In recent years, UN agencies, global tech corporations, states and humanitarian NGOs have invested in advanced technologies from smart borders to digital identities to manage migratory movements. These are surveillance technologies that have intensified the militarization of borders and became a testing ground for surveillance capitalism. This book shows how these technologies reproduce structural inequalities and discriminative policies. Korkmaz reveals the way in which they grant extensive powers to states and big tech corporations to control communities.Unpacking the effects of surveillance capitalism on vulnerable populations, this is a much-needed intervention that will be of interest to readers in a range of fields.
Emre Eren Korkmaz is Departmental Lecturer of Migration and Development at the University of Oxford.
Introduction: Canaries in the Coal Mine1. Migration and (Surveillance) Capitalism2. Migration and (Big) Data Analysis3. Smart Borders4. Digital Identity and Surveillance CapitalismConclusion: How Can We Resist?
“This eye-opening book proposes a reading of smart borders, digital identity and the control of migratory movements via surveillance capitalism, showing how structural inequalities are perpetuated, affecting society as a whole.” Sara Vannini, University of Sheffield