RT Article T1 Leaving no stone unturned: the borders and orders of transnational prostitution JF The British journal of criminology VO 58 IS 2 SP 255 OP 272 A1 Jahnsen, Synnøve Økland 1981- A2 May-Len, Skilbrei LA English YR 2018 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/157252748X AB Criminologists are increasingly turning their attention to the intersections between immigration and crime control. In this article, we describe and discuss four regulatory practices whereby Norwegian police combine criminal law and immigration law in different ways vis-à-vis migrant women involved in prostitution. These practices target sex workers with exclusionary measures, even though the sale of sex is legal. These regulatory practices illustrate how Norwegian anti-prostitution policies are combined with an anti-trafficking agenda, something which creates a policing regime dependent on extensive forms of surveillance and control over sex workers’ lives and mobility, and on partnerships and networks of governance. K1 Borders K1 Crimmigration K1 Human trafficking K1 Migration control K1 Prostitution K1 Menschenhandel K1 Migrationskontrolle DO 10.1093/bjc/azx028