Agnieszka Radziwinowiczówna
@radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
380 followers 860 following 32 posts
I research migrations & deportations, work at University of Warsaw. I have two kids and a 🐕
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radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
JOB ALERT
5 days left to apply for a post-doc to work with me in #UK2deport project at @cmr-warsaw.bsky.social

Check the requirements migracje.uw.edu.pl/wp-content/u... and send your application to [email protected]
radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
Our article on the new grounds for deportation of EU citizens in the UK is among the top 10% viewed articles published in 2023 in International Migration.
Thank you, Olayinka Lewis for working together on this piece.
The article is available here: doi.org/10.1111/imig...
radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
Last call, today is the deadline to apply 😉
radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
JOB ALERT
5 days left to apply for a post-doc to work with me in #UK2deport project at @cmr-warsaw.bsky.social

Check the requirements migracje.uw.edu.pl/wp-content/u... and send your application to [email protected]
radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
In this video, I explain the roots of Central and Eastern Europeans' differentiated deportability in the 🇬🇧
Check out this new videocast of the Centre of Migration Research: youtu.be/VtwMIc9Usn0?...
#UK2deport @ncngovpl.bsky.social
The deportations of European Union citizens from the United Kingdom.
YouTube video by MIGRATION RESEARCH
youtu.be
radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
🚨I am hiring, please share!🚨
🤩#UK2deport research team is growing at the CMR (Warsaw)
I am looking for a post-doc with good qualitative skills and interest in involuntary returns
🗓️Application deadline Feb 28, 2025
If you have any questions, email me
Job offer: www.migracje.uw.edu.pl/wp-content/u...
radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
This blog post was written with Corina Tulbure within the #UK2deport research project that was funded by the @ncngovpl.bsky.social
radziwinowiczowna.org/research/#uk...
radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
The decision on the refusal of entry is discretionary, at the hands of the UK Border Force. One of our research participants was returned because she did not have a return ticket. Another person was travelling with too many pairs of trousers, according to the border official.
radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
The UK Home Office declares there is no national profiling in place, but half of EU port returns were Romanian and Bulgarian citizens.
radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
EU citizens make up 55% of port returns.
EU citizens returned from airports and ports are often the people who did not secure a status under the EUSS, who were refused it. Some of them are new, post-Brexit arrivals suspected of coming to the UK to work without visa.
radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
A port return happens when the UK Border Force refuses entry and sends back a person wishing to travel to the UK.

Recently the number of port returns has dynamically grown, with 24 686 port returns in 2023 only.
In a recent post @bordercrim.bsky.social we explain, why.
bordercrim.bsky.social
New on the blog!

Agnieszka Radziwinowiczówna and Corina Tulbure discuss the growth of port-Brexit port returns. Port returns are a discretionary form of refusal of entry is at the hands of the UK Border Force. Read more here:

blogs.law.ox.ac.uk/border-crimi...
Port returns in UK: How the post-Brexit mobility of EU citizens is restricted
blogs.law.ox.ac.uk
radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
📻📻📻📻
Today on the radio I will be talking about Trump’s unrealistic plans to deport millions of people from the US

3:40 PM (CET)
Tok FM @tokfm.bsky.social
radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
Latin American workers in Poland unionised.
An interview with two members of the union (in Polish):
ozzip.pl/publicystyka...
ozzip.pl
radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
I will be presenting the power-knowledge approach this Thursday at the Centre of Migration Research, University of Warsaw
When: Dec 5, 2024, 11:00-12:00 CEST
Where: Hybrid, in the Conference Hall at CMR (Pasteura 7, Warsaw) and online
link👇🏻
radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
Reading a paper by one of my colleagues and idols in a high-regarded migration journal
The paper is great, but the journal didn’t do the copy editing. The footnote containing only a full stop is only one of the examples.

Hiring humans to do the copy-editing could be a good idea, academic journals
radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
Done by the team of Dr. Dobrochna Zielińska from the University of Warsaw and SWPS University (Poland)
radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
A big ‘thank you’ to those who helped me with this article. Thank you the funder of my research the National Science Centre of Poland for making my work possible.
/11
radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
Differentiated deportability of CEEU nationals helped to perpetuate enduring discrimination against Eastern Europeans and they prefigured post-Brexit policy and practice, e.g.:
· The rough sleeping rule (2020)
· Disclose of criminal convictions in EUSS applications
10/
radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
I knew from deported Polish people and their families that in prison they were told they would not be barred from re-entry if they agreed to deportation or Early Removal Scheme. They realised they were indeed barred when they were rejected entry to the UK.
9/
radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
Legal changes in the UK and official and unofficial practices of the Home Office and prison staff made possible deportations of the most excluded of them...
7/
radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
Two populations were the most targeted: people who had contact with the criminal justice system (not necessarily convicts, though) and rough sleepers (an English term for street homeless people).
6/
radziwinowiczowna.bsky.social
Did EU deportations make the UK more secure? You guess.
Who was deported? The most excluded. The people who couldn't afford an attorney (legal aid in deportation cases is not available), people with poor English who did not understand the documents they signed (see 9/)
5/