Refused asylum seekers living in the UK face hostility and legal restrictions
on the basis of immigration status that limit access to statutory support, employment,
and social goods. Working at a non-profit organization that offered an advice service
for refused asylum seekers, I observed how the experiences of refused asylum seekers
are constituted not simply by restrictions within immigration law, but rather by the
ways in which laws are perceived and implemented by a wide range of actors. I argue
that the legal consciousness of social workers hostile to refused asylum seekers plays
an important role in making policy through practice. I show that social workers prioritized
immigration enforcement over other legal obligations, thereby amplifying the
meaning of immigration status and deepening the marginalization of refused asylum
seekers.
Refused asylum seekers living in the UK face hostility and legal restrictions
on the basis of immigration status that limit access to statutory support, employment,
and social goods. Working at a non-profit organization that offered an advice service
for refused asylum seekers, I observed how the experiences of refused asylum seekers
are constituted not simply by restrictions within immigration law, but rather by the
ways in which laws are perceived and implemented by a wide range of actors. I argue
that the legal consciousness of social workers hostile to refused asylum seekers plays
an important role in making policy through practice. I show that social workers prioritized
immigration enforcement over other legal obligations, thereby amplifying the
meaning of immigration status and deepening the marginalization of refused asylum
seekers.
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