This paper focuses on labour within immigration detention in the United Kingdom, offering an original national case study as well as a new conceptual framework for analysing such practices. It does so through an innovative engagement with recent literatures on forced labour, unfreedom and hyper-precarity, particularly amongst irregular migrants. We advance two key arguments in this paper. First, that the available data on labour within immigration detention indicate that detainees should legally be considered employees and granted access to labour protections, including the national minimum wage. Second, that work in immigration detention is an example of state-sanctioned exploitative, coercive and unfree labour amongst a hyper-precarious group of the population. This case has implications for other country contexts where immigration detention is used.
CITATION STYLE
Bales, K., & Mayblin, L. (2018). Unfree labour in immigration detention: exploitation and coercion of a captive immigrant workforce. Economy and Society, 47(2), 191–213. https://doi.org/10.1080/03085147.2018.1484051
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