00996cam0 22002891 450 SOBE0002911920200728072917.0843760140120121213d1978 |||||ita|0103 baspaESFarsasDiego Sánchez de Badajozedición de José María Díez BorqueMadridEdiciones Cátedra, S.A.1978313 p.18 cmLetras Hispánicas71001LAEC000161352001 *Letras Hispánicas71Sánchez de Badajoz, DiegoSOBA00005415070385067Díez Borque, José MaríaAF00022483070ITUNISOB20200728RICAUNISOBUNISOB860|Coll|4|K40855SOBE00029119M 102 Monografia moderna SBNM860|Coll|4|K000071SI40855acquistoNvittoriniUNISOBUNISOB20121213102655.020200728072917.0SpinosaFarsas94042UNISOB03822nam 22005895 450 991101562570332120250730020231.03-031-86962-110.1007/978-3-031-86962-4(MiAaPQ)EBC32202157(Au-PeEL)EBL32202157(CKB)39621141100041(DE-He213)978-3-031-86962-4(OCoLC)1528962633(EXLCZ)993962114110004120250709d2025 u| 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierDetaining Immigrants, Scoring Criminals How Scoring Algorithms Transformed Anti-Immigrant Sentiments into Policy /by Robert Koulish, Ernesto Calvo1st ed. 2025.Cham :Springer Nature Switzerland :Imprint: Springer,2025.1 online resource (151 pages)SpringerBriefs in Political Science,2191-54743-031-86961-3 Preface -- Technologies of Crimmigration -- A theory of punitive biases in Risk Assessment Algorithms -- From Humane to Criminal Detention Changes in RCA Scoring Rules -- Punitive Bias and Algorithm Updating Measuring Puni-tive biases through officers dissents -- Optimized at Last Making RCA Criminals out of Undocumented Immigrants -- Concluding Remarks The Crimmigration Calculus.Since 2012, scoring algorithms created to manage risks in the United States penal system have been adopted by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agencies across the United States. First developed as a mechanism to reduce anti-immigrant biases and to ensure the humane treatment of detainees, scoring algorithms suffered constant revisions to accommodate DHS enforcement priorities as well as the preferences and punitive biases of ICE agents. With the arrival of the Trump administration, a technology created to ensure the humane treatment of undocumented immigrants became central to the policy of criminalization of the immigration process. This book provides historical, qualitative, and quantitative evidence of the process that placed risk assessment technologies at the forefront of the anti-immigration battle. Using very large data sets on immigration and detention proceedings obtained from DHS through multiple FOIA requests, this Brief reveals the inner workings of the risk classification algorithms (RCA) used to process tens of thousands of immigrants each day. Chapters examine the tension between risk algorithms and end users and explain how ICE officers’ preferences shape the scoring properties of RCA used in immigration enforcement. Illustrating how scoring algorithms oppress immigrants of color, this book is interest policymakers, immigration scholars, lawyers, criminologists, political scientists, and university professors, graduate students, and undergraduate students in the behavioral sciences.SpringerBriefs in Political Science,2191-5474Emigration and immigrationGovernment policyAmericaPolitics and governmentHuman rightsMigration PolicyAmerican PoliticsPolitics and Human RightsEmigration and immigrationGovernment policy.AmericaPolitics and government.Human rights.Migration Policy.American Politics.Politics and Human Rights.325Koulish Robert512774Calvo Ernesto1833298MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911015625703321Detaining Immigrants, Scoring Criminals4408243UNINA