1. From Borderline to Borderland: The Changing European Border Regime
- Author
-
Henrik Lebuhn, Gene Ray, and Markus Euskirchen
- Subjects
History ,Sociology and Political Science ,Member states ,Refugee ,Geography, Planning and Development ,North africa ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Gender Studies ,Politics ,Political economy ,Economic history ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,Residence ,European union ,media_common - Abstract
All along the European border, the year 2006 set new records: Spanish authorities reported 6,000 refugees dead, drowned in the Atlantic Ocean while trying to reach the Canary Islands, off West Africa.1 Hundreds more suffocated in containers, trucks, and cargo boats in the ports of London, Dublin, and Rotterdam, or froze to death in Eastern Europe. Others, locked up in one of the innumerable internment camps spread all over the heart of Europe and North Africa, desperately decided to end their own lives.2 At the same time, Europe reported the lowest rate in years of refugees officially seeking asylum. This list obviously doesn't point to a more peaceful world. What it indicates instead is that in Europe the criteria and procedures for securing legal refugee status have become so restrictive that most migrants no longer bother to apply for it. In 2006, Germany for example counted only 20,000 petitions for political asylum, the lowest number since 1977. If we include the member states of the European Union (EU), that number rises to 200,000.3 However, the real story of the border regime, and its constriction of the category for legal entrance and residence, is in the rising body countThis article can also be found at the Monthly Review website, where most recent articles are published in full.Click here to purchase a PDF version of this article at the Monthly Review website.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF