The following text field will produce suggestions that follow it as you type.

The Digital Empowerment-Control Nexus: Precarious Migrants, Migration Regimes and Technologies
The Digital Empowerment-Control Nexus: Precarious Migrants, Migration Regimes and Technologies

The Digital Empowerment-Control Nexus: Precarious Migrants, Migration Regimes and Technologies in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $180.00
Loading Inventory...
Get it at Barnes and Noble

Size: Hardcover

Get it at Barnes and Noble
This book analyses the diverse and complex interactions between the emancipatory practices of precarious (i.e. forced, vulnerable, undocumented or deported) migrants enabled by information and communication technologies, and the constraints imposed by technological tools used for surveillance and migration control. It explores the
digital empowerment-control nexus
by articulating the use of digital technologies - whether by migrants themselves, civil society actors or institutions - with their
mediating
role in the processes of empowerment, surveillance and migration control.
Based on original empirical studies, the chapters bring contrasting and complementary insights into the use of digital technologies as agentic and/or surveillance tools in different national and supranational contexts (Turkey, Mexico, the United States, Switzerland, France, Romania, Greece and the European Union) and from different disciplinary perspectives (anthropology, sociology, geography, media studies, law and deportation studies). Using different theoretical lenses, they demonstrate the varying degrees of (dis)entanglement between individual and institutional practices, at micro and macro levels.
Helping readers to understand the ambivalent role of digital technologies in (forced) migration processes,
The Digital Empowerment-Control Nexus
can be used as a resource by students, researchers, practitioners and policymakers interested in digitally mediated migration practices and migration regimes.  It was originally published as a special issue of the
Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies.
Powered by Adeptmind