Prosiectau fesul blwyddyn
Crynodeb
This article interrogates the European biometric ID system and securitisation measures in West African borders which have become detrimental to, first, African migrants and, second, both African and European security objectives. Using the Niger’s experience, we demonstrate how migrants’ identity problems as well as their atomisation and loosening of their social integration are directly linked to the criminalising and dehumanising border security practices they now face. This article reveals the multiple forms and effects of the unimpeded European biometric/digital control over African territorial borderlands and (im)mobilities. First is the subversion of African states’ administrative, decisional, sovereign and territorial prerogatives by way of enacting digital territorial borderscapes that enforce migrants’ identity de(re)construction. Second, the use of ‘biometric power’ to facilitate a specific modality of neoliberal biometric power relations which perpetuates global inequalities in biometric identification and (im)mobility governance. Lastly, migrants’ recourse to agentic mechanisms to contest the European biometric ID system, via discoveries and implantation of parallel border routes.
Iaith wreiddiol | Saesneg |
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Cyfnodolyn | Alternatives |
Dyddiad ar-lein cynnar | 25 Medi 2024 |
Dynodwyr Gwrthrych Digidol (DOIs) | |
Statws | E-gyhoeddi cyn argraffu - 25 Medi 2024 |
Ôl bys
Gweld gwybodaeth am bynciau ymchwil 'European Biometric Border System, Securitization and (Im)mobilities in West Africa'. Gyda’i gilydd, maen nhw’n ffurfio ôl bys unigryw.Prosiectau
- 1 Wedi Gorffen
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Visiting Fellowship: European Externalization Policies and Biometric ID Cooperation in West Africa
Iwuoha, V. C. (Prif Ymchwilydd) & Stullerova, K. (Prif Ymchwilydd)
01 Maw 2023 → 31 Hyd 2023
Prosiect: Ymchwil a ariannwyd yn allanol