RT Article T1 Punishment, political economy and crisis: Disciplining labour through state-corporate surveillance in the ‘neoliberal heartlands’ JF European journal of criminology VO 19 IS 3 SP 332 OP 348 A1 Xenakis, Sappho LA English YR 2022 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1801008965 AB The aim of this article is to advance the politico-economic analysis of punishment in contexts of crisis. To this end, the article examines punitive state interventions in the ‘neoliberal heartlands’ of the UK and the US, as set against a backdrop of multidimensional crises that have reconfigured political landscapes, the relationship between labour and capital, and the mode and scope of state punishment. Through a focus on the treatment of socio-economically embedded undocumented migrants, the article highlights the increasingly diffuse punitive repercussions stemming from the growing multi-sectoral, corporate-facilitated surveillance of the labour force. K1 Political Economy K1 US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) K1 Windrush Scandal K1 Imprisonment K1 Punishment K1 state-corporate surveillance DO 10.1177/14773708221089233