The business of child detention:charitable co-option, migrant advocacy and activist outrage

Tyler, Imogen and Gill, Nick and Conlon, Deirdre and Oeppen, Ceri (2014) The business of child detention:charitable co-option, migrant advocacy and activist outrage. Race and Class, 56 (1). pp. 3-21. ISSN 0306-3968

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Abstract

In 2010 the British government announced that the outrage of child detention for immigration purposes was to end. Simultaneously, however, it commissioned the opening of a new family detention centre called CEDARS. An acronym for Compassion, Empathy, Dignity, Approachability, Respect and Support, CEDARS is run under novel governance arrangements by the Home Office, private security company G4S and the children’s charity Barnardo’s. This article draws on focus group research with migrant advocacy groups, to examine the ways in which Barnardo’s’ role within CEDARS is variously imagined as mitigating and/or legitimating the use of detention as a border control mechanism. In particular we ask: what are the consequences of the co-option of charities and voluntary organisations within the immigration detention market? Has the neoliberal trend towards the ‘professionalisation of dissent’ diminished political opposition to immigration detention in Britain and the wider world?1 Has humanitarian activism on behalf of migrants (unintentionally) contributed to the exponential growth of for-profit migrant detention markets?

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Race and Class
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/3300/3314
Subjects:
?? BARNARDO’SBRITAIN CHILD DETENTION CEDARS COMMISSIONING CO-OPTION G4S IMMIGRATION DETENTION NEOLIBERALISM THIRD SECTORSOCIAL SCIENCES (MISCELLANEOUS)SOCIOLOGY AND POLITICAL SCIENCESOCIAL SCIENCES(ALL)CULTURAL STUDIESANTHROPOLOGY ??
ID Code:
71317
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
17 Oct 2014 15:28
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
19 Sep 2023 01:18