<p><b>How the UK’s immigration detention and deportation system turns people into monetized, measurable units on a supply chain </b><br><br>In the UK’s fully outsourced “immigration detainee escorting system,” private sector security employees detain, circulate and deport foreign national citizens. Run and organized like a supply chain, this system dehumanises those who are detained and deported, treating them as if they were packages to be moved from place to place and relying on poorly paid, minimally trained staff to do so. In <i>Supply Chain Justice</i>, Mary Bosworth offers the first empirically grounded, scholarly analysis of the British detention and deportation system. Drawing on four years of extensive ethnographic research, Bosworth examines what keeps the system in place and whether it might be effectively challenged.<br><br>Told by a senior manager that “this is a logistics business,” Bosworth documents how the public and private sectors