Corporate Ethics and the Architecture of Asylum

Offshore Processing at Manus Island, Papua New Guinea and Nauru

Jennifer Ferng author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd

Published:10th Sep '25

Should be back in stock very soon

Corporate Ethics and the Architecture of Asylum cover

Corporate Ethics and the Architecture of Asylum engages innovative perspectives to understand our contemporary crisis of forced displacement and detention practices in the Pacific.

Multinational contractors responsible for the construction and maintenance of regional processing centres in Papua New Guinea and Nauru have flourished as powerful historical actors, exerting global dominance over the lives of asylum seekers wishing to come to Australia. Transitioning from the policeman or security guard towards the subject of the asylum seeker, this book contends that entanglements between architecture and law represent important epistemic models to interrogate how asylum can be understood and reconceptualised. Proposing diverse forms of visual and textual evidence, asylum is repositioned as a dynamic, ever-changing countermeasure against xenophobic sentiments around offshore processing. Over six chapters, Corporate Ethics examines how the regional processing centres of Manus Island and Nauru are deeply connected to the intellectual discourses of care, environmental precarity, human rights, and sovereignty. From Rembrandt’s De Nachtwacht or Night Watch (1642) to recent advancements in artificial intelligence and legal testimonies, picturing the future of asylum serves as a critical tool to resist state authoritarianism and the rise of corporate malfeasance in the built environment.

This book will be of interest to researchers and students of humanitarian architecture, architectural history, and Asia Pacific politics.

Recommended reading by the Migration Policy Institute, United States.

"For anyone who wants to truly understand how private companies have come to control every aspect of the lives of those caught up in Australia’s offshore detention regime, Jennifer Ferng’s book is a must read. With meticulous research into the sordid tale of contracts, flowing from one multinational to the next, she demonstrates how the damaging impact of government policies are not an accident, they are part of the design."

Dr Graham Thom, Advocacy Coordinator, Refugee Council of Australia.

"This ambitious and pioneering study offers a theoretically astute and courageous exposition of the outsourcing of offshore detention infrastructure to profit-driven multinational corporations. It highlights the design profession's persistent failure to engage with these spaces or insist on humane alternatives. Using dynamic digital media archives to expand the horizon of architectural research, it penetrates the opacity of a shameful national legacy.”

Anoma Pieris, Professor of Architecture, The University of Melbourne.

ISBN: 9781032461984

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 400g

176 pages