AltinRMincaC (2017) The ambivalent camp: mobility and excess in a quasi-carceral Italian asylum seeker hospitality centre. In JenniferTKimberlyP (eds) Carceral Mobilities: Interrogating Movement in Incarceration. Routledge, pp. 30–43.
2.
BurridgeAGillNKocherA, et al. (2017) Polymorphic borders. Territory, Politics, Governance5(3): 239–251.
3.
ChambersP (2015) The embrace of border security: maritime jurisdiction, national sovereignty, and the geopolitics of operation sovereign borders. Geopolitics20(2): 404–437.
4.
CoddingtonK (2017) Mobile carceral logics: aboriginal communities and asylum seekers facing enclosure in Australia’s’ Northern territory. In: JenniferTKimberlyP (eds) Carceral Mobilities: Interrogating Movement in Incarceration. Routledge, pp. 17–29.
5.
DawsonC (2014) Refugee hotels: the discourse of hospitality and the rise of immigration detention in Canada. University of Toronto Quarterly83(4): 826–846.
6.
DencikLAllanS (2017) In/visible conflicts: NGOs and the visual politics of humanitarian photography. Media, Culture and Society39(8): 1178–1193.
7.
DevetakR (2004) In fear of refugees: the politics of border protection in Australia. The International Journal of Human Rights8(1): 101–109.
8.
FallJJ (2020) Fenced in. Environment and Planning C38(5): 771–794.
9.
FregoneseS (2012) Beyond the ‘weak state’: hybrid sovereignties in Beirut. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space30(4): 655–674.
10.
JonesM (2016) Polymorphic political geographies. Territory, Politics, Governance4(1): 1–7.
11.
UbayasiriK (2021) Manus to Meanjin: a case study of refugee migration, polymorphic borders and Australian 'imperialism'. Pacific Journalism Review27(1/2): 269–282.