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isbn 978 90 8964 159 5 15,6 x 23,4 cm, ca 230 pages, paperback, 2009 English € 39,50
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Dennis Broeders Breaking Down Anonymity Digital Surveillance of Irregular Migrants in Germany and the Netherlands Because borders alone cannot stop irregular migration, the European Union is turning more and more to internal control measures. Through surveillance, member states aim to exclude irregular migrants from societal institutions, thereby discouraging their stay or deporting those who are apprehended. And yet, states cannot expel immigrants who remain anonymous. Identification has thus become key. Breaking Down Anonymity shows how digital surveillance is becoming a prime instrument of identification and exclusion policies towards irregular migrants. To support this claim, the study charts policy developments in Germany and the Netherlands. It analyses both countries’ labour market controls as well as their detention and expulsion practices. Also examined is the development of several new EU migration databases. Spanning the Continent, these information systems create a new European Union frontier – one that is digital, biometric and ever-strengthening. Dennis Broeders is a researcher in the Department of Sociology at the Erasmus University of Rotterdam and a research fellow at the Dutch Scientific Council for Government Policy.
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