46,870 results on '"Border security"'
Search Results
2. The Pros and Cons of Reform Immigration.
- Subjects
- *
IMMIGRATION reform , *BORDER security , *POLITICIANS - Abstract
The article focuses on the viewpoints of several politicians regarding immigration reform and border security, particularly at the U.S. Southern border. It presents perspectives from Senators John Cornyn, Mike Lee, and Dick Durbin, as well as Representative Elissa Slotkin, highlighting their arguments, proposals, and criticisms regarding current policies and potential legislative measures to address the immigration crisis.
- Published
- 2024
3. СИСТЕМА КРИМІНАЛЬНИХ ПРАВОПОРУШЕНЬ, ЩО ПОВ'ЯЗАНІ З ПЕРЕТИНАННЯМ ДЕРЖАВНОГО КОРДОНУ УКРАЇНИ НЕЗАКОННИМ СПОСОБОМ ТА/АБО ЗІ ЗЛОЧИННОЮ МЕТОЮ
- Author
-
І. Є., Харченко
- Subjects
CRIME ,BORDER crossing ,BORDER security ,LAW enforcement ,CRIMINAL law ,TERRORIST organizations - Abstract
The article highlights an attempt to define the system of criminal offenses related to crossing the State border of Ukraine in an illegal manner and/or for a criminal purpose. It is proved that criminal offenses under Articles 332, 332-1, 332-2, 333, 334 of Section XIV of the Special Part of the Criminal Code of Ukraine encroach not only on the inviolability of the state borders of Ukraine, but also on border security, which is a component of Ukraine's national security. The author establishes the difference between crossing the State border of Ukraine, transportation of goods across the State border of Ukraine and transportation of persons across the State border of Ukraine. Based on this comparison, it is determined that crossing the State border of Ukraine in an illegal manner and/or for a criminal purpose is characterized by the physical movement of a person across the State border of Ukraine without the purpose of moving a certain product or other object. In addition, unlike illegal transportation of persons across the state border of Ukraine, crossing this border in an illegal manner and/or for a criminal purpose is characterized by the direct physical movement of a person across the state border of Ukraine, which in itself is criminalized if carried out in an illegal manner and/or for a criminal purpose, while illegal transportation across the state border of Ukraine is characterized by such a property as indirectness, which is of paramount importance for criminal law enforcement of border security. The system of criminal offenses related to crossing the state border of Ukraine illegally and/or for criminal purposes should include terrorist financing in the form of providing, collecting or storing any assets directly or indirectly with the intent to use them or with the knowledge that they will be used in whole or in part for any purpose by an individual terrorist or terrorist group (organization) to cross the state border of Ukraine for terrorist purposes (Art. 258-5), crossing the state border of Ukraine for terrorist purposes (to carry out activities that are considered terrorist according to the law) (Art. 258-6), illegal crossing of the state border of Ukraine (Art. 332-2), violation of international flight rules (Art. 334) of the Criminal Code of Ukraine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The technopolitics of border security R&D: Shaping the EU's border in the Security Research Programme.
- Author
-
Binder, Clemens
- Subjects
- *
BORDER security , *RESEARCH & development projects , *RESEARCH & development , *POLICY sciences , *ARGUMENT - Abstract
Technologies are predominantly understood as 'solutions' for policy problems in EU border control. This has prompted increased political attention to research and development (R&D) of 'innovative' security technologies. The European Commission has continuously increased its spending on the development of security devices in the Security Research Programme; at the same time, border security institutions such as Frontex or eu-LISA have worked to amplify their influence on shaping security research in the EU's Research Framework Programmes. Against this backdrop, this article develops the argument that R&D is a political practice of 'making' and governing the border through its entanglement with the politics of border security in the EU. By conceptualizing R&D as 'borderwork', the article interrogates how practices of security R&D inscribes specific logics into EU border security and control. In doing this, it also problematizes how R&D locks in exclusionary dichotomies and categorizations of mobilities through privileging security actors in the process. Based on qualitative interviews, the article provides an in-depth analysis of political processes through which R&D programmes and projects materialize at policymaking, implementing and operational levels. Through this, the article explores comprehensively how political logics of bordering are constantly shaping and simultaneously renegotiated in R&D. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Migration Securitisation and National Security in the Regional Security Complex of Nigeria–Niger Borders.
- Author
-
Sowale, Adetayo Olamide
- Subjects
- *
EMIGRATION & immigration , *NATIONAL security , *BORDER security - Abstract
Previous studies have argued that the more-than-a-year border closure has failed to curb criminal activities across Nigeria–Niger Republic borders. This stems from the intractability of criminal activities across the borders of Nigeria and the Republic of Niger. As a result, the Nigerian government securities entry and exit of foreigners from the Republic of Niger to justify its land border closure policy of 2019. The government of Nigeria claimed that border closure would address myriads of security challenges emanating from its borders with the Republic of Niger. In contention, the study raised pertinent questions such as: Is securitisation the only framework to control migration? What role could the regional security complex theory play to diagnose, comprehend and proffer solutions to cross-border security problems between Nigeria and Niger? Is migration the real security problem that the Nigerian state needs to combat? How sustainable is border security through the securitisation of migration? With the aid of a secondary source of data, the study argues that dreadful human security implications of banditry, kidnapping and pastoral conflicts across the borders are the product of amity and enmity conditions of security interdependence between Nigeria and the Niger Republic as postulated by the regional security complex theory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Specialization or Diversification: Which is More Conducive to Foreign Trade Resilience? Evidence from China-Russia Border Regions in Northeast China.
- Author
-
Li, Yuxin, Zhang, Pingyu, Yang, Qifeng, and Chu, Nanchen
- Subjects
- *
INTERNATIONAL trade , *BORDERLANDS , *SPATIAL ability , *ECONOMIC security , *BORDER security - Abstract
Under the background of complex international situation, how to build the special geo-economic space of China-Russia border lies in strengthening their foreign trade resilience against external shocks. Based on empirical evidence from ten prefecture-level China-Russia border regions in Northeast China, this paper analyzed the spatiotemporal evolution of foreign trade resilience under different shocks. Furthermore, through the Panel Regression model, the mechanism of the industrial structure on the foreign trade resilience in contraction period and expansion period was discussed. The results showed that: 1) from 2004 to 2021, foreign trade in China-Russia border regions experienced five phases. The overall foreign trade resilience was higher than expected, showing a rising volatility trend, but there was significant spatial heterogeneity in the ability of cities to cope with shocks. 2) Highly specialized clusters were mainly concentrated in Yichun, Heihe and Da Hinggan Ling Prefecture, while Mudanjiang and Yanbian performed better in related and unrelated diversification. 3) In different stages of economic system evolution, the response mode, degree and result of border foreign trade resilience to regional industrial structure showed obvious stage characteristics. During the contraction period, related diversification was more conducive to improving the resistance through risk spillovers. During the expansion period, specialization played a more significant role in improving regional resilience through self-reinforcing effect. These results are beneficial for expanding the resilience theory, ensuring border economic security and optimizing border industrial investment layout. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Commodifying Passage: Ethnographic Insights into Migration, Markets, and Digital Mediation at the Darién Gap and Mexico–Guatemala Border.
- Author
-
Cruz-Piñeiro, Rodolfo, Hernández Hernández, Alberto, and Ibarra, Carlos S.
- Subjects
- *
MASS migrations , *DIGNITY , *CIVIL rights , *BORDER security , *DIGITAL technology - Abstract
This paper examines transit migration through the Darién Gap and the Mexico–Guatemala border, focusing on the commodification of migration, the transformative role of digital platforms, and the socio-economic impacts on local economies. Based on ethnographic fieldwork and in-depth interviews conducted from 2021 to 2023, we explore how migration has evolved into a commodified journey where services and safety are bought and sold, often exploiting migrants' vulnerabilities. We analyze how digital platforms have become essential tools for navigation and community building among migrants, yet also introduce new risks and inequalities. Our findings highlight the dual nature of local economic adaptations, which both capitalize on and are reshaped by the migratory flows, leading to significant economic and social transformations. The paper argues for a reevaluation of migration policies that integrates these elements and supports a migration governance framework that prioritizes human dignity and rights. Through exposing these dynamic and interlinked phenomena, we aim to contribute to a better understanding of migration that goes beyond traditional paradigms of border security and control, advocating for policies that are just, equitable, and respectful of human experiences and challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Trust at the border: identifying risk and assessing credibility on reality television.
- Author
-
SMITH‐KHAN, LAURA, PILLER, INGRID, and TORSH, HANNA
- Subjects
- *
CRITICAL discourse analysis , *AUTHORSHIP in literature , *TELEVISION programs , *CROSS-cultural communication , *BORDER security - Abstract
Every day, officers working at international airports investigate potential risks to state safety and security. But how do they decide who they can trust, and also ensure that the broader public trusts them to conduct this work? This article explores these questions through an examination of the reality television show Border Security: Australia's Front Line. Through critical discourse analysis of a collection of 108 televised airport encounters, we explore the aspects of communication, behaviour, and identity made salient in officers' evaluations of passengers' credibility and critically examine the assumptions underlying them. Further, we consider how power and role divisions are implicated in the construction of passenger and officer credibility, both within border encounters and in discourses about them. Our analysis makes a novel contribution to the literature on credibility assessments in intercultural communication, demonstrating how an institutional and social 'culture of disbelief' is constructed vis‐à‐vis certain groups through seemingly banal border work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The open borders debate, migration as settlement, and the right to travel.
- Author
-
Altundal, Ugur
- Subjects
BRAIN drain ,FREEDOM of movement ,BORDER security ,WELFARE state ,DUTY - Abstract
The philosophical debate on the freedom of movement focuses almost exclusively on long-term migration, what I call, migration as settlement. The normative justifications defending border controls assume that the movement of people across political borders, independent of its purpose and the length of stay, refers to migration as settlement. "Global mobility," "international movement," and "immigration" are oftenused interchangeably. However, global mobility also refers to the movements of people across international borders for a short length of time such as travel, short-term and circular migration. While most scholarly attention has focused on long-term migration, the vast majority of cross-border movement of people (approximately 85% of all cross-border movements in 2019) is short-term. The existing literature offers normative arguments for border controls, which are grounded on states' right to self-determination, the freedom of (dis)association, the welfare state, the duty to compatriots, and brain drain. In this paper, I argue that these arguments do not justify excluding travelers, short-term and circular migrants from the territory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Shadow of death: the criminal economy of banditry and kidnapping in northwest Nigeria.
- Author
-
Ojewale, Oluwole
- Subjects
LAW enforcement ,ROBBERY ,BORDER security ,SECURITY sector ,SECURITY personnel ,KIDNAPPING - Abstract
This study explores the phenomenon of banditry as a criminal enterprise in Nigeria. By employing qualitative and quantitative data, it provides a historical context for banditry and discusses kidnapping for ransom as its variant. The spatial distribution and patterns of kidnapping incidents are also highlighted. In response to this persistent challenge posed by banditry, the study notes the government and community members have implemented three distinct strategies. They are enhancing security and law enforcement, negotiations, and legislation. The limitations of these responses are also examined. The paper offers guidance on the necessary policy imperatives to effectively combat armed banditry through a multifaceted approach. It emphasizes that addressing the escalating incidents of kidnapping for ransom in the northwest region cannot be addressed independently from the broader need for reform within the security sector of the country. Strengthening border security, preventing the free flow of illicit firearms into the nation, and concerted effort focused on the recruitment, training, and deployment of adequately equipped security personnel to the border areas become pivotal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Polycentricity and Private-Led Governance of Natural Resources at the U.S.-Mexico Border.
- Author
-
Clark, Connor and Nyaupane, Gyan P.
- Subjects
- *
NATURAL resources , *SECONDARY analysis , *BORDER security , *GOVERNMENT agencies , *NONPROFIT organizations - Abstract
AbstractThis paper examines private-led, polycentric natural resource governance along the U.S.-Mexico border. The guiding question of this research is: how can natural resources be effectively governed by private actors across an international border fraught with intense border security? The study employs inductive research methods, including in-depth interviews, focus groups, observations, and secondary data analysis as part of a multiple case study. The study engages 45 conservation and other related stakeholders, including state and federal agencies, nonprofits, tourism businesses, tourists, ranchers, and residents. This research reveals polycentric characteristics of governance that serve as essential mechanisms for successful cross-border governance: community empowerment, trust, and adaptability; vertical and horizontal linkage fortification; synergistic partnerships; and government initiative. By analyzing three cases of private-led, polycentric governance, this study contributes to governance literature through introducing a model illustrating how cross-border governance of natural resources can be bolstered through multi-scalar, multi-sectoral, cross-border collaboration between governments, nonprofits, and resource users. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. China –India border disputes: an analytical analysis of Doklam standoff to Tawang clash.
- Author
-
Bharti, Mukesh Shankar
- Subjects
- *
CHINA-India relations , *VISITS of state , *BORDER security , *ARMED Forces , *GEOPOLITICS , *BOUNDARY disputes - Abstract
This study aims to explore the border disputes between China and India, focusing on the period following the 2017 Doklam standoff up to the 2020 Galwan Valley clash. The objective is to understand the nature of these disputes, the causes of escalating tensions, and the broader implications for regional stability and bilateral relations. This article broadly highlights the Doklam standoff with that of the Tawang clashes between the Indian and Chinese armed forces. Further, this research empirically examines the Line of Actual Control (LAC) is a demarcation line that separates both the countries which control territory in the China–India border dispute. As a result, before the start of the Doklam standoff in 2017, China and India had been involved in cementing a bilateral partnership through trade and economy. Since PM Modi came into power in 2014 made a state visit to China and Chinese President Xi Jinping also made a state visit to India. Meanwhile, China and India had started construction in front of the LAC and even China had established a small range of several colonies around border. This has provoked and plunged India into deeper anxiety, on the other hand, New Delhi launched several border management programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. ПРАВОВЕ РЕГУЛЮВАННЯ НАДАННЯ ПРИТУЛКУ ТА ЗАБЕЗПЕЧЕННЯ ПРАВ БІЖЕНЦІВ В ЄВРОПЕЙСЬКОМУ СОЮЗІ.
- Author
-
Я. В., Фенич and П. В., Малеш
- Subjects
RUSSIAN invasion of Ukraine, 2022- ,REFUGEES ,HUMAN rights violations ,TEMPORARY protection of refugees ,BORDER security ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,DIGNITY - Abstract
The article is devoted to the study of the legal regulation of the asylum granting and ensuring of the refugees’ rights in the European Union. Within the framework of the article, the legal basis of the Common European Asylum System functioning, the creation of which is laid down in the constituent treaties of the European Union, is investigated. In particular, it is determined that the purpose of such a common system is to establish unified standards for determining the criteria for admissibility of applications for asylum or international protection, a similar procedure for considering such applications and the grounds for refusing or suspending the status of a refugee or a person seeking temporary protection, as well as determining the state, responsible for providing asylum, uniform standards for ensuring the rights of refugees, as well as common principles of cooperation between the Member States and partner states that are not members of the Union. The key provisions of the Directive on qualification criteria, on the procedure for granting asylum and international protection, on the conditions of reception and rights of refugees, as well as the Dublin Regulation and the Eurodac Regulation were analyzed. The authors put an emphasis on the fact that because of the full-scale invasion and emergence of the war on the territory of Ukraine, significant changes were made to the process and procedures for granting refugee status and providing asylum within the framework of the legislation of the European Union. The latest Pact on Migration and Asylum was analyzed, especially regarding changes in ensuring border security, quick and effective procedures for considering and obtaining the status of a refugee or a person seeking international protection, solidarity and responsibility among countries that are obliged to provide asylum, as well as strengthening international cooperation in the field of migration. The authors express their support for those concerns regarding alleged violations that may occur after the entry into force of the Pact, in connection with the threat of violations of fundamental human rights. It was concluded that ensuring dignity and respect for human rights is a priority, considering that refugees are recognized as persons who have already suffered violations and were forced to leave their homes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The Discretionary Power of Street‐Level Bureaucrats From the Perspective of Illusio.
- Author
-
Crosby, Andrew
- Subjects
- *
IMMIGRATION detention centers , *POWER (Social sciences) , *SOCIAL services , *SOCIAL control , *BORDER security , *BUREAUCRACY - Abstract
ABSTRACT Interrogating the tension between care and control in the work of social services staff in Belgian immigration detention centres, this article sheds light on the uses of discretion from the perspective of Bourdieu's concept of illusio. I argue that social services staff's use of discretionary power must be understood at the crossroads of their belief in their professional ethos and the power relations within these centres, which enabled them to frame the element of control as something they had to deal with professionally, rather than something to which they contributed. This sheds light on both the uses of discretion as well as on the articulation of care and control in border humanitarianism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Regulating mobility through detention: Understanding the new geography of control and containment at the Southern European border.
- Author
-
Campesi, Giuseppe
- Subjects
- *
EMIGRATION & immigration , *BORDER security , *ASYLUMS (Institutions) , *GEOPOLITICS - Abstract
The aim of this article is to describe the evolution of immigration detention policies at the Southern European border. This will be done by presenting original data on the actual functioning of immigration detention in Italy in the wake of the so-called "refugee crisis". By shedding light on these developments, the article reveals a notable convergence of first reception and return policies, which in turn is driving a transformation of the landscape of immigration detention leading to a proliferation of detention regimes and spaces of containment. Drawing on the literature on carceral geographies, this development is analyzed within the framework of Italy's distinct role in the geopolitics of EU border control policies. The article ultimately suggests that the immigration detention system has gradually been co-opted by the border control infrastructure, becoming part of a broader and intricate control assemblage whose essential function is the regulation of human mobility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Evaluation of Green Strategies for Prolonging the Lifespan of Linear Wireless Sensor Networks.
- Author
-
Nkemeni, Valery, Mieyeville, Fabien, Kuaban, Godlove Suila, Czekalski, Piotr, Tokarz, Krzysztof, Nsanyuy, Wirnkar Basil, Deussom Djomadji, Eric Michel, Katche, Musong L., Tsafack, Pierre, and Zieliński, Bartłomiej
- Subjects
- *
WIRELESS sensor networks , *ENERGY harvesting , *ENERGY conservation , *BORDER security , *SUSTAINABLE design - Abstract
Battery-powered sensor nodes encounter substantial energy constraints, especially in linear wireless sensor network (LWSN) applications like border surveillance and road, bridge, railway, powerline, and pipeline monitoring, where inaccessible locations exacerbate battery replacement challenges. Addressing these issues is crucial for extending a network's lifetime and reducing operational costs. This paper presents a comprehensive analysis of the factors affecting WSN energy consumption at the node and network levels, alongside effective energy management strategies for prolonging the WSN's lifetime. By categorizing existing strategies into node energy reduction, network energy balancing, and energy replenishment, this study assesses their effectiveness when implemented in LWSN applications, providing valuable insights to assist engineers during the design of green and energy-efficient LWSN monitoring systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Rhetorics of white preservation: racial violence and the Johnson–Reed Act.
- Author
-
Gomez, Logan Rae and Torres, Mikayla
- Subjects
- *
RHETORIC , *BORDER security , *WHITE supremacy , *VIOLENCE ,UNITED States. Immigration Act of 1924 ,RACE relations in the United States - Abstract
In this essay, we suggest that the historical legacies of the 1924 Johnson–Reed Act and U.S. Border Patrol highlight the centrality of race and racialization. To do so, we briefly revisit moments of racialized rhetoric from the Johnson–Reed Act as influential in the creation (and violence) of the U.S. Border Patrol. The 100-year-old legacies of the 1924 Johnson–Reed Act, we argue, provide a lens through which we might view the current moment of racialized border violence as emergent from white supremacist ideologies historically connected to racial capitalism in the U.S. Lastly, we suggest that scholars of race and rhetoric ought to attend to racialized violence within its historical continuities in the current rhetoric of the border "crisis." [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. EU sectoral integration in the Eastern Neighbourhood: the case of Frontex-Moldova relations in border management.
- Author
-
Gazsi, David
- Subjects
- *
EUROPEAN integration , *BORDER security , *NEIGHBORHOODS , *EUROPEANIZATION , *EMPIRICAL research , *COOPERATION - Abstract
The article explores EU sectoral integration in the Eastern Neighbourhood. It shows that extant approaches to explaining EU meso-level engagement with third countries – differentiated integration and functional cooperation – fall short of capturing all dynamics at play. Drawing on the literature of 'Europeanisation,' it develops a novel conceptual framework for the study of EU sectoral integration entailing four avenues – rules, institutions, practices and knowledge – and two features – local ownership and cross-fertilisation. Through an in-depth empirical study of Frontex-Moldova relations, the article demonstrates that engagement in border management remains below the threshold of differentiated integration by precluding institutional inclusion but reaches beyond functional cooperation through combining integration concerning practices and knowledge. Furthermore, unlike differentiated integration, it allows for local ownership, and contrary to functional cooperation, it enables cross-fertilisation, even if these features are absent from the macro-level cooperation context. Thus, the article contributes to the refinement of the theoretical framework of European integration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. European Union border technology in Africa: Experiences en route.
- Author
-
Uzomah, Ngozi Louis
- Subjects
BORDERLANDS ,BORDER security ,POPULATION geography ,MASS migrations ,IMMIGRATION enforcement - Abstract
The EU externalisation policy on border management and migration control in Africa has increasingly relied on the use of technology in recent times. This paper examines how these technological interventions for border governance in Africa infringe on migrants' rights and mobility patterns. Exploring the effect of deployment of Migration Information Data Analysis System in Nigeria, risk analysis cells in Niger and biometric registration of migrants in Mauritania, the study finds infringements on the migration pattern of the people. The biometric exercise in Mauritania hampers the northward movement of mainly male migrants, aged between 18 and 46, who are mostly from Senegal, Gambia, Nigeria, Guinea Conakry and Mali. Data collected from these migrants, are shared on EU digital platforms, between IOM, Europol and FRONTEX, and can be used to facilitate their deportation as they approach Europe's border space. While emphasising the significance of this work on the geography of population movement, this paper argues that the use of EU‐funded technological projects for border management infringes on the historical cross‐border mobility in North and West Africa which is essential for socioeconomic exchanges and escaping conflicts. It highlights these restrictive practices as mirroring the hegemonic relationship between Europe and Africa that reinforces colonial‐era violence at Africa's border space. The paper draws from non‐participatory observation, instant interactions and 78 semi‐structured interviews conducted with migrants, cross‐border traders, government officials, civil society organisations, motorists, residents and the media along two major migration routes: between Nigeria and Niger and between Mauritania and Western Sahara (Morocco). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. DETERMINANTS INFLUENCING MADEIRA ISLAND'S SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT POLICIES AS AN ECO-TOURISM DESTINATION: AN EMPIRICAL STUDY.
- Author
-
Manuel Vicente, José
- Subjects
TOURIST attractions ,TOURISM ,ECOTOURISM ,BORDER security ,TOURISM management ,SUSTAINABLE tourism - Abstract
Copyright of International Journal of Professional Business Review (JPBReview) is the property of Open Access Publications LLC and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The Spectacle of Invisibility: Vanishing Points and the Spatialised Legal Violence of the UK’s Expanding Quasi-Carceral Geography of Immigration Control.
- Author
-
Conlon, Deirdre
- Subjects
- *
IMMIGRATION enforcement , *UNDOCUMENTED immigrants , *BORDER security , *INVISIBILITY , *IMMIGRANTS - Abstract
Increasingly, irregularized migrants are pushed to rely on more and more clandestine means in attempts to reach so-called safe havens in Europe and elsewhere. Often, these actions are necessitated by governments instituting ever-more hostile and violent mechanisms of immigration control. Taking as its focus key developments in the UK’s morphing and expanding ‘quasi-carceral geography’ of immigration control, this paper considers some of these developments alongside Derek Gregory’s incisive essay titled analysis of ‘vanishing points’. The paper examines how the spectacular and invisible are instrumentalized simultaneously to produce spatialised legal vanishing points in the UK and beyond by scrutinising three distinct yet interconnected sites where vanishing points materialise, each successively more proximate to UK geographical terrain. Specifically, I examine the multi-scalar legal contestations that surrounded the UK-Rwanda Agreement; the invisibility and tactical ambiguities of juxtaposed border controls in Northern France; and the downgrading of rights, responsibilities, and accountability in amended rules for the accommodation of irregular migrant arrivals, focusing on the former military barracks of Manston, Kent, UK. Drawing on Gregory’s analysis as a framework, the paper traces the significance not only of law’s presence or suspension but also its application, morphing, and contestation within these sites – and more generally – for the emergence and functioning of a continuum of extra-territorial, ambiguous, discretionary, violent spaces where possibilities for sanctuary, safe haven, or security are continually deferred or denied amidst the spectacular invisibility and persistent spatialised legal vanishing points. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Anxieties about a Porous Border: Australian Government Responses to Melanesian ‘Boat People’.
- Author
-
Neumann, Klaus and Taylor, Savitri
- Subjects
- *
BORDER security , *POLITICAL refugees , *ANXIETY , *STRAITS , *OCEAN - Abstract
Starting in 1969, small groups of West Papuans have occasionally crossed the Torres Strait to Australia and sought its protection. In public discourse, these arrivals have figured as part of a narrative about Australia’s relationship with Indonesia. By contrast, in the public discourse about border control, which focuses on attempted travel across the Indian Ocean and distinct ‘waves’, they have been treated as a footnote, at most. In this article, we closely examine the Australian government’s response to West Papuan ‘boat people’ over time to demonstrate that, unlike in public discourse, border control considerations have loomed large in the government’s response. We argue that, in order to understand Australia’s approach to border control, we should see West Papuan asylum seekers in the context of border control policy and not only as a problem in Australia’s relationship with Indonesia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. MIGRACIONES: NORMATIVAS, POLÍTICAS Y NARRATIVAS.
- Author
-
MORENO MOLINERO, MARÍA JOSÉ
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL reality , *POLICY discourse , *BORDER security , *HUMAN rights , *IMMIGRANTS , *DIGNITY - Abstract
Human mobility is not a conjunctural element, it is part of the construction of a society and it will go through different phases throughout its history. Faced with this social reality, the narratives that are constructed and that seem to be imposed tend, ignoring data, to criminalise migrants, supporting restrictive regulations and policies based on security and the externalisation of borders. The challenge lies in dismantling these narratives and favouring discourses and policies based on human rights that emphasise the dignity of the person. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
24. UCRANIA, DOS AÑOS DE APLICACIÓN DE LA PROTECCIÓN TEMPORAL.
- Author
-
ROJO HERRERO, FRANCISCO JOSÉ
- Subjects
- *
RUSSIAN invasion of Ukraine, 2022- , *WORLD War II , *BORDER security , *RESTRAINING orders , *BEST practices - Abstract
The Russian invasion of Ukraine has generated the largest crisis of displaced persons since the Second World War. In order to respond to the protection needs of these people, the EU activated the application of Temporary Protection, which has made it possible to guarantee rights such as access to work, education, health, shelter and maintenance to these people in a short period of time. Spain has been one of the main receiving countries and has implemented temporary protection in a more effective way. Parallel to the temporary application, the EU has been updating its common migration and asylum policy with the approval of the European Pact on Migration and Asylum. This pact has not included the good practices developed during the implementation of temporary protection, focusing on border control. Spain should maintain the positive aspects that have been developed in the application of temporary protection in the elaboration of the national plan for the implementation of the Pact. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
25. Cross‐border university choice in China's Greater Bay Area.
- Author
-
Xie, Xiujuan, Li, Danling, and Jung, Jisun
- Subjects
- *
BORDER security , *CHINESE students , *GLOBAL studies , *POLICY sciences , *HIGHER education - Abstract
This study explored Chinese students' motivations for selecting a cross‐border university in China's Guangdong‐Hong Kong‐Macau Greater Bay Area (GBA) and how they perceive their undergraduate experiences. The GBA was developed as an international economic cluster in China. Despite the vitality of the GBA's international education sector, few studies have focused on individual students' perspectives on cross‐border higher education choices and experiences. We interviewed twenty students and two academics in charge of university admissions about their opinions and reflections concerning a GBA cross‐border university. Students' university choices were linked to different admission profiles, parental influences, institutional features and interactions between students and the institutions. Our study has significant implications for leaders and policymakers in higher education seeking to attract talented university students, improve enrolment and promote students' learning experiences in cross‐border higher education institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Streamlining the ethical-legal governance of cross-border health data sharing during global health emergencies.
- Author
-
Andanda, Pamela and Mlotshwa, Langelihle
- Subjects
- *
INFORMATION sharing , *VALUES (Ethics) , *WORLD health , *BORDER security , *RESEARCH personnel , *SHARING - Abstract
Global health emergencies often lead to a proliferation of health-related research and resultant data, which is shared across borders to help control the outbreak of disease and support decision-making regarding public health interventions. However, efforts to share data can be hindered by diverse international ethical and legal frameworks. The frameworks aim to govern coordinated processing, sharing and transfer of health data across borders thus placing burdens on researchers who are willing or obligated to share data. In this paper, we investigate ethical values and legal principles that can be applied to ensure a more streamlined approach in the governance of cross-border health data sharing during global health emergencies. A scoping review approach was used to better understand emerging evidence about issues related to the ethical and legal governance of cross-border health data sharing. We first highlight the challenges of sharing health data across borders. We then discuss how the challenges might be overcome through the application of ethical values and legal principles that have been identified in literature. This is followed by a proposal for possible ways of streamlining the governance of health data sharing from ethical and legal perspectives in a bid to better prepare for future global health emergencies and promote the responsible sharing of health data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The impact of Brexit on supply chain cost and Ro-Ro traffic at Dover.
- Author
-
Ke, Luqi, Liu, Qing, Han, Ke, and Zhang, Weibing
- Subjects
- *
CONTAINER terminals , *SUPPLY chains , *BORDER security , *BRITISH withdrawal from the European Union, 2016-2020 , *SIMULATION methods & models - Abstract
This study analyzes the potential impact of Brexit on port congestion and supply chain cost using the example of the largest European Ro-Ro port of Dover. A microscopic simulation model is constructed to replicate traffic conditions and analyse different scenarios. The results show that the current port infrastructure will have difficulties facing the challenges that Brexit could have brought. Checkpoints for border controls are found to be the primary bottleneck. Three types of countermeasures are discussed and found that none of the single measures is sufficient. However, the combination of two additional border checking booths and 10% traffic reduction is the most realistic and effective solution to contain the congestion. The case study shows the company's supply chain costs would increase by around 7% to 20% in different scenarios. The largest increase comes from annual shipping cost, which accounts for 94% of the total supply chain costs. Alternative transportation options are discussed. It is found that the Port of Dover remains the preferred Ro-Ro port, but the Lo-Lo container port of Southampton will become a better solution for cargoes with modest unit value. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Entangled Vulnerabilities: Gendered and Racialised Bodies and Borders in EU External Border Security.
- Author
-
Sachseder, Julia, Stachowitsch, Saskia, and Standke-Erdmann, Madita
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL geography , *COASTAL surveillance , *BORDER security , *BORDER crossing , *HUMAN rights - Abstract
The notion of vulnerability is gaining traction in EU border protection. On the one hand, the concept refers to vulnerable migrants and their affectedness by insecurity and violence. On the other, it indicates the susceptibility of borders to irregular crossings and cross-border crime. Both forms of vulnerability are assessed through dedicated procedures under the umbrella of the European Border and Coast Guard Agency Frontex. To make sense of these seemingly contradictory conceptual and practical uses of vulnerability, we draw on feminist postcolonial scholarship in security studies and political geography. We argue that a shared colonial matrix of gendered and racialised meanings and problematisations enables analogies between borders and bodies as (un-)deserving of protection. In a discourse-theoretical analysis of Frontex documents, we show how the ambiguous use of vulnerability legitimises the EU border regime and its security practices by constructing EU bordering as neutral and objective and EU borders as objects of care. We conclude that vulnerability becomes increasingly important for normalising the EU's violent borders in the context of the EU's broader claims to liberal values of freedom, protection, and human rights. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Digitalising Asylum Procedures: The Legitimisation of Smartphone Data Extraction for Retrospective Border Control.
- Author
-
Josipovic, Ivan
- Subjects
- *
CRITICAL discourse analysis , *BORDER security , *DATA extraction , *SOCIAL injustice , *PERSONALLY identifiable information - Abstract
The smartification and digitalisation of border controls in Europe has been widely associated with the expansion and interoperation of databases like EURODAC, SIS, or VIS. This article examines the legitimisation of a new instrument of dataveillance for retrospective border control, namely smartphone data extraction in asylum governance. In particular, it asks how smartphone examinations could become a legitimate policy instrument in asylum procedures in the Central European region of Germany, Austria and Switzerland. Applying Critical Discourse Analysis to policy documents, including parliamentary protocols, laws, public commentaries and implementation documents, it argues that the introduction of smartphone data extraction against concerns over privacy and social injustice was based on moralising securitisation strategies as well as techno-solutionist rationalisations. Overall, the (re-)appropriation of personal digital data in the service of border control displays established characteristics of a governmentality of unease but also distinctly Big Data-related legitimisation patterns linked to data/meta-data differentiations and machine-based readouts. The case study raises questions about the implications of using personal digital data for a liberal democratic governance of borders and about its capacity to become an acceptable geopolitical tool for identification and return procedures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. 'They must know their rights'– reflecting on privacy, informed consent and the digital agency of asylum seekers and refugees in border contexts.
- Author
-
Lintner, Claudia
- Subjects
- *
RIGHT of asylum , *POLITICAL refugees , *BIOMETRIC identification , *BORDER security ,EUROPEAN law - Abstract
The article questions digital agency as a subjective experience of refugees when crossing Europe's external and internal borders. More concretely, the article asks how refugees experience digital agency, and how this concrete experience is constituted in specific border practices. In doing so, it examines the contradictions that arise between European laws and human rights in the context of border practices. The analysis of the data of this paper reflects two important components of digital agency: the sense of ownership and control of one's body and actions, and the capacity to think independently and thus make considered choices. This study is based on a qualitative research approach based on narrative interviews. The data was imported to MAXQDA, a software package that allows data to be efficiently collected, organised, analysed and visualised electronically. The article shows how refugees and asylum seekers, when crossing the border to Europe, do not simply enter another country, but a (powerful) institutional system. In having their biometric and digital data collected, they are confronted with several practices of border and risk management that have become routinised and thus 'normalised' on an institutional level. Thus, their digital agency must be understood as precarious, underscored by an installed coercive environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Powering bikeshare in New York City: does the usage of e-bikes differ from regular bikes?
- Author
-
Xie, Yingning, Smart, Michael, and Noland, Robert B.
- Subjects
- *
DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics , *AUTOREGRESSIVE models , *LAND use , *BORDER security , *BICYCLES , *ELECTRIC bicycles - Abstract
In this study, we investigate the difference between shared electric bicycles (e-bikes) and conventional shared bikes operated by Citi Bike in New York City. We examine differences in usage by examining summary statistics and we develop conditional autoregressive models to examine differences in factors associated with trip generation. These factors include bike infrastructure, subway proximity, area demographics, land use, and elevation. We also control for border effects by identifying peripheral stations. The percentage of e-bike trips fluctuates across hours of the day, with a peak around 3 PM but diminishes during peak commuting hours. We find mostly no significant differences in factors associated with the generation of trips between the two modes. Exceptions include a larger effect on e-bike trip generation when the daytime worker population is larger; other differences are due to the racial composition around the station area, some land use categories, and elevation differentials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Administrative control mechanisms in the descent-based family reunification of refugees.
- Author
-
Fattorelli, Elena
- Subjects
- *
FAMILY reunification , *REFUGEE families , *REFUGEE children , *WINDBREAKS, shelterbelts, etc. , *BORDER security , *PARENTS - Abstract
Since it establishes differentiated socio-legal eligibility categories among different migrant groups, family reunification constitutes a prime example of the internal border. In my article, I investigate how the border is produced and negotiated in the context of family reunification of refugee children and parents by focusing on discretionary practices of German immigration bureaucracy through the lens of counselling actors in the city. Taking the city of Frankfurt am Main as my research site, I identify ignorance, verification, and temporalization as three administrative control mechanisms over descent-based refugee families. I argue that family reunification constitutes a highly selective and culturalized field of border control, in which refugee families are filtered according to their conformity to a certain family norm and European bureaucratic standards. By examining how counselling actors understand administrative practice, I also discuss how they respond to it, including their own participation in de- and (re-)bordering. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. WHAT CONGRESS NEEDS TO BREAK THE IMMIGRATION REFORM STALEMATE.
- Author
-
Stevenson, Maryam T.
- Subjects
IMMIGRATION reform ,IMMIGRATION policy ,BIPARTISANSHIP ,BORDER security ,POLITICAL elites - Abstract
This article provides a policy proposal for an immigration reform package that could be successful in the modern-day Congress. It is the second article of a series that began with an analysis of why immigration reform has been unsuccessful over the past thirty years despite bipartisan support. That article argued that polarization combined with the framing of immigration by the media and political elites has caused the public to view immigration as a onedimensional policy largely defined by border concerns, when in reality, it is a robust policy area that encompasses a number of various issues (i.e. family immigration, skilled and unskilled workers, entrepreneurs, asylum, border control, etc.). This successive article offers a policy proposal that could eclipse those concerns and provides a path forward for Congress and policy elites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
34. Resurgence of TTP in Pakistan: Implications for Peace and Security in Southern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
- Author
-
Ahmad, Sohail, Khan, Robina, and Abbas, Zafar
- Subjects
NATIONAL security ,BORDER security ,COUNTERINSURGENCY ,PEACE ,TERRORISM ,COUNTERTERRORISM - Abstract
This article investigates the significant implications for peace and security in the southern region of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), Pakistan, of the resurgence of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP). The paper endeavors to analyze the factors that contributed to the TTP's resurgence to elucidate the intricate dynamics that facilitated its acquisition of power, despite prior counterinsurgency efforts. This paper employed a qualitative philosophybased explanatory approach. This study provides the root causes and hurdles behind the positive peace and security in Southern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. We find that core ideological tenets and intricate organizational frameworks are indispensable for the development of effective counterterrorism policies and the promotion of enduring stability in regions affected by terrorism. This study suggests enhancing intelligence cooperation between national and regional security agencies and enhancing control over borders, especially from the Afghanistan side. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Sərhədşünaslıq elmi və onun konseptual stadiyası.
- Author
-
Mehmanoğlu, Orxan
- Subjects
ARMED Forces ,STATE formation ,SOVEREIGNTY ,BORDER security ,CIVIL society - Abstract
In the article, the necessity of the Armed Forces metamodel was analyzed on the criteria of the centralization of the sovereign state and the formation of a democratic civil society. The security of the border against the background of army building, including having a sacred meaning, has been proven with references and analyzed from a scientific-philosophical as well as a theological point of view. İn the article, the values of the border model in terms of an abstract approach, the importance of the democratic state and society in the prism of the multi-centered concept are elaborated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Total boundary dominating set in graphs.
- Author
-
Murugan, G. Palani, Angaleeswari, K., Sundareswaran, R., and Swaminathan, V.
- Subjects
- *
GRAPH connectivity , *UNDIRECTED graphs , *BORDER security , *EQUATIONS , *SOCIAL dominance , *DOMINATING set - Abstract
The inquiry is predicated on the premise that X is a simple, finite, undirected connected graph. Being members of the set A(퐺), 푙 and 푎 are objects in the set 푉,퐺 when 퐺 is the set of vertices. For every 푤 in the set (푎), 푎 is a boundary vertex of whenever the set of 푑,, is less than or equal to 푑(푙,푎). If X is the border that is closest to you, then you are said to be a boundary neighbour of X. In a graph, the dominating vertex is the one that lies on the vertex's boundary. The sole condition that has to be met for a vertex in 푊 to dominate all vertex in 푀−푆 is for every vertex in 푊 to be a boundary in (퐺). 푽 functions as a vertex on the border of 푙 for every 푽 in the set 푀−푆. By utilising the symbol 훾-푏.(퐺), the minimum cardinality of a boundary dominating set, denoted by the letter 퐺, can be found. This specific number is associated with a group that is in charge of border control. The symbol -C represents the set's highest cardinality (C). This is the symbol for the minimal border dominating set. Every subset 퐷 of J(퐺) is called a full boundary dominating set of 퐺 itself if and only if every 푽 in J(퐺) has a 푙 in 퐷. The total border dominance number is represented by the equation 훾-푡푏.(퐺) in the case of 퐺. Among the many elements that make up the border dominating set is the minimal cardinality of T. The first presentation of the collection of secure and dominant graphs at the total boundary occurs in this chapter. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. CROSSING THE LINE: The Border Patrols culture of impunity enables bad behavior--and sometimes keeps it from public view
- Author
-
McIntyre, Erin Siegal
- Subjects
United States. Border Patrol -- Powers and duties ,Border patrols ,Illegal immigrants -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Border security ,Peace officers -- Powers and duties -- Behavior ,Government regulation ,General interest ,Political science ,Social sciences - Abstract
THE DESERT AROUND ARTESIA, NEW MEXICO, had cooled to a comfortable 79 degrees by the time local police officer Beth Hahn steered her black-and-white Chevy Tahoe into the parking lot [...]
- Published
- 2024
38. FRONTIER JUSTICE: The Border Patrol is an engine of crisis--and has been since the beginning
- Author
-
Murphy, Tim
- Subjects
United States. Border Patrol -- History ,Border patrols ,Border security ,General interest ,Political science ,Social sciences - Abstract
THE NATIONAL BORDER PATROL MUSEUM, which sits inside a squat building on a decommissioned bombing range on the edge of El Paso's Franklin Mountains, has a musty and scattershot feel, [...]
- Published
- 2024
39. Europe
- Author
-
Rodriguez, Victoria
- Published
- 2024
40. Closing the gaps in law around emerging technology: Recommendations for the legal profession
- Author
-
Abedi, Fahimeh and Miller, Tim
- Published
- 2024
41. How Did Border Politics Get So Toxic?
- Author
-
HARRIGAN, FIONA
- Subjects
- *
POLARIZATION (Social sciences) , *BORDERLANDS , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *BORDER security - Abstract
The article focuses on the increasing toxicity and polarization in U.S. border politics. Topics include the historical shift from 1980s immigration debates to current extreme rhetoric and policy, the mismatch between outdated border management tools and modern migration patterns, and the impact of political figures and events, such as Donald Trump's presidency, on the current border crisis.
- Published
- 2024
42. I. INTERNATIONAL ENFORCEMENT.
- Author
-
Zagaris, Bruce
- Subjects
UNITED States presidential elections ,PRESIDENTS-elect ,CONCENTRATION camps ,PRESIDENTIAL elections ,BORDER security - Abstract
The article discusses the implications of the U.S. Presidential elections on international enforcement, particularly focusing on immigration, border security, illicit arms trafficking, transnational organized crime, and environmental enforcement. The new administration is expected to prioritize certain areas such as border enforcement and transnational organized crime while potentially reducing efforts in international environmental enforcement. Additionally, the article highlights the dropping of charges against Tigran Gambaryan, an American compliance officer for Binance, by the Nigerian government, allowing him to receive medical treatment in the U.S. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
43. Ukraine’s Transit Potential Amid the Russian Invasion and European Integration
- Author
-
Volodymyr Nikiforenko and Yurii Kuryliuk
- Subjects
trans-european transport corridors ,transit potential ,economic cooperation ,cross-border routes ,cross-border cooperation ,border security ,Law - Abstract
The article outlines the dynamics of Ukraine’s transit routes through the European Union and the Republic of Moldova and their institutional development in 2022-2023 amid the Russo-Ukrainian armed conflict. Using the models of “shifting borders,” “fortified borders,” and “infrastructure-permeable border,” the phenomenon of formation of cross-border transit assets and the feasibility of their use to formulate strategic decisions on the development of Ukraine’s transit potential, which significantly affects the competitiveness of its economy, are considered. Attention is drawn to the prospects of using the “infrastructure-permeable border” model for planning the development of cross-border economic cooperation with Ukraine’s neighboring democratic countries. Considering the experience of implementing European technologies of integrated border management, Ukraine’s candidate status for accession to the European Union, and the increasing sanctions pressure on the Russian Federation, the prospects for developing cross-border communication routes with the neighboring states of Ukraine are presented. Recommendations include the development of a network of transit routes through the territory of Ukraine, implementing joint control measures with neighboring countries, and creating multimodal transport hubs using European co-financing programs and tools for developing European transport assets.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Awareness based gannet optimization for source location privacy preservation with multiple assets in wireless sensor networks.
- Author
-
Singh, Mintu and Singh, Maheshwari Prasad
- Subjects
WIRELESS sensor networks ,RANDOM walks ,BORDER security ,MODERN society ,ENERGY consumption - Abstract
Summary: The wireless sensor network (WSN) has been assimilated into modern society and is utilized in many crucial application domains, including animal monitoring, border surveillance, asset monitoring, and so forth. These technologies aid in protecting the place of the event's occurrence from the adversary. Maintaining privacy concerning the source location is challenging due to the sensor nodes' limitations and efficient routing strategies. Hence, this research introduces a novel source location privacy preservation using the awareness‐based Gannet with random‐Dijkstra's algorithm (AGO‐RD). The network is initialized by splitting the hotspot and non‐hotspot region optimally using the proposed awareness‐based Gannet (AGO) algorithm. Here, the multi‐objective fitness function is utilized to initialize the network based on factors like throughput, energy consumption, latency, and entropy. Then, the information is forwarded to the phantom node in the non‐hotspot region to preserve the source location's privacy, which is far from the sink node. The proposed random‐Dijkstra algorithm is utilized to route the information from the phantom node to the sink with more security. Analysis of the proposed AGO‐RD‐based source location privacy preservation technique in terms of delay, throughput, network lifetime, and energy consumption accomplished the values of 6.52 ms, 95.68%, 7109.9 rounds, and 0.000125 μJ. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. 'Bringing order to the border': liberal and illiberal fantasies of border control in the English channel.
- Author
-
Mayblin, Lucy, Turner, Joe, Davies, Thom, Yemane, Tesfalem, and Isakjee, Arshad
- Subjects
- *
BORDER security , *TECHNOCRACY , *POLITICAL refugees , *IMPERIALISM , *RACIALIZATION - Abstract
This article focuses on the advancement of fantasy policy solutions to irregular migration, drawing on the case study of the UK/French border. In 2018 people began to cross the English Channel in significant numbers to seek asylum. This led to much commentary and a raft of new legislation seeking to criminalise people crossing the Channel and end rights to seek asylum in the UK. In this article, we explore the interaction between two sets of fantasies that are advanced by politicians and mainstream political parties in the UK. That is: the liberal technocratic fantasy – that this phenomenon can be efficiently 'fixed' through interventions in policing and multilateral cooperation with neighbouring EU states; and the illiberal fantasy that extreme and performative punishments can solve it. These fantasies intersect and break at different points in time, and involve many of the same policy solutions which are represented in different terms. Importantly, both of these fantasies reproduce racialised and colonial logics and ultimately serve border imperialism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. 'Hybrid war', military humanitarianism, and epistemic friction. Framing illegalised migration on the Polish-Belarusian border.
- Author
-
Straczuk, Justyna
- Subjects
- *
HUMANITARIANISM , *NATIONALISM , *BORDER security , *HEGEMONY , *FREEDOM of movement - Abstract
This article aims to contribute to the understanding of the phenomenon of the 'humanitarian border' in its specific local context of Polish nationalism and the use of patriotic sentiments to justify violence at the border. The intensification of asylum-seeker migration from Asia and Africa on the EU's eastern border, triggered by the Lukashenka regime since the summer of 2021, was quickly dubbed as 'hybrid war', enabling the Polish government to take decisive military action against border crossers. The justification for this violence became both the patriotic duty, expressed in national idioms, and the discursively produced humanitarian concern for refugees whose lives and health were threatened precisely by the harshness of border controls. The labelling of repression and violence as the heroism and care of the Polish uniformed services, present both in the discursive framework of the description of the 'crisis' by the government media and in the cooperation of border guards with humanitarian actors, has become a specific form of 'epistemic borderwork'. The grassroots solidarity movement that opposes these hegemonic discourses seeks to create counter-narratives highlighting the state's illegal actions and the refugees' right to freedom of movement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. SỰ ĐIỀU CHỈNH CHÍNH SÁCH CỦA CHÍNH QUYỀN BIDEN-HARRIS ĐỐI VỚI MỸ LATINH TRÊN LĨNH VỰC AN NINH - CHÍNH TRỊ.
- Author
-
Lê Thị Phương Loan
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL relations ,BORDER security ,GROSS domestic product - Abstract
Latin America has always been a source of interest to the U.S. as it is home to over 659 million people (as of 2023) with 2023 GDP (Gross Domestic Product) amounting to US$ 6,517.25 billion. In its development, the U.S. interests in this region have been very diverse ranging from security, politics, economics - trade, to democracy and human rights. Also, geographical proximity stresses the importance of Latin America, especially in the current context requiring joint efforts to address such prioritized problems as border security, democracy and human rights, illegal drug and weapon trafficking, and response to climate change. This paper is aimed at analyzing the adjustment of American foreign policy towards Latin America, with a focus on political - security policies executed under the Biden-Harris administration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
48. Bye bye Moria: escape commons vs policies of military campization.
- Author
-
Tsavdaroglou, Charalampos, Giannopoulou, Chrysoula, Frangopoulos, Yannis, Hatziprokopiou, Panos, Kyriazidou, Ilektra, and Valiantzas, Zacharias
- Subjects
- *
MILITARY camps , *TRAVEL restrictions , *BORDER security , *MILITARY policy , *COVID-19 - Abstract
AbstractOver the period from 2013 to 2020, the Moria camp in the island of Lesvos became synonymous with the exclusionary border control policies of the Greek state and the European Union. During the summer of 2020, most Covid-19 travel restrictions were lifted and Lesvos opened to tourists, while the Moria camp remained in lockdown. On the night of 8 September, the camp was set on fire and its residents escaped in a nearby area where they self-organized a makeshift settlement. The escape was followed by days of riots with police forces, and ended with the violent enclosure of the people in a new camp. The paper builds on critical migration scholarship and proposes the concepts of escape commons and military campization in order to conceptualize the commoning practices in moments of escape and the way they are susceptible to state migration policies which increasingly take the form of military management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Security-centric approach in the use of digital technologies in EU migration and asylum policies.
- Author
-
Lang, Iris Goldner
- Subjects
- *
BORDER security , *DIGITAL technology , *NATIONAL security , *IMMIGRATION enforcement - Abstract
The rapid evolution of digital technology, particularly in the domain of surveillance and identification, has brought forth a multitude of implications for the European Union’s approach to migration, asylum and border control. The use of digital technologies at the EU's external borders has emerged as a critical point of contention. By referring to ‘security-centric approach’ to describe the expansion of national security-related uses of digital technologies in migration and asylum, the article unveils the extent to which security considerations have permeated the use of digital technologies in this area. The analysis aims to demonstrate the predominance of this security focus and only a marginal role of efficiency, convenience and market needs objectives in the use of digital technologies in EU migration, asylum and border control policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The Court and the Two Presidencies Thesis: An Evaluation of Presidential Power on Immigration Policy.
- Author
-
Koehler, John C.
- Subjects
- *
IMMIGRATION policy , *EXECUTIVE power , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *BOUNDARY disputes , *BORDER security - Abstract
Enhancing both the policy literature and institutional literature, this article uses instrumental case studies to showcase how the Supreme Court views presidential authority regarding to immigration policy. Immigration policy stems from concurrent authority between the legislature and the executive while bridging domestic and foreign affairs. I contend that the Court's position on the extent of executive authority is congruent with the "Two Presidencies Thesis" by recognizing executive authority with regard to immigration policy that involves diplomatic engagement or national security, while limiting the president on policies that do not have a direct impact on foreign policy. The first category is exemplified by immigration restrictions while the second is illustrated with the issue of deportation. On the issue of border security, the president's power appears to vary. I also argue that limitations on presidential power have resulted from procedural and administrative limitations on the more "domestic" immigration issues, which also provides evidence against the emergence of a unitary executive. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.