 (2015), 853–869.Google Scholar
Landolt, Patricia and Goldring, Luin, ‘Assembling Non-Citizen Access to Education in a Sanctuary City: The Place of Public School Bordering Practices’, in Bada, Xóchitl and Gleeson, Shannon (eds), Accountability Across Borders: Migrant Rights in North America (Austin: University of Texas Press): 214–236.Google Scholar
Landolt, Patricia, ‘Assembling the Local Politics of Noncitizenship: Contesting Access to Healthcare in Toronto-Sanctuary City’, Social Problems (2020), doi:10.1093/socpro/spaa046.Google Scholar
Lanz, Stephan, ‘Be Berlin! Governing the City Through Freedom’, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 37 (2013), 1305–1324.Google Scholar
Lanz, Stephan, ‘Berlin oder Das umkämpfte Terrain der Einwanderungsstadt’, Das Argument,318 (2016), 534–547.Google Scholar
Lasch, Christopher, Chan, Linus, Eagly, Ingrid V., Francesca Haynes, Dina, Lai, Annie, McCormick, Elizabeth M. and Stumpf, Juliet P., ‘Understanding Sanctuary Cities’, Boston College Law Review, 59 (2018), 1703–1773.Google Scholar
Lasch, Christopher, ‘Rendition Resistance’, North Carolina Law Review, 92 (2013), 149–235.Google Scholar
Lasch, Christopher, ‘Sanctuary Cities and Dog-Whistle Politics’, New England Journal of Criminal and Civil Confinement, 42 (2016), 159–190.Google Scholar
Lasch, Christopher, ‘Immigration Detainers After Arizona’, Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review, 46 (2013), 629–702.Google Scholar
Lebow, Allison, ‘Access Denied in a “Sanctuary City”: Undocumented Immigrants and Subsidized Housing Policies in Toronto’ (Unpublished Master’s Thesis, Department of Geography and Planning, University of Toronto, 2014).Google Scholar
Lefebvre, Henri, The Production of Space (Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 1991).Google Scholar
Liebman, James S., ‘More Than “Slightly Retro”: The Rehnquist Court’s Rout of Habeas Corpus Jurisdiction in Teague v. Lane’, New York University Review of Law and Social Change, 18 (1991), 537–636.Google Scholar
Liew, Jamie Chai Yun, ‘The Invisible Women: Migrant and Immigrant Sex Workers and Law Reform in Canada’, Migration, Intersectionality and Social Justice, 14 (2020), 90–116.Google Scholar
Lippert, Randy K. and Walby, Kevin, Policing Cities: Urban Securitization and Regulation in a 21st Century World (New York: Routledge, 2013).Google Scholar
Lippert, Randy K., ‘Rethinking Sanctuary: The Canadian Context, 1983–2003’, International Migration Review, 39 (2005), 381–406.Google Scholar
Lippert, Randy K., Sanctuary, Sovereignty, Sacrifice: Canadian Sanctuary Incidents, Power, and Law (Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2006).Google Scholar
Liss, Ryan, ‘Right to Belong: Legal Protection of Sociological Membership in the Application of Article 12(4) of the ICCPR’, N.Y.U. J. Int’l L. & Pol., 46 (2014), 1097–1191.Google Scholar
Lochner, Sarah L., ‘Qualified Immunity, Constitutional Stagnation, and the Global War on Terror’, Northwestern University Law Review, 105 (2011), 829–868.Google Scholar
Lodge, Tom, ‘Political Corruption in South Africa’, African Affairs, 97 (1998), 157–187.Google Scholar
Lucassen, Jan and Lucassen, Leo, Globalising Migration History: The Eurasian Experience (16th–21st Centuries) (Leiden: Brill, 2014).Google Scholar
Jerome, Ma and Pavlovic, Nicholas, ‘California Divided: The Restrictions and Vulnerabilities in Implementing SB 54’, Asian American Law Journal, 26 (2019), 127–167.Google Scholar
Macdonald, Roderick, ‘Legal Republicanism and Legal Pluralism: Two Takes on Identity and Diversity’, in Bussani, Mauro and Graziadei, Michele (eds), Human Diversity and the Law (Brussels: Bruylant, 2005): 43–70.Google Scholar
Macdonald, Roderick, ‘Kaleidoscopic Federalism’, In Gaudreault-DesBiens, Jean-Francois and Gélinas, Fabien (eds), The States and Moods of Federalism: Governance, Identity and Methodology (Montreal: Blais, 2005): 261–283.Google Scholar
Macklin, Audrey, ‘Citizenship Revocation, the Privilege to Have Rights and the Production of the Alien’, Queen’s Law Journal, 40 (2014), 1–54.Google Scholar
Main, Henry Summer, 1897. Ancient Law: Its Connection with the Early History of Society and its Relation to Modern Ideas, 16th edn. (London: John Murray).Google Scholar
Mamdani, Mahmood, Define and Rule: Native as Political Identity (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Mancina, Peter A., ‘Sanctuary Cities and Sanctuary Power’, in Reece, Jones (ed), Open Borders: In Defense of Free Movement (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2019): 250–264.Google Scholar
Mani, Lata, Contentious Traditions: The Debate on Sati in Colonial India (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Mantena, Karuna, Alibis of Empire: Henry Maine and the Ends of Liberal Imperialism (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Marcuse, Peter, ‘From Critical Urban Theory to the Right to the City’, City, 13 (2009), 185–197.Google Scholar
Markovits, Claude, The Global World of Indian Merchants, 1750–1947: Traders of Sind from Bukhara to Panama (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000).Google Scholar
Marks, Shula and Trapido, Stanley, The Politics of Race, Class and Nationalism in Twentieth-Century South Africa (London and New York: Longman, 1987).Google Scholar
Massaro, Toni M. and Milczarek-Desai, Shefali, ‘Constitutional Cities: Sanctuary Jurisdictions, Local Voice, and Individual Liberty’, Columbia Human Rights Law Review, 50 (2018), 1–115.Google Scholar
Massey, Doreen, Space, Place and Gender (London: Polity Press, 1994).Google Scholar
Massey, Douglas S. and Tannen, Jonathan, ‘Suburbanization and Segregation in the United States: 1970–2010’, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 41 (2018), 1594–1611.Google Scholar
Mawani, Renisa, Across Oceans of Law: The Komagata Maru and Jurisdiction in the Time of Empire (Durham: Duke University Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Mayer, Margit, ‘The “Right to the City” in Urban Social Movements’, in Brenner, Neil, Marcuse, Peter and Mayer, Margit (eds), Cities for People Not for Profit. Critical Urban Theory and the Right to the City (London: Routledge, 2011): 75–97.Google Scholar
Maynard, Robyn, Policing Black Lives (Winnipeg: Fernwood Publishing, 2017).Google Scholar
Maynard, Robyn, ‘Black Life and Death Across the U.S.-Canada Border: Border Violence, Black Fugitive Belonging, and a Turtle Island View of Black Liberation’, Journal of the Critical Ethnic Studies Association, 5 (2019), 124–151.Google Scholar
McClintok, Ann, Imperial Leather: Race, Gender and Sexuality in the Colonial Contest (New York: Routledge, 1995).Google Scholar
McCulloch, Jude and Pickering, Sharon, ‘Pre-Crime and Counter-Terrorism: Imagining Future Crime in the “War on Terror”, British Journal of Criminology, 49 (2009), 628–645.Google Scholar
McKay, Fiona H., Thomas, Samantha L. and Kneebone, Susan. ‘“It Would be Okay if They Came Through the Proper Channels”: Community Perceptions and Attitudes Toward Asylum Seekers in Australia’, Journal of Refugee Studies, 25 (2012), 113–133.Google Scholar
McKeown, Adam, ‘Global Migration, 1846-1940’, Journal of World History, 15 (2004), 155–189.Google Scholar
McKeown, Adam, Melancholy Order: Asian Migration and the Globalization of Borders (New York: Columbia University Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Menjívar, Cecilia, Cervantes, Andrea Gómez and Alvord, Daniel, ‘The Expansion of “Crimmigration”, Mass Detention, and Deportation’, Sociology Compass, 12 (2018), 1–15.Google Scholar
Merritt, Deborah Jones, ‘The Guarantee Clause and State Autonomy: Federalism for a Third Century’, Columbia Law Review, 88 (1988), 1–78.Google Scholar
Merritt, Deborah Jones, ‘Republican Governments and Autonomous States: A New Role for the Guarantee Clause’, University of Colorado Law Review, 65 (1994), 815–834.Google Scholar
Merry, Sally Engle, ‘Crossing Boundaries: Ethnography in the Twenty-First Century’, Political and Legal Anthropology Review, 23 (2000), 127–133.Google Scholar
Mezzadra, Sandro and Neilson, Brett, Border as Method, or, The Multiplication of Labor (Durham: Duke University Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Mfubu, Popo, ‘Prohibited and Undesirable Persons’, in Khan, Fatima (ed), Immigration Law in South Africa (Cape Town: Juta, 2018): 178–191.Google Scholar
Minn, aar, Anthony and Hough, Mike, Who Goes There? Perspectives on Clandestine Migration and Illegal Aliens in Southern Africa (Pretoria: Human Sciences Research Council, 1996).Google Scholar
Missbach, Antje, Adiputera, Yunizar and Prabandari, Atin, ‘Is Makassar a “Sanctuary City”? Migration Governance in Indonesia After the “Local Turn”’, Austrian Journal of South-East Asian Studies, 11 (2018), 199–216.Google Scholar
Moens, Alexander, The Challenging Parameters of the Border Action Plan in Perimeter Security and the Beyond the Border Dialogue (Bellingham: Border Policy Research Institute, Western Washington University, 2011): 15–21.Google Scholar
Moffette, David and Pratt, Anna, ‘Beyond Criminal Law and Methodological Nationalism: Borderlands, Jurisdictional Games, and Legal Intersections’, in Côté-Lussier, Carolyn, Moffette, David and Piché, Justin (eds), Contemporary Criminological Issues: Moving Beyond Insecurity and Exclusion (Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press, 2020): 15–40.Google Scholar
Moffette, David, ‘The Jurisdictional Games of Immigration Policing: Barcelona’s Fight Against Unauthorized Street Vending’, Theoretical Criminology, 24 (2020): 258–75.Google Scholar
Mongia, Radhika, ‘Gender and the Historiography of Gandhian Satyagraha in South Africa’, Gender & History, 18 (2006), 130–149.Google Scholar
Mongia, Radhika, ‘Interrogating Critiques of Methodological Nationalism: Propositions for New Methodologies’, in Amelina, Anna, Nergiz, Devrimsel D., Faist, Thomas and Glick Schiller, Nina (eds), Beyond Methodological Nationalism: Research Methodologies for Cross-Border Studies (New York and London: Routledge, 2012): 198–215.Google Scholar
Mongia, Radhika, ‘Race, Nationality, Mobility: A History of the Passport’, Public Culture, 11 (1999), 527–556.Google Scholar
Mongia, Radhika, ‘The Komagata Maru as Event: Legal Transformations in Migration Regimes’, in Dhamoon, Rita Kaur, Bhandar, Davina, Mawani, Renise and Kaur Bains, Satwinder (eds), Unmooring the Komagata Maru: Charting Imperial Itineraries (Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2019): 95–120.Google Scholar
Mongia, Radhika, Indian Migration and Empire: A Colonial Genealogy of the Modern State (Durham: Duke University Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Morales, Daniel I., ‘Transforming Crime-Based Deportation’, NYUL Review, 92 (2017), 698.Google Scholar
Motomura, Hiroshi, ‘Immigration Outside the Law’, Columbia Law Review, 108 (2008), 2037–2097.Google Scholar
Motomura, Hiroshi, Immigration Outside the Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Mourad, Lama, ‘Brothers, Workers or Syrians? The Politics of Naming in Lebanese Municipalities’, Journal of Refugee Studies, 34 (2021), 1387–1399.Google Scholar
Nath, Nisha, ‘Curated Hostilities and the Story of Abdoul Abdi: Relational Securitization in the Settler Colonial Racial State’, Citizenship Studies, 25 (2020), 1–23.Google Scholar
Netto, Vinicius M., The Social Fabric of Cities (London: Routledge, 2017).Google Scholar
Nicholls, Walter J., The DREAMers: How the Undocumented Youth Movement Transformed the Immigrant Rights Debate (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Nicholls, Walter J., ‘The Uneven Geographies of Politicisation: The Case of the Undocumented Immigrant Youth Movement in the United States’ Antipode, 53 (2020), 1–21.Google Scholar
Nijhawan, Shobna, ‘Fallen Through the Nationalist and Feminist Grids of Analysis: Political Campaigning of Indian Women Against Indentured Labour Migration’, Indian Journal of Gender Studies, 21 (2014), 111–133.Google Scholar
Nijman, Janne, ‘The Urban Pushback: International Law as an Instrument of Cities’, Proceedings of the ASIL Annual Meeting, 113 (2019), 119–123.Google Scholar
Niranjana, Tejaswini, Mobilizing India: Women, Music, and Migration Between India and Trinidad (Durham: Duke University Press, 2006).Google Scholar
Noriel, Gerard, The French Melting Pot (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1996).Google Scholar
Nussbaum, Martha C., Political Emotions: Why Love Matters for Justice (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Nyers, Peter and Rygiel, Kim (eds), Citizenship, Migrant Activism and the Politics of Movement (New York: Routledge, 2012).Google Scholar
Obasogie, Osagie K., Newman, Zachary, ‘Black Lives Matter and Respectability Politics in Local News Accounts of Officer-Involved Civilian Deaths: An Early Empirical Assessment’, Wisconsin Law Review, 3 (2016), 541–574. Olivares, Mariela, ‘Narrative Reform Dilemmas,’ Missouri Law Review, 4 (2017), 1089–1139.Google Scholar
Olivas, Michael A., ‘Immigration-Related State and Local Ordinances: Preemption, Prejudice, and the Proper Role for Enforcement’, Immigration and Nationality Law Review, 28 (2007): 243–272.Google Scholar
Olivas, Michael A., Perchance to DREAM: A Legal and Political History of the DREAM Act and DACA (New York: New York University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Barbara, Oomen and Baumgärtel, Moritz, ‘Frontier Cities: The Rise of Local Authorities as an Opportunity for International Human Rights Law’, European Journal of International Law, 29 (2018), 607–630.Google Scholar
Oomen, Barbara and Leenders, Emma, ‘Symbolic Laws, Street-Level Actors: Everyday Bordering in Dutch Participation Declaration Workshops’, in Ambrosini, Maurizio, Cinalli, Manlio and Jacobson, David (eds), Migration, Borders and Citizenship: Between Policy and Public Spheres (Cham: Springer, 2020): 265–294.Google Scholar
Oomen, Barbara, Moritz Baumgärtel, Sara Miellet, Durmus, Elif and Sabchev, Tihomir, ‘Strategies of Divergence: Local Authorities, Law and Discretionary Spaces in Migration Governance’, Journal of Refugee Studies 34 (2021), 3608–3628.Google Scholar
Oomen, Barbara, ‘Cities, Refugees and Migration’, in Aust, Helmut P., Nijman, Janne E. and Marcenko, Miha (eds), Research Handbook on International Law and Cities (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar): 240–250.Google Scholar
Oosterlynck, Stijn, Loopmans, Maarten, Schuermans, Nick, Vandenabeele, Joke and Zemni, Sami, ‘Putting Flesh to the Bone: Looking for Solidarity in Diversity, Here and Now’, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 39 (2016), 764–782.Google Scholar
Operational Working Team on Border Control, Border Control Collective Approach: Implementation Plan (Pretoria: Heads of the National Inter-Departmental Structure on Border Control, 1997).Google Scholar
Paik, A. Naomi, ‘Abolitionist Futures and the US Sanctuary Movement’, Race & Class, 59 (2017), 3–25.Google Scholar
Parmar, Alpa, ‘Borders as Mirrors: Racial Hierarchies and Policing Migration’, Critical Criminology, 28 (2020), 175–192.Google Scholar
Peberdy, Sally and Crush, Jonathan, ‘Invisible Trade, Invisible Travellers: The Maputo Corridor Spatial Development Initiative and Informal Cross-Border Trading’, South African Geographical Journal, 83 (2001), 115–123.Google Scholar
Perryman, Benjamin, ‘Adducing Social Science Evidence in Constitutional Cases’, Queen’s Law Journal, 44 (2018): 121–175.Google Scholar
Pinderhughes, Ellen E., Scott, Judith C. and Matthews, Jessica A. K., ‘Youth of Color in Care: Intersecting Identities and Vulnerabilities’, in Fitzgerald, Hiram E., Johnson, Deborah J., Qin, Desiree Baolian, Villarruel, Francisco A. and Norder, John (eds), Handbook of Children and Prejudice: Integrating Research, Practice, and Policy (Cham: Springer 2019): 353–373.Google Scholar
Porter, Libby, Roy, Ananya and Legacy, Crystal, ‘Planning Solidarity? From Silence to Refusal’, Planning Theory & Practice, 22 (2021): 111–138.Google Scholar
Powell, Cedric Merlin, ‘Rhetorical Neutrality: Colorblindness, Frederick Douglass, and Inverted Critical Race Theory’, Cleveland St. Law Review, 56 (2008), 823–894.Google Scholar
Prak, Maarten Roy, Citizens Without Nations: Urban Citizenship in Europe and the World, c.1000–1789 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Provine, Doris Marie and Lynn Doty, Roxanne, ‘The Criminalization of Immigrants as a Racial Project’, Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice, 27 (2011), 261–277.Google Scholar
Putnam, Robert D., Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2016).Google Scholar
Rahman, Talha, ‘Identifying the “Outsider”: An Assessment of Foreigner Tribunals in the Indian State of Assam’, Statelessness and Citizenship Review, 2 (2020), 112–137.Google Scholar
Ramakrishnan, S. Karthick and Gulasekaram, Pratheepan, ‘The Importance of the Political in Immigration Federalism’, Arizona St. Law Journal, 44 (2012), 1431–1488.Google Scholar
Ranasinghe, Prashan and Valverde, Mariana, ‘Governing Homelessness Through Land-Use: A Sociolegal Study of the Toronto Shelter Zoning By-Law’, Canadian Journal of Sociology, 31 (2006), 325–349.Google Scholar
Rankin, Katharine N., ‘Critical Development Studies and the Praxis of Planning’, City, 13 (2009): 219–229.Google Scholar
Rao, Rahul, ‘Nationalisms by, Against and Beyond the Indian State’, Radical Philosophy, 2 (2020), 17–26.Google Scholar
Razack, Sherene, Casting Out: The Eviction of Muslims from Western Law and Politics (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Räuchle, Charlotte, ‘Welcome to the City? Discursive and Administrative Dimensions of Hamburg’s Arrival Infrastructures Around 1900’, in Arnaut, Bruno Meeus Karel and van Heur, Bas (eds), Arrival Infrastructures (Cham: Palgrave, 2019): 33–52.Google Scholar
Reddock, Rhoda, ‘Freedom Denied: Indian Women and Indentureship in Trinidad and Tobago, 1845-1917’, Economic and Political Weekly, 20 (1985), 79–87.Google Scholar
Reddock, Rhoda, Women, Labour & Politics in Trinidad and Tobago: A History (London: Zed Books, 1994).Google Scholar
Reny, Tyler T., Collingwood, Loren and Valenzuela, Ali A., ‘Vote Switching in the 2016 Election: How Racial and Immigration Attitudes, Not Economics, Explain Shifts in White Voting’, Public Opinion Quarterly, 83 (2019), 91–113.Google Scholar
Resnik, Judith, Civin, Joshua and Frueh, Joseph B., ‘Ratifying Kyoto at the Local Level: Sovereigntism, Federalism, and Translocal Organizations of Government Actors (TOGAs)’, Arizona Law Review, 50 (2008): 709–786.Google Scholar
Resnik, Judith, ‘Categorical Federalism: Jurisdiction, Gender, and the Globe’, The Yale Law Journal, 111 (2001), 619–80.Google Scholar
Resnik, Judith, ‘Law as Affiliation: “Foreign” Law, Democratic Federalism, and the Sovereigntism of the Nation-State’, International Journal of Constitutional Law, 6 (2008), 33–66.Google Scholar
Resnik, Judith, ‘Federalism(s)’ Forms and Norms: Contesting Rights, De-Essentializing Jurisdictional Divides, and Temporizing Accommodations’, in Fleming, James E. and Levy, Jacob T. (eds), Federalism and Subsidiarity (Nomos LV) (New York: NYU Press, 2014): 363–436.Google Scholar
Resnik, Judith, ‘Within its Jurisdiction: Moving Boundaries, People, and the Law of Migration’, Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 160 (2016), 117–159.Google Scholar
Resnik, Judith, ‘Bordering by Law: The Migration of Law Crimes, Sovereignty, and the Mail’, in Knight, Jack (ed), Immigration, Emigration and Migration (Nomos LVII) (New York: NYU Press, 2017): 79–201.Google Scholar
Ricci, Carola, ‘The Necessity for Alternative Legal Pathways: The Best Practice of Humanitarian Corridors Opened by Private Sponsors in Italy’, German Law Journal, 21 (2020), 265–283.Google Scholar
Genevieve, Ritchie, ‘Civil Society, the State, and Private Sponsorship: The Political Economy of Refugee Resettlement’, International Journal of Lifelong Education, 37 (2018), 663–675.Google Scholar
Rivero, Juan J., Sotomayor, Luisa, Zanotto, Juliana M. and Zitcer, Andrew, ‘Democratic Public or Populist Rabble: Repositioning the City Amidst Social Fracture’, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 46 (2022), 101–114.Google Scholar
Robertson, Angela A. and Walker, Courtney S., ‘Predictors of Justice System Involvement: Maltreatment and Education’, Child Abuse & Neglect, 76 (2018), 408–415.Google Scholar
Rodriguez, Cristina M., ‘The Significance of the Local in Immigration Regulation’, Michigan Law Review, 106 (2008), 567–642.Google Scholar
Rodriguez, Cristina M., ‘Enforcement, Integration, and the Future of Immigration Federalism’, Journal of Migration and Human Society, 5 (2017), 509–540.Google Scholar
Rosenbaum, Carrie L., ‘The Natural Persistence of Racial Disparities in Crime-Based Removals’, University of St. Thomas Law Journal, 13 (2017), 532–565.Google Scholar
Rosenberger, Sieglinde, Stern, Verena and Merhaut, Nina (eds), Protest Movements in Asylum and Deportation (Cham: Springer, 2018).Google Scholar
Rosenfeld, Michel, The Identity of the Constitutional Subject: Selfhood, Citizenship, Culture (London and New York: Routledge, 2010).Google Scholar
Rotman, Leonard I., ‘Understanding Fiduciary Duties and Relationship Fiduciarity’, McGill Law Journal, 62 (2017), 975–1042.Google Scholar
Roy, Ananya, ‘Praxis in the Time of Empire’, Planning Theory, 5 (2006), 7–29.Google Scholar
Roy, Anupama and Singh, Ujjwal Kumar, ‘The Ambivalence of Citizenship: The IMDT Act (1983) and the Politics of Forclusion in Assam’, Critical Asian Studies, 41 (2009), 37–60.Google Scholar
Roy, Anupama, Mapping Citizenship in India (New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Rubinstein, David and Gulasekaram, Pratheepan, ‘Immigration Exceptionalism’, Northwestern University Law Review, 111 (2017), 583–654.Google Scholar
Rudner, Martin, ‘Challenge and Response: Canada’s Intelligence Community in the War on Terrorism’, Canadian Foreign Policy, 11 (2004), 17–39.Google Scholar
Sabchev, Tihomir and Baumgärtel, Moritz, ‘The Path of Least Resistance?: EU Cities and Locally Organised Resettlement’, Forced Migration Review, 63 (2020), 38–40.Google Scholar
Saberi, Parastou, ‘Toronto and the “Paris problem”: Community Policing in ‘Immigrant Neighbourhoods’, Race & Class, 59 (2017), 49–69.Google Scholar
Sadiq, Kamal, Paper Citizens: How Illegal Migrants Acquire Citizenship in Developing Countries (Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Sandercock, Leonie, ‘Towards a Planning Imagination for the 21st Century’, Journal of the American Planning Association, 70 (2004), 133–141.Google Scholar
Sandhu, Kernail Singh, Indian in Malaya: Some Aspects of their Immigration and Settlement, 1786-1957 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1969).Google Scholar
Sandoval, Gerardo F., ‘Shadow Transnationalism: Cross-Border Networks and Planning Challenges of Transnational Unauthorized Immigrant Communities’, Journal of Planning Education and Research, 33 (2013), 176–193.Google Scholar
Sarat, Austin, ‘Narrative Strategy and Death Penalty Advocacy’, Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review, 31 (1996), 353–382.Google Scholar
Sassen, Saskia, The Global City: New York, London, Tokyo (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2001).Google Scholar
Sassen, Saskia, Territory, Authority, Rights: From Medieval to Global Assemblages (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Schammann, Hannes, ‘Wenn Variationen den Alltag bestimmen. Unterschiede lokaler Politikgestaltung in der Leistungsgewährung für Asylsuchende’, Zeitschrift für Vergleichende Politikwissenschaft, 9 (2015), 161–182.Google Scholar
Schammann, Hannes, ‘Stadt, Land, Flucht. Konzeptionelle Überlegungen zum Vergleich städtischer Flüchtlingspolitik in Deutschland’, in Barbehön, Marlon and Münch, Sybille (eds), Variationen des Städtischen–Variationen lokaler Politik (Wiesbaden: Springer, 2017): 91–117.Google Scholar
Schierup, Carl U., ‘Under the Rainbow: Migration, Precarity and People Power in Post-Apartheid South Africa’, Critical Sociology, 42 (2016), 1051–1068.Google Scholar
Schiller, Maria, ‘Paradigmatic Pragmatism and the Politics of Diversity’, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 38 (2015), 1120–1136.Google Scholar
Schneider, Gerald, Segadlo, Nadine and Leue, Miriam, ‘Forty-Eight Shades of Germany: Positive and Negative Discrimination in Federal Asylum Decision Making’, German Politics, 29 (2020), 564–581.Google Scholar
Schneider, Hanna, The Strategic Use of Resettlement: Lessons from the Syria Context (Amman: Durable Solutions Platform, 2020).Google Scholar
Schoch, Magdalene, ‘Conflict of Laws in a Federal State: The Experience of Switzerland’, Harvard Law Review, 55 (1942): 738–779.Google Scholar
Scholten, Peter, ‘Between National Models and Multi-Level Decoupling: The Pursuit of Multi-Level Governance in Dutch and UK Policies Towards Migrant Incorporation’, Journal of International Migration and Integration, 17 (2016), 973–994.Google Scholar
Scholten, Peter and Penninx, Rinus, ‘The Multilevel Governance of Migration and Integration’, in Garcés-Mascareñas, Blanca and Penninx, Rinus (eds), Integration Processes and Policies in Europe: Contexts, Levels and Actors (Cham: Springer, 2016): 91–108.Google Scholar
Scholten, Peter, ‘Two Worlds Apart? Multilevel Governance and the Gap Between National and Local Integration Policies’, in Caponio, Tiziana, Scholten, Peter and Zapata-Barrero, Ricard (eds), The Routledge Handbook of the Governance of Migration and Diversity in Cities (London and New York: Routledge, 2018): 157–167.Google Scholar
Scholten, Peter, ‘Agenda Dynamics and the Multi-Level Governance of Intractable Policy Controversies: The Case of Migrant Integration Policies in the Netherlands’, Policy Sciences, 46 (2013), 217–236.Google Scholar
Scholten, Peter, ‘Cities of Migration: Towards a Typology’, in Caponio, Tiziana, Scholten, Peter and Zapata-Barrero, Ricard (eds), The Routledge Handbook of the Governance of Migration and Diversity in Cities (London and New York: Routledge, 2018): 241–250.Google Scholar
Schragger, Richard C., Power: Urban Governance in a Global Age (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Schultz, Caroline, ‘Ambiguous Goals, Uneven Implementation – How Immigration Offices Shape Internal Immigration Control in Germany’, Comparative Migration Studies, 8 (2020): 1–18.Google Scholar
Schwartz, Joanna C., ‘The Case Against Qualified Immunity’, Notre Dame Law Review, 93 (2018), 1797–1852.Google Scholar
Schwiertz, Helge and Steinhilper, Elias, ‘Countering the Asylum Paradox Through Strategic Humanitarianism: Evidence from Safe Passage Activism in Germany’, Critical Sociology, 47 (2021), 203–217.Google Scholar
Scott, Elizabeth S. and Chen, Ben, ‘Fiduciary Principles in Family Law’, in Criddle, Evan J., Miller, Paul B. and Sitkoff, Robert H. (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Fiduciary Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019): 227–248.Google Scholar
Seda, Fulgêncio, Border Governance in Mozambique: The Intersection of International Border Controls, Regional Integration and Cross-border Regions (Unpublished PhD Dissertation, International Institute of Social Studies, 2015).Google Scholar
Shachar, Ayelet, The Birthright Lottery: Citizenship and Global Inequality (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Sharpless, Rebecca, ‘“Immigrants are Not Criminals”: Respectability, Immigration Reform, and Hyperincarceration’, Houston Law Review, 53 (2016), 691–766.Google Scholar
Shay, Giovanna and Lasch, Christopher, ‘Initiating a New Constitutional Dialogue: The Increased Importance Under AEDPA of Seeking Certiorari from Judgments of State Courts’, William and Mary Law Review, 50 (2009), 211–266.Google Scholar
Sheik, Nafisa Essop, Colonial Rites: Custom, Marriage Law and the Making of Difference in Natal, 1830s–c. 1910 (Unpublished PhD Dissertation, University of Michigan, 2012).Google Scholar
Sheller, Mimi, Mobility Justice: The Politics of Movement in an Age of Extremes (London: Verso, 2018).Google Scholar
Siegel, Reva B., ‘The Rule of Love: Wife Beating As Prerogative and Privacy’, Yale Law Journal, 105 (1996), 2117–2208.Google Scholar
Simmons, William Paul, Menjívar, Cecilia and Salerno Valdez, Elizabeth, ‘The Gendered Effects of Local Immigration Enforcement: Latinas’ Social Isolation in Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles, and Phoenix’, International Migration Review, 55 (2021), 108–134.Google Scholar
Singha, Radhika, ‘Colonial Law and Infrastructural Power: Reconstructing Community, Locating the Female Subject’, Studies in History, 19 (2003), 88–126.Google Scholar
Sinha, Mrinalini, ‘Premonitions of the Past’, Journal of Asian Studies, 74 (2015), 821–841.Google Scholar
Slater, Tom, ‘Municipally Managed Gentrification in South Parkdale, Toronto’, Canadian Geographer/Le Géographe Canadien, 48 (2004), 303–325.Google Scholar
Smith, Matthew, ‘Violence, Xenophobia and the Media: A Review of the South African Media’s Coverage of Xenophobia and the Xenophobic Violence Prior to and Including the Events of 2008’, Politikon, 38 (2011), 111–129.Google Scholar
Smith, Michael Peter and Guarnizo, Luis Eduardo, ‘Global Mobility, Shifting Borders and Urban Citizenship’, Journal of Economic and Social Geography, 100 (2009), 610–622.Google Scholar
Soederberg, Susanne and Walks, Alan, ‘Producing and Governing Inequalities under Planetary Urbanization: From Urban Age to Urban Revolution?’, Geoforum, 89 (2018), 107–113.Google Scholar
Soennecken, Dagmar, ‘The Managerialization of Refugee Determinations in Canada’, Droit et Société, 84 (2013), 297–311.Google Scholar
Soennecken, Dagmar, ‘Germany and the Janus Face of Immigration Federalism: Devolution vs. Centralization’, in Baglay, Sasha and Nakache, Delphine (eds), Immigration Regulation in Federal States: Challenges and Responses in Comparative Perspective (Dordrecht: Springer, 2014): 159–178.Google Scholar
Somin, Ilya, ‘Making Federalism Great Again: How the Trump Administration’s Attack on Sanctuary Cities Unintentionally Strengthened Judicial Protection for State Autonomy’, Texas Law Review, 97 (2019), 1247–1294.Google Scholar
Somin, Ilya, Free to Move: Foot Voting, Migration, and Political Freedom (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Song, Sarah, ‘Why Does the State Have the Right to Control Immigration’, in Knight, Jack (ed), Immigration, Emigration and Migration (Nomos LVII) (New York: NYU Press, 2017): 3–50.Google Scholar
Soske, Jon, ‘Wash Me Black Again’: African Nationalism, the Indian Diaspora, and Kwa-Zulu Natal, 1944-1960 (Unpublished PhD Dissertation, University of Toronto, 2009).Google Scholar
Sotomayor, Luisa and Daniere, Amrita, ‘The Dilemmas of Equity Planning in the Global South: A Comparative View from Bangkok and Medellín’, Journal of Planning Education and Research, 38 (2018), 273–388.Google Scholar
Spena, Alessandro, ‘The Good, The Bad and the Ugly: Images of the Foreigner in Contemporary Criminal Law’, International Journal of Migration and Border Studies, 4 (2018), 287–302.Google Scholar
Spencer, Sarah and Delvino, Nicola, Migrants with Irregular Status in Europe: Guidance for Municipalities (Report C-MISE 03 2019) (Oxford: University of Oxford, 2019).Google Scholar
Spencer, Sarah and Delvino, Nicola, ‘Municipal Activism on Irregular Migrants: The Framing of Inclusive Approaches at the Local Level’, Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies, 17 (2019), 27–43.Google Scholar
Spiro, Peter J., Formalizing Local Citizenship’, Fordham Urban Law Journal, 37 (2010), 559–572.Google Scholar
Squire, Vicki, ‘From Community Cohesion to Mobile Solidarities: The City of Sanctuary Network and the Strangers into Citizens Campaign’, Political Studies, 59(2011), 290–307.Google Scholar
Staeheli, Lynn, ‘Cities and Citizenship’, Urban Geography, 24 (2003), 97–102.Google Scholar
Steil, Justin Peter and Bogdan Vasi, Ion, ‘The New Immigration Contestation: Social Movements and Local Immigration Policy Making in the United States, 2000–2011’, American Journal of Sociology, 119 (2014), 1104–1155.Google Scholar
Stein, Samuel, Capital City: Gentrification and the Real Estate State (London: Verso, 2019).Google Scholar
Stenner, Karen, The Authoritarian Dynamic. Cambridge Studies in Public Opinion and Political Psychology (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005).Google Scholar
Stern, Philip J., The Company-State: Corporate Sovereignty and the Early Modern Foundations of the British Empire in India (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Stevens, Jacqueline, States Without Nations: Citizenship for Mortals. (United Kingdom: Columbia University Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Stone, Deborah A., ‘Causal Stories and the Formation of Policy Agendas’ Political Science Quarterly, 104 (1989), 281–300.Google Scholar
Stuart, Forrest, Armenta, Amada and Osborne, Melissa, ‘Legal Control of Marginal Groups’, Annual Review of Law and Social Science, 11 (2015), 235–254.Google Scholar
Stumpf, Juliet P., ‘The Process is the Punishment in Crimmigration Law’, in Aas, Katja F. and Bosworth, Mary (eds), The Borders of Punishment (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013): 58–75.Google Scholar
Stumpf, Juliet, ‘The Crimmigration Crisis: Immigrants, Crime and Sovereign Power’, American University Law Review, 56 (2006), 367–420.Google Scholar
Stürner, Janina and Bendel, Petra, Valuing Local Ownership: Refugees and Municipalities as Actors in the Search for Sustainable Solutions to Displacement (Erlangen: FAU University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Su, Rick, ‘Local Fragmentation as Immigration Regulation’ Houston Law Review, 47 (2010), 367–435.Google Scholar
Swerts, Thomas and Nicholls, Walter, ‘Undocumented Immigrant Activism and the Political: Disrupting the Order or Reproducing the Status Quo?’, Antipode, 53 (2021), 1–12.Google Scholar
Tan, Nikolas Feith, ‘Community Sponsorship, The Pact and The Compact: Towards Protection Principle’, in Carrera, Sergio and Geddes, Andrew (eds), The EU Pact on Migration and Asylum in light of the United Nations Global Compact on Refugees (San Domenico di Fiesole: European University Institute, 2021): 71–80.Google Scholar
Tan, Nikolas Feith, ‘The End of Protection: The Danish Paradigm Shift and the Law of Cessation’, Nordic Journal of International Law, 90 (2021), 60–85.Google Scholar
Tan, Nikolas Feith, ‘Community Sponsorship in Europe: Taking Stock, Policy Transfer and What the Future Might Hold’, Frontiers in Human Dynamics, 3 (2021), 1–8.Google Scholar
Tewolde, Amanuel I., ‘Am I Black, am I Coloured, am I Indian? An Autoethnographic Account of a Refugee’s Everyday Encounters with Ascribed Racialisation in South Africa’, African Identities, 18 (2020), 363–376.Google Scholar
Thomas, June-Manning, ‘Planning History and the Black Urban Experience: Linkages and Contemporary Implications’, Journal of Planning Education and Research, 14 (1994), 1–11.Google Scholar
Tinker, Hugh, A New System of Slavery: The Export of Indian Labour Overseas, 1830–1920 (London: Oxford University Press, 1974).Google Scholar
Ugarte, Magdalena, ‘Ethics, Discourse, or Rights? A Discussion About a Decolonizing Project in Planning’, Journal of Planning Literature, 29 (2014), 403–414.Google Scholar
UNHCR, UNHCR Resettlement Handbook (Geneva: UNHCR, 2011).Google Scholar
Uslaner, Eric M., Segregation and Mistrust: Diversity, Isolation, and Social Cohesion (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Valverde, Mariana, ‘Taking Land Use Seriously: Toward an Ontology of Municipal Law’, Law Text Culture, 9 (2005), 34–59.Google Scholar
Valverde, Mariana, ‘Jurisdiction and Scale: Legal ‘Technicalities’ as Resources for Theory’, Social & Legal Studies, 18 (2009), 139–157.Google Scholar
Valverde, Mariana, ‘Practices of Citizenship and Scales of Governance’, New Criminal Law Review: An International and Interdisciplinary Journal, 13 (2010), 216–240.Google Scholar
Valverde, Mariana, Everyday Law on the Street: City Governance in an Age of Diversity (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2010). Valverde, Mariana, ‘Seeing Like a City: The Dialectic of Premodern and Modern Ways of Seeing in Urban Regulation’, Law and Society Review, 45 (2011), 271-313.Google Scholar
Valverde, Mariana, ‘Studying the Governance of Crime and Security: Space, Time and Jurisdiction’, Criminology & Criminal Justice, 14 (2014), 379–391.Google Scholar
Valverde, Mariana, Chronotopes of Law: Time, Space and Jurisdiction in Legal Networks (New York: Routledge, 2015).Google Scholar
Valverde, Mariana, ‘Games of Jurisdiction: How Local Governance Realities Challenge the “Creatures of the Province” Doctrine’, Journal of Law and Social Policy, 34 (2021), 21–38.Google Scholar
Van Breugel, Ilona, ‘Towards a Typology of Local Migration Diversity Policies’, Comparative Migration Studies, 8 (2020), 1–16.Google Scholar
Van Selm, Joanne, ‘Complementary Pathways to Protection: Promoting the Integration and Inclusion of Refugees in Europe?’, The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 690 (2020), 136–152.Google Scholar
Van Selm, Joanne, ‘The Strategic Use of Resettlement: Changing the Face of Protection?’, Refuge: Canada’s Journal on Refugees, 22 (2004), 39–48.Google Scholar
Varsanyi, Monica W., ‘Interrogating “Urban Citizenship” vis-à-vis Undocumented Migration’, Citizenship Studies 10(2006), 229–249.Google Scholar
Varsanyi, Monica W., ‘Immigration Policing Through the Backdoor: City Ordinances, the “Right to the City,” and the Exclusion of Undocumented Day Laborers’, Urban Geography, 29 (2008), 29–52.Google Scholar
Varsanyi, Monica, Lewis, Paul, Marie Provine, Doris and Decker, Scott, ‘A Multilayered Jurisdictional Patchwork: Immigration Federalism in the United States’, Law & Policy, 34(2012), 138–158.Google Scholar
Vicino, Thomas J., Suburban Crossroads: The Fight for Local Control of Immigration Policy (United States: Lexington Books, 2013).Google Scholar
Vigneswaran, Darshan, Araia, Tesfalem, Hoag, Colin and Tshabalala, Xolani, ‘Criminality or Monopoly? Informal Immigration Enforcement in South Africa’, Journal of Southern African Studies, 36 (2010), 465–481.Google Scholar
Vigneswaran, Darshan, ‘Enduring Territoriality: South African Immigration Control’, Political Geography, 27 (2008), 783–801.Google Scholar
Vigneswaran, Darshan, ‘The Complex Sources of Immigration Control’, International Migration Review, 54 (2019), 1–27.Google Scholar
Villazor, Rose Cuison and Gulasekaram, Pratheepan, ‘Sanctuary Networks’, Minnesota Law Review, 103 (2019), 1209.Google Scholar
Villazor, Rose Cuison, ‘Sanctuary Cities and Local Citizenship’, Fordham Urban Law Journal, 37 (2010), 573–598.Google Scholar
Villegas, Francisco J., ‘“Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell”: Examining the Illegalization of Undocumented Students in Toronto, Canada’, British Journal of Sociology of Education, 39 (2018), 1111–1125.Google Scholar
Villegas, Francisco, ‘Active Communities and Practices of Resistance: A Brief History of School as Border Zones and Resistance in Toronto’, in Villegas, Francisco J. and Brady, Janelle (eds), Critical Schooling: Transformative Theory & Practice (Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019): 175–199.Google Scholar
Villegas, Paloma and Aberman, Tanya, ‘A Double Punishment: The Context of Postsecondary Access for Racialized Precarious Status Migrant Students in Toronto, Canada’, Refuge, 35 (2019), 72–82.Google Scholar
Virally, Michel, ‘A propos de la lex ferenda’, in Reuter, Paul (ed), Mélanges offerts à Paul Reuter. Le droit international: unité et diversité (Paris: A Pedone, 1981): 519–533.Google Scholar
Visser, M. Anne and Simpson, Sheryl-Ann, ‘Understanding Local Government’s Engagement in Immigration Policy Making in the US’, in Darling, Jonathan and Bauder, Harald (eds), Sanctuary Cities and Urban Struggles: Rescaling Migration, Citizenship, and Rights (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2019): 166–190.Google Scholar
Walsh, Matthew A. and Jaggers, Jeremiah W., ‘Addressing the Needs Crossover Youth: What Key Professionals are Saying’, Children and Youth Services Review, 75 (2017), 110–115.Google Scholar
Weber, Leanne, Policing Non-Citizens (New York: Routledge, 2013).Google Scholar
Weber, Leanne (ed), Rethinking Border Control for a Globalizing World (New York: Routledge, 2015).Google Scholar
Weiner, Myron, ‘The Political Demography of Assam’s Anti-Immigrant Movement’, Population and Development Review, 9 (1983), 279–292.Google Scholar
Whyte, Zachary, Romme Larsen, Birgitte and Fog Olwig, Karen, ‘New Neighbours in a Time of Change: Local Pragmatics and the Perception of Asylum Centres in Rural Denmark’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 45 (2019), 1953–1969.Google Scholar
Wilde, Lawrence, ‘The Concept of Solidarity: Emerging from the Theoretical Shadows?’, British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 9 (2007): 171–181.Google Scholar
Wimmer, Andreas and Glick Schiller, Nina, ‘Methodological Nationalism and Beyond: Nation-State Building, Migration and the Social Sciences’, Global Networks, 2 (2002), 301–334.Google Scholar
Winant, Howard, ‘Racial Democracy and Racial Identity: Comparing the United States and Brazil’, in Hanchard, Michael (ed), Racial Politics in Contemporary Brazil (New York: Duke University Press, 1999): 98–115.Google Scholar
Woods, Michael, ‘Precarious Rural Cosmopolitanism: Negotiating Globalization, Migration and Diversity in Irish Small Towns’, Journal of Rural Studies, 64 (2018), 164–176.Google Scholar
Wortley, Richard K., ‘Measuring Police Attitudes Toward Discretion’, Criminal Justice and Behavior, 30 (2003), 538–558.Google Scholar
Wright, Emily M., Spohn, Ryan and Campagna, Michael, ‘Responding to Crossover Youth: A Look Beyond Recidivism Outcomes’, Youth Violence and Juvenile Justice, 18 (2020), 381–394.Google Scholar
Yiftachel, Oren, ‘Planning and Social Control: Exploring the Dark Side’, Journal of Planning Literature, 12 (1998), 395–406.Google Scholar
Yoshino, Kenji, ‘Suspect Symbols: The Literary Argument for Heightened Scrutiny for Gays’, Columbia Law Review, 96 (1996), 1753–1834.Google Scholar
Yoshino, Kenji, ‘The New Equal Protection’, Harvard Law Review, 124 (2011), 747–804.Google Scholar
Young, Elliot, Alien Nation: Chinese Migration in the Americas from the Coolie Era through World War II (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Yuval-, Davis, Nira and Anthias, Floya (eds), Woman/Nation/State (London: Macmillan, 1989).Google Scholar
Yuval-Davis, Nira, Gender and Nation (London: Sage Publications, 1997).Google Scholar
Zachariah, Benjamin, Nation Games: History and Historiographical Imperatives in India (Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter Oldenbourg, 2020).Google Scholar
Zagor, Matthew, ‘Martyrdom, Antinomianism, and the Prioritising of Christians–Towards a Political Theology of Refugee Resettlement’, Refugee Survey Quarterly, 38 (2019), 387–424.Google Scholar
Zaman, Habiba, ‘Racialization and Marginalization of Immigrants: A New Wave of Xenophobia in Canada’, Labour, 66 (2010), 163–182.Google Scholar
Zapata-Barrero, Ricard, Caponio, Tiziana and Scholten, Peter, ‘Theorizing the “Local Turn” in a Multi-Level Governance Framework of Analysis: A Case Study in Immigrant Policies’, International Review of Administrative Sciences, 83 (2017), 241–246.Google Scholar
Zedner, Lucia, ‘Securing Liberty in the Face of Terror: Reflections from Criminal Justice’, Journal of Law and Society, 32 (2005), 507–533.Google Scholar
Zolberg, Aristide, A Nation by Design: Immigration Policy in the Fashioning of America (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2006).Google Scholar

Secondary Sources

‘Assam NRC Final List: Students’ Body AASU to Challenge NRC Findings in SC’, The Hindu, 31 August 2019, available at www.thehindu.com/news/national/other-states/students-body-aasu-to-challenge-nrc-findings-in-sc/article29308071.ece (accessed 2 August 2021).Google Scholar
‘Beschämend: Berlins Innensenator kritisiert Seehofer’, Berlin.de, 11 September 2020, available at www.berlin.de/aktuelles/berlin/6290315-958092-beschaemend-berlins-innensenator-kritisi.html (accessed 2 September 2021).Google Scholar
‘Berlin klagt gegen Seehofer im Streit um Flüchtlingsaufnahme’, Berlin.de, 18 November 2020, available at www.berlin.de/aktuelles/berlin/6358855-958092-berlin-klagt-gegen-seehofer-im-streit-um.html (accessed 2 September 2021).Google Scholar
‘Breitenbach und Geisel: Keine Lösung im Abschiebestreit’, Süddeutsche Zeitung, 27 August 2019, available at www.sueddeutsche.de/politik/auslaender-berlin-breitenbach-und-geisel-keine-loesung-im-abschiebestreit-dpa.urn-newsml-dpa-com-20090101-190827-99-631724 (accessed 5 September 2021).Google Scholar
Aery, Anjana and Cheff, Rebecca, ‘Sanctuary City: Opportunities for Health Equity’, Toronto, Canada: Wellesley Institute, February 2018, available at www.wellesleyinstitute.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/Sanctuary-City-Opportunities-for-Health-Equity.pdf.Google Scholar
Amit, Roni, ‘Breaking the Law: Breaking the Bank: The Cost of Home Affairs Illegal Detention Practices’, Johannesburg: African Centre for Migration and Society, 30 September 2012, available at https://ssrn.com/abstract=3274018.Google Scholar
Amit, Roni, ‘Queue Here for Corruption: Measuring Irregularities in South Africa’s Asylum System’, Johannesburg: Lawyers for Human Rights and African Centre for Migration and Society, 30 July 2015, available at https://ssrn.com/abstract=3274014.Google Scholar
Arbeitsgruppe der EASY-Beauftragten, ‘Asyl: Ausnahmen von Verteilungsentscheidungen mit dem System EASY’, Anwaltsnachrichten Ausländer- und Asylrecht, 2013, available at https://dav-migrationsrecht.de/files/page/0_05980400_1401645320s.pdf (accessed 15 September 2021).Google Scholar
Armanyous, Marietta and Hudson, Graham, ‘Barriers vs. Bridges: Undocumented Immigrants, Access to Post-Secondary Education in Ontario’. RCIS Working Paper, No. 5, December 2019, available at www.ryerson.ca/content/dam/centre-for-immigration-and-settlement/RCIS/publications/workingpapers/2019_5_Armanyous_Marietta_Hudson_Graham_Barriers_vs_bridges_Undocumented_immigrants_access_to_post-secondary_education_in_Ontario.pdf.Google Scholar
Ayyub, Rana, ‘Bilkis’, Time Magazine, 22 September 2020, available at https://time.com/collection/100-most-influential-people-2020/5888255/bilkis/ (accessed 2 August 2021).Google Scholar
Baker, Robert H., ‘A Brief History of Sanctuary Cities’, Tropics of Meta, 2 February 2017, available at https://tropicsofmeta.com/2017/02/02/a-brief-history-of-sanctuary-cities/.Google Scholar
Bauböck, Rainer and Orgad, Liav, ‘Cities vs States: Should Urban Citizenship be Emancipated from Nationality?’, Working Paper, EUI RSCAS, Global Governance Programme 386, no 16, 2020, available at http://hdl.handle.net/1814/66369.Google Scholar
Bauböck, Rainer, ‘In Defence of Multilevel Citizenship – A Rejoinder’, in Rainer Bauböck and Liav Orgad (eds), Cities vs States: Should Urban Citizenship Be Emancipated from Nationality?, 76–86. Working Paper EUI RSCAS, Global Governance Programme-386, 2020, available at cadmus.eui.eu/handle/1814/66369.Google Scholar
Hanne, Beirens and Ahad, Aliyyah ‘Measuring Up? Using Monitoring and Evaluation to Make Good on the Promise of Refugee Sponsorship’, Migration Policy Institute Europe, June 2020, available at www.migrationpolicy.org/research/monitoring-evaluation-refugee-sponsorship.Google Scholar
Bhat, Mohsin Alam and Yadav, Aashish, ‘The NRC in Assam Doesn’t Just Violate Human Rights of Millions – It Also Breaks International Law’, Scroll.in, 7 January 2021, available at https://scroll.in/article/983130/the-nrc-in-assam-doesnt-just-violate-human-rights-it-also-breaks-international-law (accessed 2 August 2021).Google Scholar
Blitzer, Jonathan, ‘How Biden Came to Own Trump’s Policy at the Border’, The New Yorker, 6 October 2021, available at www.newyorker.com/news/daily-comment/how-biden-came-to-own-trumps-policy-at-the-border.Google Scholar
Block, Sheila, Grace-Edward, Galabuzi and Tranjan, Ricardo, ‘Canada’s Colour Coded Income Inequality’, Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, available at www.policyalternatives.ca/sites/default/files/uploads/publications/National%20Office/2019/12/Canada%27s%20Colour%20Coded%20Income%20Inequality.pdf.Google Scholar
Bornman, Jon, ‘How Lindela Became Bosasa’s meal ticket’, Mail and Guardian, 2019, available at https://mg.co.za/article/2019-12-11-00-how-lindela-became-bosasas-meal-ticket/ (accessed 15 October 2021).Google Scholar
Brock, Joe, ‘In South Africa, Immigration Feeds Corrupt Officials and Race Hate’, Reuters Investigates, 22 March 2017, available at www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/safrica-migrants-corruption/.Google Scholar
Bundesrat, Gesetzesantrag der Länder Berlin, Thüringen: Entwurf eines Gesetzes zur Änderung des § 23 Absatz 1 Aufenthaltsgesetz‘, Drucksache 482/19, 7 October 2019, available at https://dserver.bundestag.de/brd/2019/0482-19.pdf (accessed 22 September 2021).Google Scholar
Caldwell, Alicia A. and Radnofsky, Louise, ‘Why Trump Has Deported Fewer Immigrants Than Obama’, The Wall Street Journal, 3 August 2019, available at www.wsj.com/articles/why-trump-has-deported-fewer-immigrants-than-obama-11564824601.Google Scholar
Canada, ‘Securing an Open Society: Canada’s National Security Policy’, Ottawa: Queen’s Printer, 2004, available at https://publications.gc.ca/site/eng/9.665565/publication.html.Google Scholar
Canadian Press, ‘Abdoul Abdi relieved federal government won’t pursue deportation, lawyer says’, The Star, 17 July 2018, available at www.thestar.com/news/canada/2018/07/17/federal-government-wont-pursue-deportation-of-abdoul-abdi-goodale-says.html.Google Scholar
Sergio, Carrera and Cortinovis, Roberto, ‘The EU’s Role in Implementing the UN Global Compact on Refugees: Contained Mobility vs International Protection’, CEPS Paper in Liberty and Security in Europe, available at www.ceeol.com/search/book-detail?id=833753.Google Scholar
CBC, ‘School Official Blasts Deportation Tactics’, 2006, available at www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/school-official-blasts-deportation-tactics-1.622136.Google Scholar
Changoiwala, Puja, ‘India’s Muslims are Terrified of Being Deported’, Foreign Policy, 21 February 2020, available at https://foreignpolicy.com/2020/02/21/india-muslims-deported-terrified-citizenship-amendment-act-caa/.Google Scholar
Cheung, Jessica, ‘Black People and Other People of Color Make Up 83% of Reported COVID-19 Cases in Toronto’, CBC News, 30 July 2020, available at www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/toronto-covid-19-data-1.5669091.Google Scholar
Choudhury, Angshuman, ‘No, the Shameful Attack on Sikhs in Kabul Still Doesn’t Justify the CAA’, The Wire, 5 April 2020, available at https://thewire.in/south-asia/no-the-shameful-attack-on-sikhs-in-kabul-still-doesnt-justify-the-caa (accessed 2 August 2021).Google Scholar
Choudhury, Ratnadip, ‘“Want Peace, Not Migrants”: Thousands of Women Protest Citizenship Act Across Assam’, NDTV, 22 December 2019, available at www.ndtv.com/india-news/citizenship-amendment-act-protest-women-protest-citizenship-act-across-assam-say-want-peace-not-migr-2152470 (accessed 2 August 2021).Google Scholar
City of Toronto, ‘Toronto Police Service: Service Governance Pertaining to the Access to Police Services for Undocumented Torontonians’, City Council Resolution, Ref. no CD4.2, 2015, available at www.toronto.ca/legdocs/mmis/2015/cd/bgrd/backgroundfile-79357.pdf.Google Scholar
City of Toronto, ‘Access to City Services for Undocumented Torontonians: Progress of the Access T.O. Initiative’, City Council Resolution, Ref. no. CD 8.4, 2015, available at www.toronto.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/97ea-Access-to-City-Services-for-Undocumented-Torontonians-Progress-Report-2015-backgroundfile-85779.pdf.Google Scholar
City of Toronto, ‘Refugees, Refugee Claimants and Undocumented Torontonians – Recent Trends and Issues’, CD19.9 Report for Action. Social Development, Finance and Administration, 30 March 2017, available at www.toronto.ca/legdocs/mmis/2017/cd/bgrd/backgroundfile-102520.pdf.Google Scholar
City of Vancouver, Access to City Services Without Fear for Residents With Uncertain or No Immigration Status’, 2016, available at https://council.vancouver.ca/20160406/documents/pspc3.pdf.Google Scholar
Color of Poverty – Color of Change, ‘COP-COC Reconstruction and Reset Plan for Canada’, 8 September 2020, available at https://colourofpoverty.ca/2020/09/08/cop-coc-reconstruction-and-reset-plan-for-canada/.Google Scholar
Contenta, Sandro, Monsebraaten, Laurie and Rankin, Jim, ‘CAS Study Reveals Stark Racial Disparities for Blacks, Aboriginals’, The Star, 23 June 2016, available at www.thestar.com/news/canada/2016/06/23/cas-study-reveals-stark-racial-disparities-for-blacks-aboriginals.html.Google Scholar
Corruption Watch, ‘Asylum at a Price: How Corruption Impacts Those Seeking Legal Protection in South Africa’, 2016, available at www.corruptionwatch.org.za/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/Project-Lokisa-revised-Pg16-22Nov20161.pdf (last accessed 15 October 2021).Google Scholar
Cox, Daniel and Jones, Robert, ‘Still Live Near Your Hometown? If You’re White, You’re More Likely to Support Trump: PRRI/The Atlantic Survey’, Public Religion Research Institute, 10 June 2016, available at www.prri.org/research/prri-atlantic-oct-6-poll-politics-election-clinton-trump/.Google Scholar
Crisp, Jeff, ‘Briefing: Are Labour Mobility Schemes for Skilled Refugees a Good Idea?’, Free Movement 5 August 2021, available at www.freemovement.org.uk/briefing-is-labour-mobility-for-skilled-refugees-a-good-idea/ (accessed 13 August 2021).Google Scholar
Crisp, Jeff, ‘After the Forum: New Directions in Global Refugee Policy’, TRAFIG Consortium, 18 December 2019, available at https://trafig.eu/blog/after-the-forum-new-directions-in-global-refugee-policy (accessed 3 July 2020).Google Scholar
Crush, Jonathan. ‘Covert Operations: Clandestine Migration, Temporary Work and Immigration Policy in South Africa’, Southern African Policy Series, 1 (1997) Cape Town: Southern African Migration Programme, available at https://samponline.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/Acrobat1.pdf.Google Scholar
Crush, Jonathan and Ramchandaran, Sujata. ‘Migrant Entrepreneurship, Collective Violence and Xenophobia in South Africa’, Southern African Migration Policy Series, 67 (2014), available at https://scholars.wlu.ca/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1017&context=imrcGoogle Scholar
Debenedicits, Don, ‘California Can’t Enforce Sanctuary Law Against Charter Cities’, Courthouse News, 28 September 2018, available at www.courthousenews.com/california-cant-enforce-sanctuary-law-against-charter-cities/.Google Scholar
Deccan Herald News Service, ‘Harsh Mander’s Full Report to NHRC [National Human Rights Commission]’, Deccan Herald, 13 October 2018, available at www.deccanherald.com/national/top-national-stories/harsh-manders-full-report-nhrc-678127.html (accessed 2 August 2021).Google Scholar
Department of Justice and Equality, ‘Community Sponsorship Ireland: Initial Policy Framework’, Republic of Ireland Department of Justice and Equality, 2019, available at http://integration.ie/en/ISEC/Community%20Sponsorship%20Policy%20Framework%20WEB.pdf/Files/Community%20Sponsorship%20Policy%20Framework%20WEB.pdf.Google Scholar
Department of Home Affairs, ‘Annual Report 2018-19’, South Africa Department of Home Affairs, available at https://static.pmg.org.za/1/DHA_Annual_Report_201819_Text.pdf.Google Scholar
Department of Home Affairs, ‘White Paper on Home Affairs’, South Africa Department of Home Affairs, August 2019, available at www.dha.gov.za/files/dhawhitepaper.pdf (last accessed 15 October 2021).Google Scholar
Department of Home Affairs, ‘White Paper on International Migration for South Africa’, South Africa Department of Home Affairs, July 2017, available at www.dha.gov.za/WhitePaperonInternationalMigration-20170602.pdf.Google Scholar
Duken, Carlotta and Rasche, Lukas, ‘Towards a European Model for Community Sponsorship’, Jacques Delors Centre, 2021, available at https://opus4.kobv.de/opus4-hsog/frontdoor/deliver/index/docId/3802/file/210331_Duken_Rasche_Community_sponsors.pdf.Google Scholar
Dutta, Prabhash K., ‘Assam NRC: Why BJP is Upset and Protesting Over its Own Agenda’, India Today, 3 September 2019, available at www.indiatoday.in/news-analysis/story/assam-nrc-why-bjp-is-upset-and-protesting-over-its-own-agenda-1594560-2019-09-02 (accessed 2 August 2021).Google Scholar
Edgecliffe-Johnson, Andrew, ‘Why Cities and National Governments Clash Over Migration’, Financial Times, 5 June 2019, available at www.ft.com/content/319ec1f6-5d25-11e9-840c-530737425559.Google Scholar
European Commission, ‘Study on the Feasibility and Added Value of Sponsorship Schemes as a Possible Pathway to Safe Channels for Admission to the EU, Including Resettlement’, 4 October 2018, available at https://op.europa.eu/en/publication-detail/-/publication/1dbb0873-d349-11e8-9424-01aa75ed71a1.Google Scholar
European Resettlement Network, ‘Integration Phase’, available at www.resettlement.eu/journey/integration-phase (accessed 10 August 2021).Google Scholar
European Resettlement Network, ‘Private Sponsorship Feasibility Study – Towards a Private Sponsorship Model in France’, available at https://resettlement.eu/resource/private-sponsorship-feasibility-study-towards-private-sponsorship-model-france.Google Scholar
Felix, Jason, ‘The Enemy is not Foreigners, but Govt’s Failure to Realise We Need Borders’, News24, 19 October 2021, available at www.news24.com/news24/southafrica/news/the-enemy-is-not-foreigners-but-govts-failure-to-realise-we-need-borders-actionsa-20211019 (accessed 3 November 2021).Google Scholar
Fernández, Jonan and Pías, Esther, ‘Community-Based Refugee Sponsorship in Spain-Basque Country’, UNHCR, 21 November 2019, available at https://globalcompactrefugees.org/article/community-based-refugee-sponsorship-spain-basque-country (accessed 12 August 2021).Google Scholar
Field, Jessica, et al., ‘Bureaucratic Failings in the National Register of Citizens Process Have Worsened Life for the Vulnerable in Assam’, Jindal Global University Research Publications, April 2019, available at www.daji.org.in/images/NRC-Brief-final.pdf (accessed 2 August 2021).Google Scholar
Fiedler, Maria and Hackenbruch, Felix, ‘So viele Flüchtlinge leben in den Bezirken’, Der Tagesspiegel, 16 December 2016, available at www.tagesspiegel.de/berlin/asylsuchende-in-berlin-so-viele-fluechtlinge-leben-in-den-bezirken/14986694.html (accessed 5 October 2021).Google Scholar
Flüchtlingsrat Berlin, ‘Berlin braucht eine menschenwürdige Flüchtlingspolitik’, September 2021, available at www.fluechtlingsrat-berlin.de/forderungen_2021 (accessed 23 September 2021).Google Scholar
Flüchtlingsrat NRW, ‘Thüringer Landesaufnahmeprogramm für Afghanistan gescheitert’, 9 September 2021, available at www.frnrw.de/themen-a-z/aufnahme-von-fluechtlingen/bundes-und-landesaufnahmeprogramme/thueringer-landesaufnahemprogramm-fuer-afghanistan.html (accessed 27 October 2021).Google Scholar
Gallant, Jacques, ‘Lawsuit Accuses Ontario Government of Leaving Foreign-Born Crown Wards in the Lurch’, The Star, 9 March 2018, available at www.thestar.com/news/gta/2018/03/09/lawsuit-accuses-ontario-government-of-leaving-foreign-born-crown-wards-in-the-lurch.html.Google Scholar
Gatehouse, Jonathon, ‘How Undocumented Migrant Workers are Slipping through Ontario’s COVID-19 net’, 2 July 2020, available at www.cbc.ca/news/canada/leamington-migrant-workers-1.5633032.Google Scholar
Gettleman, Jeffery and Kumar, Hari, ‘India Plans Big Detention Camps for Migrants. Muslims are Afraid’, New York Times, 17 August 2019, available at www.nytimes.com/2019/08/17/world/asia/india-muslims-narendra-modi.html (accessed 2 August 2021).Google Scholar
Giesberg, Judith, ‘Jeff Sessions is Wrong. Sanctuary-City Advocates aren’t Like Secessionists. They’re Like Abolitionists’, Washington Post, 6 March 2018, available at www.washingtonpost.com/news/made-by-history/wp/2018/03/06/jeff-sessions-is-wrong-sanctuary-city-advocates-arent-like-secessionists-theyre-like-abolitionists/.Google Scholar
Gilili, Chris, ‘Home Affairs Vows to Speed up Border Management Authority’, Mail and Guardian, 12 May 2021, available at https://mg.co.za/news/2021-05-12-home-affairs-vows-to-speed-up-border-management-authority/ (accessed 28 October 2021).Google Scholar
Global Refugee Sponsorship Initiative, ‘Co-Designing Sponsorship Programs: A Step-By-Step Workbook for Policymakers and Community Leaders’, available at https://refugeesponsorship.org/_uploads/603152976a5bb.pdf.Google Scholar
Security, Global, ‘Mozambique Border Fence’, Alexandria, Virginia: Global Security.org, available at www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/rsa/fence-mozambique.htm (accessed 15 October 2021).Google Scholar
Gluns, Danielle, ‘Refugee Integration Policy and Public Administration in Berlin’, LoGoSO Research Papers No. 6, available at https://refubium.fu-berlin.de/handle/fub188/22193 (accessed 1 September 2021).Google Scholar
Government of Canada, ‘Canada Emergency Response Benefits (CERB)’, available at www.canada.ca/en/services/benefits/ei/cerb-application.html.Google Scholar
Government of Canada, ‘Health-Care Workers Permanent Residence Pathway: About the Public Policies’, 2020, available at www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/refugees/healthcare-workers-permanent-residence.html.Google Scholar
Government of Canada, ‘By the Numbers – 40 Years of Canada’s Private Sponsorship of Refugees Program’, July 2020, available at www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/news/2019/04/by-the-numbers--40-years-of-canadas-private-sponsorship-of-refugees-program.html (accessed 13 August 2021).Google Scholar
Grad, Shelby and Tchekmedyian, Alene, ‘Trump’s Immigration War with California Has Reached a Fever Pitch’, Los Angeles Times, 7 March 2018, available at www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-trump-california-immigration-20180307-story.html.Google Scholar
Grandi, Filippo, ‘Statement by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees on Colombia’s New Protection Measure for Venezuelans’, 2021, available at www.unhcr.org/news/press/2021/2/602246c84/statement-un-high-commissioner-refugees-colombias-new-temporary-protection.html.Google Scholar
Guadagno, Lorenzo, ‘Migrants and the COVID-19 Pandemic: An Initial Analysis’, Geneva: International Organization for Migration, 2020, available at https://publications.iom.int/system/files/pdf/mrs-60.pdf.Google Scholar
Guttman, Astrid, et al., ‘COVID-19 I Immigrants, Refugees and Other Newcomers in Ontario: Characteristics of Those Tested and Those Confirmed Positive, as of June 13, 2020’, ICES, September 2020, available at www.ices.on.ca/Publications/Atlases-and-Reports/2020/COVID-19-in-Immigrants-Refugees-and-Other-Newcomers-in-Ontario.Google Scholar
Handmaker, Jeff and Singh, Karam, ‘Crossing Borders: A comparison of US and South African Border Control Policies’, RULA Working Paper, 2002, University of the Witwatersrand, available at https://repub.eur.nl/pub/21674/_rula-bordercontrol.pdf.Google Scholar
Heitman, Helmoed, ‘SANDF Personnel Strength’, DefenceWeb, 23 April 2019, available at www.defenceweb.co.za/featured/sandf-personnel-strength/ (accessed 15 October 2021).Google Scholar
Horowitz, Jason, ‘Italy’s Crackdown on Migrants Meets a Grass-Roots Resistance’, The New York Times, 1 February 2019, available at www.nytimes.com/2019/02/01/world/europe/italy-mayors-migrants-salvini-security-decree.html.Google Scholar
Hudson, Graham, Atak, Idil, Manocchi, Michele and Hannan, Charity-Ann, ‘(No) Access T.O.: A Pilot Study on Sanctuary City Policy in Toronto, Canada’, Ryerson Centre for Immigration and Settlement, Working Paper No. 2017/1, available at www.ryerson.ca/content/dam/centre-for-immigration-and settlement/RCIS/publications/workingpapers/2017_1_ Hudson_Graham_Atak_Idil_Manocchi_Michele_Hannan_Charity_Ann_(No)_Access_T.O._A_Pilot_Study_on_Sanctuary_City_Policy_in_Toronto_Canada.pdfGoogle Scholar
Hueck, Petra, ‘Community Based Sponsorship Programmes in Europe: What Next?’, European Insights, August 2019, available at www.vuesdeurope.eu/en/opinion/community-based-sponsorship-programmes-in-europe-what-next/ (accessed 1 October 2019).Google Scholar
Human Rights Watch, ‘Crossing the Line’, April 1995, available at www.hrw.org/legacy/reports/1995/Us1.htm.Google Scholar
Humanitarian Corridors, ‘The Humanitarian Corridors’, available at www.humanitariancorridor.org/en/homepage/ (accessed 13 August 2021).Google Scholar
Immigration Legal Committee, Police Services: Safe Access for All. Legal Arguments for a Complete “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy’, A report by the Immigration Legal Committee, Presented to the Toronto Police Services Board, May 2008, available at http://ottwatch.ca/meetings/file/433639.Google Scholar
Indo-Asian News Service, ‘Unhappy BJP to Move Supreme Court Seeking Reverification of NRC Data’, India Today, 2 September 2019, available at www.indiatoday.in/india/story/unhappy-bjp-move-supreme-court-seeking-reverifcation-nrc-data-1594453-2019-09-02 (accessed 2 August 2021).Google Scholar
Instrategies, ‘Auzolana II Pilot Community Sponsorship Experience: Evaluation Report’, Basque Government, 1 March 2021, available at http://resettlement.eu/sites/icmc/files/Basque%20Country-%20Pilot%20Community%20Sponsorship%20Evaluation%20_Full%20report_EN.pdf.Google Scholar
Joint Forum Against NRC, ‘Exclusion of 19 Lakh [1.9 million] People Shows the Irrationality of #NRC Exercise’, Kafila, 31 August 2019, available at https://kafila.online/2019/08/31/exclusion-of-19-lakh-people-shows-the-irrationality-of-nrc-exercise-joint-forum-against-nrc/ (accessed 2 August 2021).Google Scholar
Kamasaki, Charles, ‘US Immigration Policy: A Classic, Unappreciated Example of Structural Racism’, Brookings, 26 March 2021, available at www.brookings.edu/blog/how-we-rise/2021/03/26/us-immigration-policy-a-classic-unappreciated-example-of-structural-racism/.Google Scholar
Kapila, Siddharth, ‘These are Some of the Refugees that India’s CAA is Turning its Back on’, The Wire, 22 December 2019, available at https://thewire.in/rights/caa-india-refugees (accessed 2 August 2021).Google Scholar
Kaur, Harmeet, ‘US Immigration Policies Toward Haitians Have Long Been Racist, Advocates Say’, CNN, 3 October 2021, available at www.cnn.com/2021/10/03/us/haitian-migrants-us-immigration-policy-racism-cec/index.html.Google Scholar
Katz, Bruce, Noring, Luise and Garrelts, Nantke, ‘Cities and Refugees—The German Experience’, Brookings Institute, September 2016, available at www.brookings.edu/research/cities-and-refugees-the-german-experience (accessed 15 September 2021).Google Scholar
Kennedy, Rachael, ‘Belgian Councillor Arrested on Suspicion of Selling Humanitarian Visas’, Euronews, 17 January 2020, available at www.euronews.com/2019/01/17/belgian-councillor-arrested-on-suspicion-of-selling-humanitarian-visas (accessed 1 July 2020).Google Scholar
Kesavan, Mukul, ‘An Evil Hour’, Telegraph, 14 December 2019, available at www.telegraphindia.com/opinion/an-evil-hour/cid/1726976 (accessed 2 August 2021).Google Scholar
Kesavan, Mukul, ‘Border of Unreason: CAA’, Telegraph, 7 March 2020, available at www.telegraphindia.com/opinion/border-of-unreason-caa/cid/1751891 (accessed 2 August 2021).Google Scholar
Keß, Felix and Schwiertz, Helge, ‘Safe Harbours: The Cities Defying the EU to Welcome Migrants’, Open Democracy, 3 April 2019, available at www.opendemocracy.net/en/safe-harbours-cities-defying-eu-welcome-migrants/ (accessed 3 October 2021).Google Scholar
Keung, Nicholas, ‘At the UN’s Request, Canada Suspends Deportation of Former Child Refugee to Somalia’, The Star, 23 August 2019, available at www.thestar.com/news/gta/2019/08/23/at-the-uns-request-canada-suspends-deportation-of-former-child-refugee-to-somalia.html.Google Scholar
Kumar, Ishita, ‘Turning Their Back on the Rohingyas: A Border Control Regime Blind to the Collapse of Burmese “Democracy”’, 22 April 2021 available at www.law.ox.ac.uk/research-subject-groups/centre-criminology/centreborder-criminologies/blog/2021/04/turning-their.Google Scholar
Landau, Loren, Ramjathan-Keogh, Kajaal and Singh, Gayatri, ‘Xenophobia in South Africa and Problems Related to it’, Forced Migration Working Paper Series No. 13, 2005. Johannesburg: University of the Witwatersrand, available at www.academia.edu/2447383/Xenophobia_in_South_Africa_and_problems_related_to_it.Google Scholar
Lasch, Christopher, ‘Resistance to the Fugitive Slave Act Gives Sanctuary Cities a Model for Resistance’, History News Network, 21 February 2017, available at https://historynewsnetwork.org/article/165256.Google Scholar
Lavoie, Joanna, ‘Toronto Opens Four Warming Centres for People Experiencing Homelessness’, Toronto Star, December 15 2020, available at www.thestar.com/local-toronto-scarborough/news/2020/12/15/toronto-opens-four-warming-centres-for-people-experiencing-homelessness.html.Google Scholar
Lawyers for Human Rights, ‘Open Letter to President Ramaphosa on World Refugee Day’, Mail and Guardian, 20 June 2018, available at Lawyers for Human Rights, ‘Open Letter to President Ramaphosa on World Refugee Day’, Mail and Guardian, 20 June 2018.Google Scholar
Lawyers for Human Rights, ‘Monitoring Policy, Litigious and Legislative Shifts in Immigration Detention in South Africa’, 9 June 2020, available at www.lhr.org.za/lhr-resources/monitoring-policy-litigious-and-legislative-shifts-in-migration-and-detention-in-south-africa/.Google Scholar
Lee, Andree, ‘Montreal Police Calls to CBSA Suggest it is Far From a Real Sanctuary City the Very Principle of the Sanctuary City is Non-Collaboration’, Huffington Post, 2018, available at www.huffingtonpost.ca/entry/montreal-sanctuary-city-police-cbsa-migrants_ca_5cd5431ae4b07bc7297656af.Google Scholar
Lehnert, Matthias, ‘Rechtliche Spielräume der Bundesländer bei der Aufnahme von Geflüchteten aus griechischen Lagern’, Flüchtlingsrat Berlin, 11 September 2020, available at https://fluechtlingsrat-berlin.de/wp-content/uploads/diskussionspapieraufnahmegriechenland.pdf (accessed 15 September 2021).Google Scholar
Leon, Scott and Iveniuk, James, ‘Forced Out: Evictions, Race, and Poverty in Toronto’, August 2020, available at www.wellesleyinstitute.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Forced-Out-Evictions-Race-and-Poverty-in-Toronto-.pdf.Google Scholar
LeVine, Marianne, ‘“Dems” Last-Ditch Immigration Gambit Loses Steam’, Politico, 27 October 2021, available at www.politico.com/news/2021/10/27/democrats-immigration-gambit-loses-steam-517352.Google Scholar
Lind, Dara, ‘Sanctuary Cities, Explained’, Vox, 8 March 2018, available at www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2018/3/8/17091984/sanctuary-cities-city-state-illegal-immigration-sessions.Google Scholar
Mai, Marina, 2020, ‘Berlin Will grundsätzliche Klärung’, Tageszeitung, 18 November 2020, available at https://taz.de/Senat-will-Innenminister-verklagen/!5725534/ (accessed 15 September 2021).Google Scholar
Mander, Harsh, ‘If Parliament Passes the Citizenship Amendment Bill, India’s Constitutional Structure, As We Know it, Will Lose its Soul’, Indian Express, 11 December 2019, available at https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/this-land-is-mine-citizenship-amendment-bill-6160570/ (accessed 2 August 2021).Google Scholar
Mandhani, Apoorva. ‘CAA Case Comes up Just Thrice in 1 Year in SC Despite 140 Pleas, Including from UN Body’, The Print, 6 January 2021, available at https://theprint.in/judiciary/caa-case-comes-up-just-thrice-in-1-year-in-sc-despite-140-pleas-including-from-un-body/579837/ (accessed 2 August 2021).Google Scholar
Mathur, Nayanika, ‘The NRC is a Bureaucratic Paper-Monster That Will Devour and Divide India’, Scroll.in, 14 January 2020, available at https://scroll.in/article/948969/the-nrc-is-a-bureaucratic-paper-monster-that-will-devour-and-divide-india (accessed 2 August 2021).Google Scholar
Maunganidze, Otilia and Mboyizo, Aimee-Noel, ‘South Africa’s Border Management Authority Dream Could be a Nightmare’, ISS Today, 2020, available at https://issafrica.org/iss-today/south-africas-border-management-authority-dream-could-be-a-nightmare (accessed 15 October 2021).Google Scholar
Manzanedo, Christina, ‘Community-Based Refugee Sponsorship in Spain: What are the Experiences?’, 2019, available at http://library. fes. de/pdf-files/bueros/budapest/15599. Pdf.Google Scholar
McMichael, Chris, ‘The Re-Militarisation of South Africa’s Borders’, available at www.opendemocracy.net/en/re-militarisation-of-south-africas-borders/ (accessed 15 October 2021).Google Scholar
Melissaris, Emmanuel, ‘On Solidarity’, London School of Economics and Political Science, Law Society and Economy Working Papers, October 2017, available at http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/87554/.Google Scholar
Migrant Rights Network, ‘August 23 Day of Action for Status for All in 11 Cities’, available at https://migrantrights.ca/august23/Google Scholar
Moffette, David and Kardner, Karl, ‘Often Asking, Always Telling: The Toronto Police Service and the Sanctuary City Policy, Union of Ontario and No One Is Illegal-Toronto, 2015, available at http://rabble.ca/sites/rabble/files/often_asking_always_telling_-_kedits_dec_1.pdf.Google Scholar
Mowat, David and Rafi, Saäd, ‘COVID-19: Impacts and Opportunities’, City of Toronto, 15 September 2020, available at www.toronto.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/9133-torr-covid19-impacts-opportunities-2020.pdf.Google Scholar
Mthembu-Salter, Gregory, Amit, Roni, Gould, Chandre and Landau, Loren. 2014, ‘Counting the Cost of Securitising South Africa’s Immigration Regime’, Migrating out of Poverty Research Consortium Working Paper 20, September 2014, available at https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/266991612.pdf.Google Scholar
Munn, Nathan, ‘Here’s Who Stands to Gain from a Radical Policing Approach in Canada’, Vice, 28 August 2018, available at www.vice.com/en/article/7xqmny/heres-who-stands-to-gain-from-a-radical-policing-approach-in-canada.Google Scholar
Murdza, Katy and Ewing, Walter, ‘The Legacy of Racism within the U.S. Border Patrol’, Washington D.C.: American Immigration Council, 10 February 2021, available at www.americanimmigrationcouncil.org/research/legacy-racism-within-us-border-patrol.Google Scholar
Murray, Jon, ‘Denver’s New Stance on Immigration Could Draw Blowback from the Feds – But Other Cities Have Gone Further’, Denver PostI, 28 August 2017, available at www.denverpost.com/2017/08/28/denver-immigration-policy-donald-trump-federal-blowback/Google Scholar
Muscati, Samer and Macklin, Audrey, ‘Abdoul Abdi Case: A Test of Canada’s Commitment to Rules and Compassion’, The Globe and Mail, 16 January 2018, available at www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/abdoul-abdi-case-a-test-of-canadas-commitment-to-rules-and-compassion/article37616825/.Google Scholar
Nail, Thomas, Kamal, Faria and Hussan, Syed, ‘Building Sanctuary City: NOII-Toronto on Non Status Migrant Justice Organizing’, Upping the Anti, 11 (2010), available at http://uppingtheanti.org/journal/article/11-noii-sanctuary-city/.Google Scholar
Neustart im Team, ‘Neustart im Team (NeST)’, available at www.neustartimteam.de/#programm (accessed 13 August 2021).Google Scholar
New Zealand Government, ‘Community Organisation Refugee Sponsorship Category Pilot: Process Evaluation’, May 2019, available at https://reliefweb.int/report/new-zealand/community-organisation-refugee-sponsorship-category-pilot-process-evaluation-mayGoogle Scholar
New Zealand Immigration, ‘Community Organisation Refugee Sponsorship Category Introduced’, 21 December 2017, available at www.immigration.govt.nz/about-us/media-centre/news-notifications/community-organisation-refugeesponsorship-category-introduced (accessed 1 July 2020).Google Scholar
Nicholson, Frances, ‘The Right to Family Life and Family Unity of Refugees and Others in Need of International Protection and the Family Definition Applied’, UNHCR, January 2018, available at www.unhcr.org/en-us/protection/globalconsult/5a8c40ba1/35-right-family-life-family-unity-refugees-others-need-international-protection.html.Google Scholar
No One is Illegal Toronto, ‘Often Asking, Always Telling: The Toronto Police Service and the Sanctuary City Policy’, November 2015, 1–48, available at https://rabble.ca/sites/rabble/files/often_asking_always_telling_-_kedits_dec_1.pdf.Google Scholar
Oatway, James and Skuy, Alon, ‘Documenting Violence Against Migrants in South Africa’, The Guardian, 21 June 2021, available at www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jun/21/documenting-violence-against-migrants-in-south-africa-a-photo-essay (last accessed 28 October 2021).Google Scholar
OCASI (Ontario Council of Agencies Serving Immigrants), ‘OCASI Recommendation to TORR (Toronto Office of Recovery and Rebuilding)’, 24 July 2020, available at https://ocasi.org/ocasi-recommendations-torr.Google Scholar
Office of the High Commissioner, United Nations Human Rights Council, ‘UN Experts: Risk of Statelessness and Instability in Assam, India’, 3 July 2019, available at www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=24781&LangID=E (accessed 2 August 2021).Google Scholar
Ontario Association of Children’s Aid Societies, ‘Race Matters in the Child Welfare System’, 2015, available at www.oacas.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/Race-Matters-African-Canadians-Project-August-2015.pdf.Google Scholar
Ontario Human Rights Commission, ‘Under Suspicion: Research and Consultation Report on Racial Profiling in Ontario’, 2017, available at www.ohrc.on.ca/en/under-suspicion-research-and-consultation-report-racial-profiling-ontario.Google Scholar
Ontario Human Rights Commission, ‘Interrupted Childhoods: Over-Representation of Indigenous and Black Children in Ontario Child Welfare’, Toronto: Ontario Human Rights Commission, 2018, available at www.ohrc.on.ca/en/interrupted-childhoods.Google Scholar
Oomen, Barbara, Baumgärtel, Moritz and Durmus, Elif, ‘Transnational City Networks and Migration Policy’, Cities of Refuge Research – Policy Brief, 2018, available at www.citiesofrefuge.eu/sites/default/files/2018-12/Policy%20brief%20Dec%202018.pdf.Google Scholar
Parliamentary Monitoring Group, ‘Border Control: Briefing by Chief of Joint Operations, South African National Defence Force (SANDF)’, Cape Town: PMG, 16 February 2010, available at https://pmg.org.za/committee-meeting/11206/ (last accessed 15 October 2021).Google Scholar
Peyper, Liesl, ‘Tempers Flare as Bribes Block Border Crossing between SA and Zimbabwe’, City Press, 2020, available at www.news24.com/citypress/news/tempers-flare-as-bribes-block-border-crossing-resulting-in-long-queues-and-truckers-waiting-up-to-four-days-20200801 (last accessed 15 October 2021).Google Scholar
Phillimore, Jenny and Reyes, Marisol, ‘Community Sponsorship in the UK: From Application to Integration: Formative Evaluation’, Institute for Research into Superdiversity, University of Birmingham, July 2019, available at www.birmingham.ac.uk/Documents/college-social-sciences/social-policy/Misc/CS-UK-IRiS-June-2019.pdf.Google Scholar
Radjenovic, Anja, ‘Community Sponsorship Schemes Under the New Pact on Migration and Asylum: Take-up by EU Regions and Cities’, European Parliamentary Research Service June 2021, available at www.europarl.europa.eu/thinktank/en/document.html?reference=EPRS_BRI(2021)690675.Google Scholar
Resettlement.de, ‘Current Admissions’, https://resettlement.de/en/current-admissions/ (accessed 8 April 2020).Google Scholar
Rove, Karl, ‘Trump and the 21st-Century Nullifiers—What ‘Sanctuary Cities’ Have in Common with 1832 South Carolina’, Wall Street Journal, 8 February 2017, available at www.wsj.com/articles/trump-and-the-21st-century-nullifiers-1486597277Google Scholar
SANews, ‘SANDF Resumes Border Patrols’, South African Government News Agency, 29 April 2010, available at www.sanews.gov.za/south-africa/sandf-resumes-border-patrols (accessed 15 October 2021).Google Scholar
Seebrücke, ‘267 Sichere Häfen’, n.d., available at https://seebruecke.org/sichere-haefen/haefen (accessed 21 October 2021).Google Scholar
Seebrücke, ‘Forderungen’, n.d., available at https://seebruecke.org/sichere-haefen/forderungen (accessed 3 October 2021).Google Scholar
Senatskanzlei, ‘Michael Müller eröffnete Kongress ‚Städte zu sicheren Häfen‘ der Initiative Seebrücke’, 14 June 2019, available at www.berlin.de/rbmskzl/aktuelles/pressemitteilungen/2019/pressemitteilung.819666.php (accessed 3 September 2021).Google Scholar
Senatskanzlei, ‘Stadtstaaten bleiben sichere Häfen für Flüchtlinge’, 26 September 2019, available at www.berlin.de/rbmskzl/aktuelles/pressemitteilungen/2018/pressemitteilung.743348.php (accessed 2 September 2021).Google Scholar
Shabad, Rebecca, ‘Jeff Sessions Says Administration Won’t Allow Extremist Groups to “Obtain Credibility”’, CBS News, 14 August 2017, available at www.cbsnews.com/news/jeff-sessions-says-administration-wont-allow-extremist-groups-to-obtain-credibility/.Google Scholar
Smith, Alex, ‘South Africa Faces Human Rights Backlash Over Crime Crackdown’, Independent, 17 September 2011, available at www.independent.co.uk/news/world/africa/south-africa-faces-human-rights-backlash-over-crime-crackdown-5371679.html.Google Scholar
Smith, Craig Damian, ‘Report: Changing U.S. Policy and Safe-Third Country “Loophole” Drive Irregular Migration to Canada’, Migration Policy Institute, 2019,www.migrationpolicy.org/article/us-policy-safe-third-country-loophole-drive-irregular-migration-canada.Google Scholar
Sniderman, Andrew Stobo, ‘Jama Warsame is a Citizen of Nowhere’, Maclean’s, 10 December 2013, available at www.macleans.ca/news/canada/jame-warsame-is-a-citizen-of-nowhere/.Google Scholar
Solano, Giacomo and Savazzi, Valentina, ‘Private Sponsorship Programmes and Humanitarian Visas: A Viable Policy Framework for Integration?’, ReSOMA Discussion Policy Briefs, June 2019, available at www.migpolgroup.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Discussion-Policy-Briefs-PSPs_0.pdf.Google Scholar
Solidarity Cities, ‘About’, available at https://solidaritycities.eu/about (accessed 11 August 2021).Google Scholar
Southern African Development Community, ‘Protocol on the Facilitation of Free Movement of Persons’, Gabarone: Southern African Development Community, 2005, available at www.sadc.int/documents-publications/show/Protocol_on_Facilitation_of_Movement_of_Persons2005.pdf (last accessed 15 October 2021).Google Scholar
Köln, Stadt, ‘Bündnis ‘Städte Sicherer Häfen’’, n.d., available at www.stadt-koeln.de/leben-in-koeln/soziales/fluechtlinge/71459/index.html (accessed 21 October 2021).Google Scholar
Potsdam, Stadt, ‘Städte Sicherer Häfen: Die Mitglieder’, available at www.potsdam.de/die-mitglieder (accessed 4 November 2021).Google Scholar
Starzmann, Paul, ‘SPD-Bundestagsfraktion unterstützt Berliner Klage gegen Seehofer’, Der Tagesspiegel, 2 March 2021, available at www.tagesspiegel.de/politik/streit-um-aufnahme-von-fluechtlingen-spd-bundestagsfraktion-unterstuetzt-berliner-klage-gegen-seehofer/26967518.html (accessed 2 September 2021).Google Scholar
Statistics Canada, ‘Immigration and Ethnocultural Diversity: Key Results from the 2016 Census’, The Daily, 25 October 2017, available at www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/en/daily-quotidien/171025/dq171025b-eng.pdf.Google Scholar
Statistics South Africa, ‘Census 2011: Migration Dynamics in South Africa’, Pretoria: South African Government, 2015, available at www.statssa.gov.za/publications/Report-03-01-79/Report-03-01-792011.pdfGoogle Scholar
Statistics South Africa, ‘Documented Immigrants in South Africa, 2014’, 2015, available at www.statssa.gov.za/publications/P03514/P035142014.pdfGoogle Scholar
Sullivan, Sean and Sotomayor, Marianna, ‘Democrats Quietly Scramble to Include Immigration Provision in Social Spending Bill’, Washington Post, 26 October 2021, available at www.washingtonpost.com/politics/democrats-quietly-scramble-to-include-immigration-provision-in-social-spending-bill/2021/10/26/8e1a6de4-35eb-11ec-91dc-551d44733e2d_story.html.Google Scholar
Tan, Nikolas Feith, ‘The Feasibility of Community-Based Sponsorship of Refugees in Denmark’, Amnesty International Denmark, Autumn 2019, available at https://amnesty.dk/wp-content/uploads/media/6130/feasibility-study-community-based-sponsorships.pdf.Google Scholar
Tan, Nikolas Feith, ‘A Study on the Potential for Introducing a Community Sponsorship Programme for Refugees in Sweden’, UNHCR, February 2020, available at www.unhcr.org/neu/wp-content/uploads/sites/15/2020/12/UNHCR-Study-on-Community-Sponsorship-Program-in-Sweden.pdf.Google Scholar
Tan, Nikolas Feith and Vedsted-Hansen, Jens, ‘Inventory and Typology of EU Arrangements with Third Countries: Instruments and Actors’, ASILE Project, March 2021, available at www.asileproject.eu/inventory-and-typology-of-eu-arrangements-with-third-countries.Google Scholar
The Polis Project, ‘Manufacturing Evidence: How the Police is Framing and Arresting Constitutional Rights Defenders in India’, The Polis Project, 13 August 2020, available at https://thepolisproject.com/manufacturing-evidence-how-the-police-framed-and-arrested-constitutional-right-defenders-in-india/#.YQdQnhNKjzd (accessed 2 August 2021).Google Scholar
The White House, ‘Statement on Sanctuary Cities Ruling’, 25 April 2017, available at www.whitehouse.gov/briefings-statements/statement-sanctuary-cities-ruling/.Google Scholar
Töller, Annette E. and Reiter, Renate, ‘Federal Diversity of Asylum Policies in Germany: What Can We Learn From “Immigration Federalism”?’, International Conference on Public Policy, Montréal, June 2019, available at www.ippapublicpolicy.org/file/paper/5cfeb1a1779c8.pdf.Google Scholar
Toronto City Clerk’s Office, ‘Routine Disclosure’, 2015, available at www.toronto.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/9784-CCO-disclosure.pdf.Google Scholar
Toronto District School Board, ‘Students Without Legal Status’, Policy P. 061 SCH, 2007, available at http://ppf.tdsb.on.ca/uploads/files/live/98/1555.pdf.Google Scholar
Toronto Police Services Board, ‘Minutes of the Toronto Police Services Board’, 2006, available at www.tpsb.ca/component/jdownloads/send/19-2006/300-06may18pmm.Google Scholar
Toronto Police Services Board, ‘Minutes of the Toronto Police Services Board’, 2008, available at www.tpsb.ca/component/jdownloads/send/21-2008/338-minutes-nov-20-public.Google Scholar
Toronto Police Services Board, ‘Minutes of the Toronto Police Services Board’, 2017, available at www.tpsb.ca/component/jdownloads/send/42-2017/557-march-23.Google Scholar
Toronto Police Services Board, ‘Minutes of the Toronto Police Services Board’, 2018, available at www.tpsb.ca/component/jdownloads/send/49-2018/603-december-18.Google Scholar
Trainor, Sean, ‘What the Fugitive Slave Act can Teach us About Sanctuary Cities’, Time, 7 February 2017, available at https://time.com/4659391/sanctuary-cities-fugitive-slave-act/.Google Scholar
Trump, Donald J., ‘Presidential Announcement Speech’, Time, 16 June 2015, available at https://time.com/3923128/donald-trump-announcement-speech/.Google Scholar
Tulloch, Michael H., ‘Report of the Independent Street Checks Review’, Queen’s Printer for Ontario, 2018, available at www.mcscs.jus.gov.on.ca/english/Policing/StreetChecks/ReportIndependentStreetChecksReview2018.htmlGoogle Scholar
Kati, Turtiainen and Sapir, Henna, ‘Feasibility Study on the Potential of Community-Based Sponsorship in Finland’, Publications of the Ministry of Economic Affairs and Employment Finland, 2021, available at https://julkaisut.valtioneuvosto.fi/bitstream/handle/10024/163177/TEM_2021_37.pdf?sequence=1.Google Scholar
UK Home Office, ‘New Global Resettlement Scheme for the Most Vulnerable Refugees Announced’, 17 June 2019, available at www.gov.uk/government/news/new-global-resettlement-scheme-for-the-most-vulnerable-refugees-announced (accessed 30 October 2019).Google Scholar
UN Refugee Agency, ‘UNHCR Applauds Canada’s Commitment to Grant Permanent Residency to Asylum-Seekers Working on COVID-19 Frontlines’, 2021, available at www.unhcr.org/news/press/2020/8/5f3708f44/unhcr-applauds-canadas-commitment-grant-permanent-residency-asylum-seekers.html.Google Scholar
UNHCR, ‘Complementary Pathways for Admission of Refugees to Third Countries: Key considerations’, April 2019, available at www.refworld.org/docid/5cebf3fc4.html.Google Scholar
UNHCR, ‘Figures at a Glance: 79.5 million Forcibly Displaced People Worldwide at the End of 2019, 18 June 2020, available at www.unhcr.org/figures-at-a-glance.html.Google Scholar
UNHCR, ‘Global Trends: Forced Displacement in 2019’, 18 June 2021, available at www.unhcr.org/flagship-reports/globaltrends/globaltrends2019/.Google Scholar
UNHCR, ‘Pledges & Contributions Dashboard’ available at https://globalcompactrefugees.org/channel/pledges-contributions (accessed 8 April 2020).Google Scholar
UNHCR, ‘Resettlement Data’, available at www.unhcr.org/resettlement-data.html (accessed 13 August 2021).Google Scholar
UNHCR, ‘The Three-Year (2019-2021) Strategy on Resettlement and Complementary Pathways’, June 2019, available at www.unhcr.org/en-us/protection/resettlement/5d15db254/three-year-strategy-resettlement-complementary-pathways.html.Google Scholar
U.S. Department of Justice, ‘Attorney General Sessions Delivers Remarks at the 26th Annual Law Enforcement Legislative Day Hosted by the California Peace Officers’ Association’, 7 March 2018, available at www.justice.gov/opa/speech/attorney-general-sessions-delivers-remarks-26th-annual-law-enforcement-legislative-day.Google Scholar
U.S. Department of Justice, ‘Attorney General Sessions Delivers Remarks to Federal Law Enforcement Authorities About Sanctuary Cities’, 19 September 2017, available at www.justice.gov/opa/speech/attorney-general-sessions-delivers-remarks-federal-law-enforcement-authorities-about.Google Scholar
Van Lennep, Tove, ‘Migration III: Interpreting the Data on South African Migration’, Helen Suzman Foundation Briefs, 18 September 2019, available at https://hsf.org.za/publications/hsf-briefs/interpreting-the-data-on-south-african-migration.Google Scholar
Van Lennep, Tove, ‘Lindela and South Africa’s Defective Deportation Regime’, Helen Suzman Foundation Briefs, 15 November 2019, available at https://hsf.org.za/publications/hsf-briefs/lindela-and-south-africa2019s-defective-deportation-regime.Google Scholar
Wherry, Aaron, ‘One Country, Two Pandemics: What COVID-19 Reveals about Inequality in Canada’, CBC News, 13 June 2020, available at www.cbc.ca/news/politics/pandemic-covid-coronavirus-cerb-unemployment-1.5610404.Google Scholar
Winston, Ali, ‘Palantir has Secretly Been Using New Orleans to Test its Predictive Policing Technology’, The Verge, 27 February 2018, available at www.theverge.com/2018/2/27/17054740/palantir-predictive-policing-tool-new-orleans-nopd.Google Scholar
Wolffhardt, Alexander, ‘Operationalising a Comprehensive Approach to Migrant Integration’, ReSOMA Discussion Policy Brief, September 2019, available at www.resoma.eu/sites/resoma/resoma/files/policy_brief/pdf/Discussion%20Policy%20Briefs%20-%20Comprehensive%20Integration_0.pdf.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Moritz Baumgärtel, Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands, Sara Miellet, Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands
  • Book: Theorizing Local Migration Law and Governance
  • Online publication: 15 September 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009047661.012
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Moritz Baumgärtel, Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands, Sara Miellet, Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands
  • Book: Theorizing Local Migration Law and Governance
  • Online publication: 15 September 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009047661.012
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Moritz Baumgärtel, Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands, Sara Miellet, Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands
  • Book: Theorizing Local Migration Law and Governance
  • Online publication: 15 September 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009047661.012
Available formats
×