Shameful Start to Shakespeare 400: Dr Paul Hamilton Arrested and Held by UK Immigration

Paul Hamilton profile

Dr Paul Hamilton

[UPDATE: Dr Hamilton released after 10 days]

My friend and frequent Kingston Shakespeare collaborator, Dr Paul Hamilton (a US citizen), was arrested on the afternoon of January 17, 2016 at his home in Stratford-upon-Avon by the West Midlands immigration team from Sanford House in Solihull. He was eventually taken to the Morton Hall Immigration Removal Centre near Lincoln, where he is still being held.

Two reasons were given for Dr Hamilton’s arrest: firstly, removal from the UK was imminent (he was later notified that he needs to leave the country by February 1, 2016); secondly, he does not have enough close ties (‘family or friends’; the arresting officer underlined ‘family’) to make it likely that he will stay in one place.

There are many things wrong with this situation but let us focus on three central issues.

First, Dr Hamilton was not illegally in the country. He had applied to the Home Office for further leave to stay in the UK in a completely legitimate way. Why is he being treated like a criminal?

FullSizeRender

Dr Hamilton at Garrick’s Temple during the Shakespeare and Scandinavia conference

Second, Dr Hamilton’s arrest coincided with the immigration team notifying him that his application for further leave was denied. It was only during his arrest and subsequent detention that he was handed the documents pertaining to the denial. The date of this decision was December 9, 2015. Why was Dr Hamilton or his lawyer, Theresa Okogwa, who was hired to represent him in this matter, not notified of this decision? Why the wait? One reason could be that the Home Office were about to change the rules about appealing their decisions and wanted to strong arm Dr Hamilton to follow the new rules which necessitated him to appeal from outside the UK. Third, the absurdity of him being a flight risk: Dr Hamilton has spent nine years in the UK building up a professional network alongside his studies and research, all of which would be thrown away if he were to act illegally and go into hiding. Even his application for further leave to stay in the country was based on a human rights appeal as he had spent these years building the network of professional contacts. One result of this is his central involvement in the Kingston Shakespeare project, where he has organised conferences and seminars. Assessing Dr Hamilton to be a flight risk is an unjust and unfounded claim.

The arresting officer’s emphasis on ‘family’—in the section that deals with flight risk that states ‘family OR friends’—seems to effectively suggest that only ‘family’ can be considered a mitigating factor for flight risk!?

Effectively, the legitimate process of application is being criminalised. Dr Hamilton had done nothing wrong or illegal nor was he accused of doing anything wrong, yet he was arrested and is STILL being detained a week after his arrest, despite people writing on his behalf and standing as surety for him. Moreover, he paid £650 for his application and also hired an attorney to help with the process as well as buying in July 2015 an open date return ticket (worth $1200) in case of the denial of his application – all of which resulted in his wrongful imprisonment. He is being treated like a criminal for making a legitimate and costly application.

With 2016 being the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death, these alarming actions perpetrated by UK immigration officials against a Shakespeare scholar starts this year of celebration in a deeply unsettling way.

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Dr Hamilton listening to Jeffrey Knapp at the Rose Theatre

Dr Hamilton received his doctorate from the Shakespeare Institute (University of Birmingham) graduating in July 2015. At the time of his arrest he was preparing an application to funding bodies for his project on a cultural history of katharsis as a medical and aesthetic concept with the support of Professor Richard Wilson (Kingston University). This process has seriously been hindered by the actions of the Home Office. Meanwhile, although Dr Hamilton is continuing to write his application after having to petition for pen and paper, he is still unable access any of his research (he was allowed to take his tablet containing a significant amount of that research with him upon arrest but he has not been granted access to it). Not only is the timing of these actions by UK immigration deeply ironic and harmful to Dr Hamilton’s career but they also reveal the precarious situation in which non-EU immigrants and Early Career Researchers find themselves.

All this after spending nearly a decade in the country without any trouble, enriching its research culture by contributing countless hours of unpaid academic work to arranging and assisting in conferences, seminars, and publications. Moreover, Dr Hamilton alone has contributed easily over $150 000 to the economy with tuition fees.

As was pointed out to me, the Shakespeare Institute, where Dr Hamilton studied, was founded partly as an effort to build a special relationship between the US and the UK. In fact, Shakespeare Studies in general could be seen through this lens. There is a very strong interlinking of American and British scholars and scholarship in the SAA, BSA and ISA, and, of course, the annual invitation-only conference at the Institute was founded upon Anglo-American cooperation. Dr Hamilton and his scholarship is situated centrally in this international cooperation.

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Introducing Shakespeare and the State of Exception

Adding to the irony of Dr Hamilton’s situation, he was the main intellectual thrust in organising a conference on Shakespeare and the State of Exception (read or listen to it here) which theorised and discussed exactly these exceptional powers the sovereign state has over its subjects in standing both inside and outside the law it enforces. Dr Hamilton now gets to experience those powers in practice—but he won’t be defeated by them.

 

Alongside the support from his friends and colleagues, the Stratford-upon-Avon Member of Parliament Nadhim Zahawi is making representations on Dr Hamilton’s behalf. Moreover, Times Higher Education have interviewed him for this piece on the situation as has politics.co.uk and BuzzFeed News. Now The Times has written a piece as has the Independent and the Daily Mail. Also an open letter was sent to The Times.

Nevertheless, Dr Hamilton’s case is only one of many and there are even more blatant infractions of civil liberties and human rights done in the name of the UK government. Will the people who decide on and carry out these infractions ever be held accountable for their actions? What kind of state is the United Kingdom if it condones these kind of actions?

Written by (Paul’s friend and collaborator),

Timo Uotinen, PhD student at Royal Holloway, University of London.

With support from:

Dr Patricia Alessandrini, Lecturer in Sonic Arts, Goldsmiths College, University of London
Martin Anderson, Toccata Classics/Toccata Press
Dr Elizabeth Andrews, PhD, School of English, University of St Andrews
Amalia Arvaniti, Professor of English Language and Linguistics, University of Kent
Megan Archer, University of Brighton
Gerald Baker, independent scholar
Julia Bard
Helen and Jose Barrios
Alice Bondi
, Retired Psychotherapist
Amy Bonsall, Freelance Theatre Director and Associate Artistic Director of Bilimankhwe Arts
Andrew Bowie
, Professor of Philosophy and German, Royal Holloway, University of London
Mimi Bowron
, student, Shakespeare Institute
Kate Begley BSc PGCE
Delilah Bermudez Brataas
, Assistant Professor in English, Norwegian University of Science and Technology
Dr Alex Bellem, School of Modern Languages and Cultures, Durham University
Dr Mark Berry, Senior Lecturer in Music, Royal Holloway, University of London
William Blount, Reader in English, Liceo Classico, Forli, Italy
Karin Brown, Shakespeare Institute Librarian
Sarah Brown, UCU Branch Secretary
Andrew Brownell, DMusA from the Guildhall School of Music and Drama
F.W. Brownlow, Professor Emeritus, Mount Holyoke College
Niels Brunse, author and translator, Denmark
Dr John Buckingham
Thea Buckley
Lorna Burslem
Christopher Bussell, 
past Vice President SU and past Vice President and Life Member of the Fellows, Ruskin College Oxford
Professor Maurizio Calbi, Department of Humanistic Studies, University of Salerno, Italy
Ramsey Campbell, Honorary Fellow in Literature, Liverpool John Moores University
Domenico Cannizzaro, a classical tenor
Dr. Colin Cavendish-Jones, Assistant Professor, City University of Hong Kong
Dr Douglas Chalmers, President, UCU Scotland
Professor Elaine Chalus, Bath Spa University
Dr Daniel Chernilo, Reader in Social and Political Thought, Loughborough University
Marie Clausén, Art Historian, Ottawa, Canada
Richard Coldman
Dr Chris Collins, Senior Lecturer in Music, Bangor University
Dr. David Conway, Honorary research Fellow, Department of Hebrew and Jewish Studies, University College London
Patrick Cook, PhD candidate in Classics, University of Cambridge
John Cowan
Karen Wills Cunningham
Joseph Curdy
Judith Curry
, student, Shakespeare Institute
Dr Stephen Curtis, Part II Tutor/Associate Lecturer, Lancaster University
Chikukuango Cuxima-Zwa, MPhil, PhD, Brunel University London
Michael Davies
, Gillingham, Kent
Tom Deveson, teacher and director of Shakespeare in London schools
Chris Diming, PhD Candidate, Durham University
Professor Michael Dobson, Director of the Shakespeare Institute
Sian Drinan
Jane Frances Dunlop, MPhil/PhD Candidate, University of Brighton
Dr Leila Edwards (British Citizen based in the UAE), Principal, Transformations Institute, Global NLP Licensed by the Society of NLP
Jude Orlando Enjolras, poet, University of Birmingham librarian and graduate
Santiago Xavier Espinosa, PhD Candidate in Archaeology, University of Edinburgh
Nick Evans, doctoral candidate, University of Oxford
Sally Evans
Declan Farrell
, director of R&D companies in both Sweden and U.S.
Joe Farrell
Dr Anna Fenemore, Associate Professor in Contemporary Theatre and Performance
Director of Research and Innovation, School of Performance and Cultural Industries, University of Leeds
Ewan Fernie, The Shakespeare Institute
Douglas Finch, Professor of Piano and Composition, Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance, London
Kenneth Young Founder, Director Artists Project Earth NGO for halting fossil fuels emissions and raising awareness for climate change
Dr Bradley L Garrett
Boris Gaydin
, Candidate of Philosophy, Moscow University for the Humanities
Dr Lia Genovese, Lecturer, Thammasat University, Bangkok, Thailand
Alice Gibson
, PhD student, Kingston University
Eugene Giddens, Skinner-Young Professor of Shakespeare and Renaissance Literature, Anglia Ruskin University
John Gillies, Professor in Literature, University of Essex
Dr Patricia Gillies, University of Essex
Andrea García González, University of Brighton
Frances Gray
Johann Gregory, Research Associate, Cardiff University
Ingrid Grueso, PhD candidate, Durham University
Zachary Guiliano, doctoral candidate, University of Cambridge
Vinayak Das Gupta, Postdoctoral fellow, National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland
Peter Hallward, Professor of Modern European Philosophy, Kingston University
Julia Hamilton, DPhil candidate in Oriental Studies, University of Oxford
Helen Hargest, Former Archive and Imaging Coordinator at the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
Lana Harper, PhD student, University of Sussex
David Hastie, musician, retired teacher of literature and Shakespeare
Professor Eric Heinze, School of Law, Queen Mary, University of London
Andrew Henderson, Stratford resident
Tom Hickey, Principal Lecturer in Philosophy and Critical Theory, School of Humanities, University of Brighton
Dr Adrian Hilton, Educationalist, Oxford University; RSC Alumnus
Dr Andy Higginbottom, Associate Professor, Chair of the Kingston University branch of UCU, University and College lecturers Union
Dr Chris Horrocks, Associate Professor, Kingston University
Lorna Hutson, Berry Professor of English Literature, School of English, University of St Andrews
Tim Huzar, University of Brighton
Dr Anders Ingram, Postdoctoral Researcher, National University of Ireland, Galway
Marie-Jeanne Jacob
Julian Jacobson, Professor of Piano and Chamber Music, Royal College of Music London and Birmingham Conservatoire,Chairman, Beethoven Piano Society of Europe
David Jones, Former Lecturer in Trade Union Studies
Dr Frauke Jurgensen, Department of Music, University of Aberdeen
Dr Anne Karhio, Postdoctoral Fellow, National University of Ireland, Galway/University of Bergen, Norway
Rosie Keep, doctoral student, University of Birmingham
Sara Kernohan
Sara J Kerr
, PhD student Maynooth University, Ireland
Helen Kidd, writer, critic and editor
Dr Thomas Koentges, University of Leipzig
Marija Krnic
, PhD candidate Theatre studies, University of Warwick
Kati Laasonen
John Langdon, doctoral candidate, Shakespeare Institute
Dr Anthony Leaker, Lecturer in Critical and Cultural Theory, University of Brighton
Gah-Kai Leung, Department of History, University College London
Patrick Levy, doctoral candidate, University of Sussex
Samantha Lin, international PhD candidate, Queen’s University, Belfast
Arthur Lindley, Hon. Fellow, Shakespeare Institute
Georgie Lucas
Mairi Macdonald
, Honorary Research Fellow, University of Birmingham
Agathe Majou, MA student, Shakespeare Institute
Doyeeta Majumder
, Teaching fellow at the School of English, Edinburgh University
Vladimir Makarov, Associate Professor, St. Tikhon’s Orthodox University for the Humanities, Moscow, Russia
Michelle Manning, PhD student at Anglia Ruskin University
Rachel Mariner
James J. Marino, Associate Professor of English, Cleveland State University, USA
Alice Martin, editor and translator
Dr Annie Martirosyan, Shakespeare Institute alumnus
Kirkmc
Jane McColl, teacher, St. Andrews, Scotland
Kathleen McCreery, playwright and theatre director, former senior lecturer (assoc.) at the Universities of Northumbria and Sunderland, counsellor
Ciaran McDonough, PhD scholar, National University of Ireland, Galway
Emer McHugh, doctoral candidate, NUI Galway
Una McIlvenna, Lecturer in Early Modern Literature, University of Kent
Erin McLaren, BS, California State University, Fullerton
Dr Patricia McManus, Senior Lecturer in Media and Literature, University of Brighton
Tornike Metreveli, Doctoral Researcher, University of Bern, Switzerland
Dr Marije Michel, Lecturer for Language Learning and Teaching, Lancaster University
Dr Hollie Morgan, Research Fellow, University of Lincoln
Kate Mueller, MA graduate, The Shakespeare Institute
Dr Tamjid Mujtaba, UCL Institute of Education
Dustin Neighbors, PhD student, University of York
Karen Nicholls
Sheila North

Richard Nunn
Richard O’Brien
, Shakespeare Institute PhD researcher
David Owen, Professor of Politics and International Relations, University of Southampton
Dave Paxton, doctoral candidate, The Shakespeare Institute, University of Birmingham
Dr Vanessa Pupavac, Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, School of Politics and International Relations, University of Nottingham
Thomas Pfau, Alice Mary Baldwin Professor of English, 
Professor & Chair of Germanic Languages & Literatures, Duke University
Anna Ilona Rajala, doctoral candidate, University of Brighton
Pauline Randall, Managing Director Florizel Media Ltd
Dr. Ned Richardson-Little, Department of History, University of Exeter
Jacqueline Roberts, concerned British Citizen, Estepona, Spain
Nancy Rogan, MA candidate, The Shakespeare Institute
Dr Jamie Rogers
Elina Salin
, a Shakespeare fan and an activist
Duncan Salkeld
, Professor of Shakespeare, University of Chichester
Christina Sandhaug, Hedmark University College, Norway
Professor Jennifer Saul, Department of Philosophy, University of Sheffield
Stephanie Schnabel, translator and SI alumna, Germany
Barry Schwabsky, art critic, The Nation
Dr Mike Searby, Kingston University UCU Branch Secretary
Dr Keith Seddon, author and activist
Deirdre E Shaw MA
Dr Rupak Shrestha, EdD, Brunel University
Dr Natasha Simonova, University of Cambridge
Norval Smith, Guest Researcher, Amsterdam Center for Language and Communication (ACLC), University of Amsterdam
Dr Stephanie Spoto, PhD Edinburgh University, Lecturer, Humanities, California State University Monterey, USA
Francisca Stangel, Doctoral Candidate, University of Kent
Barry Stocker, Assistant Professor, Istanbul Technical University
William James Summers
Zoe Sutherland, doctoral researcher, University of St Andrews
K Valerie Swift, former MA student at the Shakespeare Institute
The Bard of Tysoe
Chris Traynor
Adam Trettel

Timothy Trimingham Lee, theatre director
Dr Sara L. Uckelman, Department of Philosophy, Durham University
Sean Wallis, UCU NEC and UCL
Sonia Arias Valtuille
Jean Noel Vandaele
Rebecca Warren-Hayes

Erin Weinberg, doctoral candidate, Queen’s University, Canada
Sara Marie Westh
Alex Whiteley, Shakespeare Institute Graduate
Dr Lesley Whitworth, Deputy Curator, University of Brighton Design Archives
Dr. Jeroen Wijnendaele, Associated Post-Doctoral Researcher, Ghent University
Jay Wilkinson, retired Director, Brunel University Arts Centre
Dr Brian Willis, MA 2003, Ph.D 2008 Shakespeare Institute
Jeff Wilson
Mark Wilson
, PhD student at the University of Roehampton
Richard Wilson
, Sir Peter Hall Professor, Kingston University
David Melville Wingrove, Tutor in Literature and Film, University of Edinburgh
Adele Winston, LL.B(Hons)
Dr José Carlos Marques Volcato, Associate Professor of English Language and Literatures at the Federal University of Pelotas, Brazil
Mick Woods, Musician
Martin Young, doctoral candidate, Queen Mary, University of London
Dr Nikolay Zakharov, the Academic Secretary of the Shakespeare Committee of the Russian Academy of Sciences
Clas Zilliacus, Professor Emeritus, Åbo Akademi, Finland

If, in support of Paul, you wish to have your name added to this, please email me at timo.uotinen(at)gmail.com or comment below.

Update 11.37 Jan 25 2016: Paragraph about the Shakespeare Institute and US – UK relations added. Notice of Times Higher Education piece added.

Update 14.15 Jan 25 2016: On suggestion anonymised funding bodies as not to hinder the application process.  14.51: Pictures added. 19.31 link to Times Higher Education added.

Update 23.36 Jan 26 2016: Added links to articles from news outlets.

About Timo Uotinen

Timo Uotinen was a Finnish PhD student at Royal Holloway, University of London working on Shakespeare and philosophy - more specifically on Baconian philosophy, Shakespearean tragedy, and ethics.
This entry was posted in News, Thinking through Shakespeare and tagged , , . Bookmark the permalink.

133 Responses to Shameful Start to Shakespeare 400: Dr Paul Hamilton Arrested and Held by UK Immigration

  1. Keith Seddon says:

    Absolutely outrageous. Please add my name as well. Dr Keith Seddon, author and activist.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Pingback: Another immigrant’s tale | The Shakespeare blog

  3. Joseph Curdy says:

    In solidarity with Paul, and as a former colleague of mine while I attended the Shakespeare Institute, I too wish to have my name added to this list. This is a shocking overreach and an injustice. Please let me know if there’s anything I can do on his behalf.

    On a personal note, towards the end of my studies (as an international student) to my great surprise, the Home Office rejected my request for a student visa extension. When they rejected my request (citing improper funds in my bank statements) they also confiscated my 6-month old daughter’s visa and attached a statement informing my daughter (as if she was herself capable of reading it) that she was illegally in the country and that she would be at risk of being detained/arrested & forcibly deported to the United States within 30-days from the date of the letter.

    That’s right. The Home Office was attempting to deport a 6-month old child to the United States with or without the parents involved.

    This whole mess was eventually resolved with legal advice, and my day in court representing myself against the Home Office who themselves had an immigration attorney with a 28-year record who was colder & more bloodless than Nurse Ratchett & Dolores Umbridge on their best day.

    In the end I was able to prove that my family had never been dependent on a single dime of public assistance during the entirety of my studies (a claim that was demonstrably proven) and that separating members of my family by legal means was in direct violation of my EU rights.

    And yes, the verdict came a couple weeks later via the post. My extension was approved, and my daughter’s visa was also returned. But what a mess, and the whole ordeal caught us completely off-guard. I can only imagine what Paul is going through. Poor man. This must be made right.

    Liked by 2 people

    • Keith Seddon says:

      That you, and others, can have this experience suggests the disturbing possibility that the government of the UK is drifting ever closer to what can only be described as a fascist mentality, in which the ‘rights of the state’ assume an overarching entitlement over the rights of the individual, in which the rule of law is not pursued in the interests of the individual citizens who collectively assent to that rule, but to empower a vicious and power crazed government to do whatever it likes, not matter the suffering it causes. Most disturbing is the government’s preference that it bring harm and suffering to children. This is why I think it is valid for us to make the disturbing comparison between Cameron’s Conservative government and examples of brutal fascist governments from history. Cameron’s treatment of sick and disabled people, for instance, rivals, in my opinion, the utter brutality of Hitler’s Nazi Party … I say that placing an emphasis on the sheer number of deaths that his policies have caused.

      Like

      • Joseph Curdy says:

        Thank you Keith. And I too am all but certain that the Home Office has targeted multiple international students with the same kind of prejudice. This suggests that the Home Office’s draconian methods are in need of serious public scrutiny. This is precisely why I have written to the editors of the Huffington Post UK editors earlier this evening to see if they might help create awareness of this deplorable situation. I can only hope that Paul’s terrible experience may serve a greater purpose to put a stop to this incredible abuse of power.

        Like

      • Lou Coatney says:

        Absolutely right, Keith. Did you see my comment above? You British are the custodians of Magna Carta – Equal Justice under the Rule of Law – and you were once the West’s moral leadership … against slavery … standing *against* fascism (along with the Commonwealth, free governments in exile, and us … under the table at first). I had hoped you would bring your Iraq war criminals to justice to set an example for us Americans. You British – Blair – were decisive in selling the rectitude of it to many if not most Americans.

        The neocons are attacking and undermining the British people and your democratic values and culture on all fronts. But this is an overt, baldfaced act of state terror – meant to intimidate and silence – if Dr. Hamilton and his attorney were deliberately uninformed of the denial (in time to respond), when they were supposed to have been.

        I do wonder what Shakespeare would be saying, were he alive today.

        Like

    • Mark Wilson, PhD student at the University of Roehampton. says:

      Dear Timo,
      Please add my name to the list of support. This is a disgraceful violation of human rights and an utter injustice.

      Like

  4. Sheila North says:

    I thought UK/US relations were better than this. What an appalling way to treat someone who was doing all the right things.

    Please add me to the list.

    Like

  5. Kelley Costigan, BFA, Dipl (Shakespeare Studies), MPhil, MSMA, MISRM says:

    I find it disgraceful that in a civilised society this persecution exists. Paul has contributed (& continues to contribute) to academic scholarship. He followed the rules & obeyed the Law like a good citizen (no matter what country) & he is punished for it. This is not right. This cannot be lawful.

    Liked by 1 person

  6. ewanfernie says:

    Please free Paul Hamilton, a scholar and in the best sense of the phrase a gentleman; and please free him NOW.

    Ewan Fernie, The Shakespeare Institute

    Liked by 1 person

  7. Pingback: Shameful Start to Shakespeare 400: Dr Paul Hamilton Arrested and Held by UK Immigration – non sanz droict

  8. Mairi Macdonald says:

    Please add my name. This is a disgrace and not the only case, I’m sure. Mairi Macdonald, Honorary Research Fellow, University of Birmingham.

    Liked by 1 person

  9. Helen Kidd: Writer, critic and editor says:

    Yet another outrageous attack on the international academic community by narrow red-tape bound box ticking officials. I totally protest against this injust and spurious act of philistinism and inhumanity.

    Like

  10. Mick Woods says:

    Please add my name to the list of supporters Mick Woods – Musician – mickwoods@gmail.com

    Liked by 1 person

  11. janet Pick MA Shakespeare and Theatre Studies says:

    There are times when I am deeply ashamed of my country and this is one of them.

    Liked by 1 person

  12. Pingback: UK opens Shakespeare year by arresting Shakespeare scholar – Slipped Disc

  13. Please add my name if it would help. Among other things I’m an Honorary Fellow in Literature of Liverpool John Moores University.

    Liked by 1 person

  14. Samantha Lin says:

    As an Australian citizen finishing off the PhD thesis, I’ve often joked about being deported back to the penal colonies post-submission–that this situation has become reality is simply appalling.

    Please add me to the list as Samantha Lin, international PhD candidate, Queen’s University, Belfast. Thank you.

    Liked by 1 person

  15. Joe Farrell says:

    A totally shameful and unacceptable situation. This must not go unchallenged. Please add my name to the list.

    Liked by 1 person

  16. I agree with the other comments here: has the UK Immigration Service been taking lessons in customer relations from Putin’s Russia? Please add my name.
    Martin Anderson, Toccata Classics/Toccata Press

    Liked by 1 person

  17. Best wishes to Paul, an outstanding contributor to the Kingston Shakespeare Seminars.

    Prof. Eric Heinze
    School of Law
    Queen Mary, University of London
    Mile End Road, London E1 4NS

    Liked by 1 person

  18. William Blount says:

    William Blount, Reader in English, Liceo Classico, Forli, Italy. Please add my name.

    Liked by 1 person

  19. wmiles91 says:

    Yes this is tragic and a disgrace for Theresa May. Its also a great critical point against the political ideology of division maintained by the minted blue collar criminals at large today. And they still have the nerve to claim it is just ‘middle of the road’ politics surpassing out-of-date Left and Right rivalry. They are the retrograde ones!

    But this is our government, we aren’t revoking our citizenship and burning our passports. Even with the exceptionalist mindset in our over-entrusted betrayer leaders, we still have a degree of representational democracy and control and are responsible. So unless we are the ones genuinely, succesfully opposing this stunted fickle policy ‘from within’, subversively or however, it is a disgrace for us. Every citizen with the means at least. My fear is when I’m convinced this issue is just one symptom part of some more desperate systemic disaster that gets worse before it gets better as people look for desperate measures. Perhaps something good will come of this. It seems a hell of a case in point, a useful base or spearhead to push back. Has anyone thought of trying an Avaaz or Change.com petition at least? Or kickstarter or gofundme for legal costs? More optimistically/absurdly, asked round for a naked protest in the spirit of lady Godiva by all the Oxbridge dons?

    Like

  20. Pingback: RT @cstross: UK Immigration Service declares war o… » Personal blog of Peter "Sci" Turpin

  21. david wingrove says:

    This is simply barbarous! I believe personally that freedom to move and live where we want should be a basic and inalienable human right, just like freedom of speech, religion or sexual orientation. For UK Border to treat a Shakespearean scholar as if he were some sort of risk to national security is nothing short of ludicrous – like something from a very bad Ealing farce! Yes, do please add my name as well.

    David Melville Wingrove, Tutor in Literature and Film, University of Edinburgh (Office of Lifelong Learning)

    Liked by 1 person

  22. alizahaida says:

    Solidarity for Dr Hamilton. My experience with Home Office on this Human Right Application is not a good experience. I have families and friends here but yet the Home Office put my application on hold and refused it. The amount of monies that I have spent just to get regularize is so much. No Democracy and its is disgrace for Theresa May to have such policy.

    Like

  23. Please add my name to the list. This type of behaviour by the state makes me ashamed to be British. I can’t begin to imagine what Dr Hamilton must be feeling now and I’m so sorry that he has been subjected to such acts. There is absolutely no excuse for this type of behaviour. I’m English but have lived in Scotland for most of my life, I just wish that the people of Scotland had voted for independence – we would then have been able to welcome Dr Hamilton.

    Pauline Randall
    Managing Director Florizel Media Ltd

    Liked by 1 person

  24. Please add my name to the list: Kathleen McCreery, playwright and theatre director, former senior lecturer (assoc.) at the Universities of Northumbria and Sunderland, counsellor.

    Like

    • Arthur Lindley says:

      Please add my name, if you haven’t done so already, in support of Paul Hamilton.

      Arthur Lindley Hon. Fellow Shakespeare Institute

      On 26 January 2016 at 14:37, Kingston Shakespeare Seminar wrote:

      > Kathleen McCreery commented: “Please add my name to the list: Kathleen > McCreery, playwright and theatre director, former senior lecturer (assoc.) > at the Universities of Northumbria and Sunderland, counsellor.” >

      Like

  25. Please add my name too. Dr Paul Hamilton is being treated as if he were Cinna the Poet. Professor Michael Dobson, Director of the Shakespeare Institute.

    Like

  26. nanrogan says:

    As a current American post-graduate student at The Shakespeare Institute with PhD aspirations, Dr Hamilton’s Kafkaesque nightmare is a wake-up call for me. My dream has been to study, on-site, in a land of the richest history and of my heritage, and create a niche within its academic ‘family’.

    Dr Hamilton’s ordeal begs the question that if an upstanding academic obeys the law, proceeds by the book, and is treated as a criminal by this government, can I or any other American student enrolled in a UK university expect the same treatment?

    Please add my name in support of Dr Hamilton.

    Nancy Rogan, MA candidate, The Shakespeare Institute, University of Birmingham, UK.

    Like

  27. This is shameful and utterly appalling. Please add my name to the list. I am Dr José Carlos Marques Volcato, Associate Professor of English Language and Literatures at the Federal University of Pelotas, Brazil.I lived in Stratford-upon-Avon and was a research student at the Shakespeare Institute in the period 1992-1996. Email zaeca1@gmail.com

    Like

  28. This is disgraceful. I have dual US/UK citizenship. What possible justification can there be for such high-handed behaviour? We are lucky to have Dr Hamilton here. Who is responsible for shaming us in this way? Adele Winston, LL.B(Hons)

    Like

  29. Colin Cavendish-Jones says:

    Please add my name in support of Dr. Hamilton: Dr. Colin Cavendish-Jones, Assistant Professor, City University of Hong Kong.

    Like

  30. Jay Wilkinson says:

    Please add my name to the list – Jay Wilkinson retired Director, Brunel University Arts Centre

    Like

  31. Thomas Koentges says:

    An unbelievable blow for all international research communities. Please add my name, Dr Thomas Koentges, University of Leipzig.

    Like

  32. Hollie says:

    Please add my name to the list: Dr Hollie Morgan, Research Fellow, University of Lincoln

    Like

  33. Please also add me, totally shocking news. Tornike Metreveli, Doctoral Researcher, University of Bern, Switzerland.

    Like

  34. Ciaran McDonough says:

    Please add me: Ciaran McDonough, PhD scholar, National University of Ireland, Galway.

    Like

  35. David Conway says:

    Please add my name – Dr. David Conway, Honorary research Fellow, Deptford. Of Hebrew and Jewish Studies, University College London

    Like

  36. Elizabeth Andrews says:

    I am completely outraged and supportive. Having just completed my PhD at the University of St Andrews and similarly unceremoniously hurdled out of the country, Dr Hamilton has my profound solidarity. This is ridiculous. It’s not just our career, it’s our lives — I lived in Scotland for 8 years, paid taxes, contributed to my community, taught countless students, supported the economy. It is my home. Yet, I am back in the US, where I have family, but no close ties or career networks.

    Sincerely,
    Dr Elizabeth Andrews
    PhD, School of English
    University of St Andrews

    Like

  37. Marie Clausén says:

    I am outraged and deeply saddened for Dr Hamilton. And as someone currently considering a move to the UK from Canada for PhD studies, I am also very, very worried. Please add my name: Marie Clausén, Art Historian, Ottawa, Canada

    Like

  38. Please add my name: Dr Frauke Jurgensen, Department of Music, University of Aberdeen

    Like

  39. Peaceful, law-abiding scholars being locked up in Great Britain for no valid reason. What has happened to the great island nation? Shameful. Utterly shameful. Please add my name to the list.

    Like

  40. pray this is dealt with properly and expediently. Yes! Exposure of these methods and policy are imperative! At the same time, I also hope that the groundswell of support will not result in them digging in their heels, “refusing to be swayed by public opinion”, “stand firm’ and all that “balderdash”!

    Like

  41. This is a disgraceful move by the powers that shouldn’t be. Please use my name Kenneth Young Founder- Director Artists Project Earth NGO for halting fossil fuels emissions and raising awareness for climate change.

    Like

  42. Helen and Jose Barrios says:

    This is outrageous! Please add our names to the list of those supporting Paul.

    Like

  43. Hilary Martin says:

    This is an utterly shameful way to treat an academic whose work proves a love of our literary traditions and solidarity with our culture.

    Like

  44. jane says:

    please add my name: Jane McColl, teacher, st andrews , scotland

    Like

  45. Hi Timo, my name is Steph Cockroft and I’m a reporter at MailOnline. I’ve sent you an email as I am keen to speak with you and Mr Hamilton about his plight. Are you able to come back to me? I’m on steph.cockroft@mailonline.co.uk or on 02036151786.

    Like

    • Keith Seddon says:

      Is that the same as the Daily Mail? Don’t touch it. Don’t go anywhere near it. The Daily Mail is jointly culpable for the onslaught of the new Nazi Tyranny that the Tories are building. The Daily Mail demonised the sick and disabled with lie upon lie upon lie, and the terror they caused killed my wife.

      Like

    • Lou Coatney says:

      I was just thinking about suggesting the Daily Mail, last night. (Huffington Britain may be neocon and not at all interested in the story.) DM’s Miles Goslett very bravely kept up public scrutiny of Dr. David Kelly’s unlikely death in The Daily Mail.

      It may be your only major newspaper left which hasn’t been bought out (by wealthy neocon interests).

      Like

  46. Helen Hargest says:

    I am ashamed of the Home Office’s actions towards Dr Paul Hamilton. This is not the way to treat people. It suggests that the Home Office is suffering a severe case of paranoia. I sincerely hope that its erroneous actions will be overturned in a timely manner.

    Helen Hargest
    Former Archive and Imaging Coordinator at tShakespeare Birthplace Trust

    Like

  47. Tom Deveson says:

    Please add my name.

    Tom Deveson
    teacher and director of Shakespeare in London schools

    Like

  48. Janne carter says:

    I am just a plain old nobody but I hate this. He should be treated with scholarly respect. He has earned it. He surely is much more of an asset than most immigrants. He is not even an immigrant he is a welcome visitor on long stay

    Like

  49. kirkmc says:

    As a foreigner living near Stratford-Upon-Avon, and a fan of everything the Shakespeare Institute does, I would like to also add my name to the list of those outraged by this.

    Like

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