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In using Britain as a case, this opens up further insights into the international/global circulations of liberal empire and its relationship to violence. In doing this, the book re-theorises how we think of the connection between liberal government, race, family, borders and empire. Drawing on historical investigations, the book investigates the continuity of colonial rule in numerous areas of contemporary government – family visa regimes, the policing of sham marriages, counterterror strategies, deprivation of citizenship, policing tactics, integration policy. Not only was family central to the making of colonial racism but claims to family continue to remake, shore up but also hide the organisation of racialised violence in liberal states. Building upon postcolonial, decolonial and black feminist theory, the investigation centres on how colonial bordering is remade in contemporary Britain through appeals to protect, sustain and make family life.
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The book explores the connected history between contemporary border regimes and the policing of family with the role of borders under European and British empires. Bordering intimacy is a study of how borders and dominant forms of intimacy, such as family, are central to the governance of postcolonial states such as Britain.