Publication | Closed Access
When the exception becomes the rule: borders, sovereignty, and citizenship
258
Citations
42
References
2008
Year
Human MigrationCross-border CrimeNationalismColonialismBorder StudiesLawSocial SciencesCross-border ChallengeState BorderMigration PolicyGeopoliticsInternational RuleInternational RelationsBorder ControlInternational LawHuman Rights LawUnique Political SpacePolitical GeographyTransnational MobilityPolitical SciencePermanent State
Borders are a unique political space, in which both sovereignty and citizenship are performed by individuals and sovereigns. Using the work of Agamben and Foucault, this article examines how decisions made at the border alienate each and every traveler crossing the frontier, not simply the ‘sans papiers’ or refugees. The governmentality at play in the border examination relies on an embedded confessionary complex and the ‘neurotic citizen’, as well as structures of identity, documentation, and data management. The state border is a permanent state of exception that clearly demonstrates the importance of biopolitics to the smooth operation of sovereign power.
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