Publication | Open Access
The politics of big borders: Data (in)justice and the governance of refugees
79
Citations
28
References
2019
Year
Human MigrationEngineeringBorder StudiesLawSocial SciencesEuropean Border ControlMigration (Business Information Systems)Forced MigrationRefugee StatusData GovernanceRefugee StudiesData ManagementMigration PolicyGeopoliticsPublic PolicyBig BordersInternational RelationsBorder ControlMigration (Educational Migration)International LawPolitical GeographyEuropean Border RegimesData SovereigntyRefugee PopulationsPolitical ScienceRefugee MovementSocial Justice
This article provides an overview of the collection and uses of data in relation to European border regimes. We analyse the significance of these developments for the governance of refugee populations and make the case that within the current policy context of European border control, data functions to systematically stigmatize, exclude and oppress ‘unwanted’ migrant populations through mechanisms of criminalisation, identification, and social sorting. This, we argue, highlights the need to engage with data politics in a way that considers both the politics in data as well as the politics of data, highlighting the agendas and interests that advance the implementation of these technologies, privileging justice concerns on terms that go beyond techno-legal solutions, and positioning those who are most impacted by developments at the forefront of discussions.
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