Nadine El-Enany

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Nadine El-Enany is an English legal scholar. She is Reader in Law, and Co-Director of the Centre for Research on Race and Law, at Birkbeck, University of London. She specializes in migration and refugee law, European Union law, protest and criminal law.

Life[]

Nadine El-Enany is the daughter of the Egyptian literary scholar Rasheed El-Enany. She gained her PhD, on refugee law in the United Kingdom and the European Union, in 2012 from the European University Institute in Italy.[1]

After Grenfell (2019) was a co-edited collection of responses to the Grenfell Tower fire, emphasising the legacy of colonialism and UK immigration policy in explaining the racialized neglect of Grenfell residents.[2] Bordering Britain (2020) argues that contemporary UK immigration law and policy need to be seen as "ongoing expressions of empire [...] an attempt to control access to the spoils of empire which are located in Britain".[3]

As well as academic publications, El-Enany has also written for non-academic media outlets,[4] including the London Review of Books[5] and The Guardian.[6]

Works[]

  • (ed. with Dan Bulley and Jenny Edkins) After Grenfell : violence, resistance and response, 2019
  • Bordering Britain: law, race and empire. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2020.

References[]

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