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Impact Factor:1.443 | Ranking:International Relations 20 out of 86
Source:2016 Release of Journal Citation Reports with Source: 2015 Web of Science Data

Hardwiring the frontier? The politics of security technology in Europe’s ‘fight against illegal migration’

  1. Ruben Andersson
    1. London School of Economics and Political Science, UK
  1. Ruben Andersson, LSE, 50 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, Houghton Street, London WC2A 2AE, UK. Email: r.andersson{at}lse.ac.uk

Abstract

Migration controls at the external EU borders have become a large field of political and financial investment in recent years – indeed, an ‘industry’ of sorts – yet conflicts between states and border agencies still mar attempts at cooperation. This article takes a close look at one way in which officials try to overcome such conflicts: through technology. In West Africa, the secure ‘Seahorse’ network hardwires border cooperation into a satellite system connecting African and European forces. In Spain’s North African enclaves of Ceuta and Melilla, advanced border fencing has joined up actors around a supposedly impenetrable divide. And on the EU level, the ‘European external border surveillance system’, or Eurosur, papers over power struggles between agencies and states through ‘decentralized’ information-sharing – even as the system’s physical features (nodes, coordination centres, interfaces) deepen competition between them. The article shows how such technologies, rather than ‘halting migration’, have above all acted as catalysts for new social relations among disparate sectors, creating areas for collaboration and competition, compliance and conflict. With these dynamics in mind, the conclusion sketches an ‘ecological’ perspective on the materialities of border control – infrastructure, interfaces, vehicles – while calling for more research on their contradictory and often counterproductive consequences.

Article Notes

  • Funding This work was supported by an AXA Research Fund Postdoctoral Research Fellowship at LSE (2014-15), and by an earlier UK Economic and Social Research Council PhD Studentship (award number ES/G01793X//1). The research has developed in close interaction with the European Research Council-funded Security in Transition programme (sponsor reference 269441) at LSE’s Civil Society and Human Security Research Unit. The views expressed in the article are my own, not those of the funders.

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This Article

  1. Security Dialogue vol. 47 no. 1 22-39
    All Versions of this Article:
    1. current version image indicatorVersion of Record - Jan 26, 2016
    2. OnlineFirst Version of Record - Oct 19, 2015
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