Immigration detention in Hong Kong: Advocacy in the dark

Key information

Date
Time
5:00 pm to 6:30 pm
Venue
SOAS Main Building
Room
RB01
Event type
Seminar

About this event

In this seminar, Professor Surabhi Chopra will discuss her paper examining civil society engagement with immigration detention in Hong Kong. 

Hong Kong administratively detains significant numbers of migrants each year as an immigration control measure. In the years before Covid-19 travel bans were imposed, the number of people who were put in immigration detention was similar to (and sometimes exceeded) the numbers of prisoners in the city.  

Professor Surabhi Chopra shows how the immigration regime in Hong Kong renders low-income migrants vulnerable to exclusion, detention, and removal from the city. She also shows that immigration detention is shrouded in a striking lack of transparency relative to other forms of state custody. 

Drawing upon semi-structured qualitative interviews with migrant-serving and refugee-serving civil society organisations, Chopra explores how differently positioned groups engage with detained migrants and the detention system, identifying whether and how these groups advocate for detention reform. Prof. Chopra then considers how recent legal and political shifts in Hong Kong have affected civil society engagement with immigration detention. 

While her paper is still a work in progress, she aims to identify civil society adaptations to an increasingly securitised political and legal environment. In so doing, she reflects upon how social mobilisation and policy advocacy for vulnerable groups evolves in an increasingly authoritarian political context.  

Registration

This event is free to attend, but registration is required. Seating is on a first-come, first-served basis. This event is taking place on campus and will not be recorded or live-streamed.

Organisers

SOAS China Institute and SOAS College of Law.

About the speaker

Surabhi Chopra is the Leverhulme Visiting Professor at the Dickson Poon School of Law, King’s College London and Research Fellow, Centre for Criminology, University of Hong Kong. She is a human rights scholar researching hate crimes, human rights remedies, and the regulation of migration across multiple Asian states.  

She led the first study of administrative detention of migrants in Hong Kong (Immigration Detention and Vulnerable Migrants in Hong Kong, Hong Kong Research Grants Council Impact Fund). Project findings led to a first-of-its-kind data repository on detention in Hong Kong, as well as a range of digital and print resources on immigration detention for migrants and CSOs. She has been invited by the Constitutional Court of South Korea, and the Commission of Human Rights of the Philippines among others to advise on redress for hate crimes and other human rights violations.  

Chair

This event will be chaired by Dr Grace (Yu) Mou, Senior Lecturer in Criminal Justice, SOAS College of Law.

Contact

Email: sci@soas.ac.uk

Image credit: Andres Garcia on Unsplash