Abstract
Borderlines are increasingly hard to grasp, they no longer follow the territorial outlines of nation states and are developing into mobile interlinked structures. The borderlines experience an increasing automation, reach into our cities, along the spaces of transit and, with the help of biometric techniques, zoom in on our bodies. These structures of inclusion and exclusion, of surveillance and control have different impacts on people, according to their status and nationality. The altered state of our borders and its appearance in artistic and academic positions will be discussed. This goes along with an analysis of theories and practices of surveillance and control in relation to the restriction of movement and the construction of spaces. The focus lies on irregular migration in the European arena.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Gschrey, R. (2011). Borderlines: Surveillance, identification and artistic explorations along european borders. Surveillance and Society, 9(1–2), 185–202. https://doi.org/10.24908/ss.v9i1/2.4146
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