[1] Anna Amelina

2017    After the Reflexive Turn in Migration Studies: Towards the Doing Migration Approach, Goethe Universitat, Frankfurt Am Main. https://www.fb03.uni-frankfurt.de/67001816/amelina_doing_migration.pdf

[2] Giuseppe Campesi

2015    “Hindering the deportation machine: An ethnography of power and resistance in immigration detention”, Punishment & Society 17(4): 427–453.

[3] Laura Cleton and Sébastien Chauvin

2020    “Performing freedom in the Dutch deportation regime: bureaucratic persuasion and the enforcement of ‘voluntary return’”, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 46(1): 297–313.

[4] Susan Bibler Coutin

2014    “Deportation Studies: Origins, Themes and Directions”, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 41(4): 671–681.

[5] Janine Dahinden, Carolin Fischer, and Joanna Menet

2020    “Knowledge production, reflexivity, and the use of categories in migration studies: tackling challenges in the field”, Ethnic and Racial Studies (April 2020): 1–20.

[6] Nicholas De Genova

2010    “The Deportation Regime: Sovereignty, Space, and the Freedom of Movement”, in N. De Genova and N. Peutz (Eds), The Deportation Regime: Sovereignty, Space, and the Freedom of Movement, Duke University Press Books, Durham, 33–65.

[7] Jason De León

2013    “The Efficacy and Impact of the Alien Transfer Exit Programme: Migrant Perspectives from Nogales, Sonora, Mexico”, International Migration 51(2): 10–23.

[8] Heike Drotbohm and Ines Hasselberg

2015    “Deportation, Anxiety, Justice: New Ethnographic Perspectives”, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 41(4): 51–562.

[9] Michel Foucault

1979    Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison, Vintage Books, New York.

[10] 2003        Society must be defended: lectures at the Collège de France, 1975-76. Picador, New York.

[11] Nicholas Gill

2009    “Governmental mobility: The power effects of the movement of detained asylum seekers around Britain’s detention estate”, Political Geography 28(3): 186–196.

[12] Barak Kalir

2017    “Between ‘Voluntary’ Return Programs and Soft Deportation: Sending Vulnerable Migrants in Spain Back ‘Home’”, in Z. Vathi and R. King (Eds), Return migration and psychosocial wellbeing: Discourses, policy-making and outcomes for migrants and their families, Routledge, Oxon: 56–71.

[13] Barak Kalir, Christin Achermann, and Damian Rosset (Eds)

2019    “Special Issue on Re‐searching Access: What do attempts at studying the management of migration tell us about the state?”, Social Anthropology 27, S1: 1–99.

[14] Daniel Kanstroom

2007    Deportation Nation: Outsiders in American History, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

[15] Deirdre Monoley

2013    “Muslims, Mormons and U.S. deportation and Exclusion Policies: The 1910 Polygamy Controversy and the Shaping of Contemporary Attitudes”, in B. Anderson, M.J. Gibney and E. Paoletti (Eds), The Social, Political and Historical Contours of Deportation, Springer, New York: 9–24.

[16] Mae M. Ngai

2004    Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of Modern America, Princeton University Press, Princeton.

[17] Nathalie Peutz and Nicholas De Genova

2010    “Introduction”, in N. De Genova and N. Peutz (Eds), The deportation regime: sovereignty, space, and the freedom of movement, Duke University Press Books, Durham: 1–32.

[18] Agnieszka Radziwinowiczówna

2019    “Suffering in Motion: Mobility Strategies of Mexicans Deported from the United States”, Apuntes: Revista de Ciencias Sociales 46(84): 59–82.

[19] 2020        “Violence That Builds Sovereignty: The Transnational Violence Continuum in Deportation from the United States”, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies (volume to be updated), published on-line first: psp.

[20] 2020        “Bare Life in an Immigration Jail: Technologies of Surveillance in US Pre-Deportation Detention. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, published on-line first: psp.

[21] Ariadna Ripoll Servent

2013    “The European Parliament and the Returns Directive: The End of Radical Contestation; The Start of Consensual Constraints”, in B. Anderson, M.J. Gibney and E. Paoletti (Eds), The Social, Political and Historical Contours of Deportation, Bridget Anderson, Matthew J. Gibney and Emanuela Paoletti (eds.). Springer, New York: 43–58.

[22] Liza Schuster and Nassim Majidi

2015    “Deportation Stigma and Re-migration”, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 41(4): 635–652.

[23] İbrahim Soysüren

2018    L’expulsion des étrangers en France, en Suisse et en Turquie. Pour une sociologie comparative de l’expulsion des étrangers, Éditions Alphil – Presses universitaires suisses, Neuchâtel.

[24] 2020        “European instruments for the deportation of foreigners and their uses by France and Switzerland: the application of the Dublin III Regulation and Eurodac”, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, published on-line first: 1–17.

[25] Juliet P. Stumpf

2006    “The Crimmigration Crisis: Immigrants, Crime, and Sovereign Power”, American University Law Review 56: 367–419.

[26] Rebecca Sutton and Darshan Vigneswaran

2011    “A Kafkaesque state: deportation and detention in South Africa”, Citizenship Studies 15(5): 627–642.

[27] Inés Valdez

2016    “Punishment, Race, and the Organization of U.S. Immigration Exclusion”, Political Research Quarterly 69(4): 640–654.

[28] William Walters

2002    “Deportation, Expulsion, and the International Police of Aliens”, Citizenship Studies 6(3): 265–292.

[29] 2017        “Aviation as deportation infrastructure: airports, planes, and expulsion”, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 44(16): 1–22.

[30] Sarah S. Willen

2007    “Toward a Critical Phenomenology of ‘Illegality’: State Power, Criminalization, and Abjectivity among Undocumented Migrant Workers in Tel Aviv, Israel”, International Migration 45(3): 8–38.