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E-grāmata: Crime Prevention, Migration Control and Surveillance Practices: Welfare Bureaucracy as Mobility Deterrent

  • Formāts: 202 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 03-Oct-2018
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351181389
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  • Formāts: 202 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 03-Oct-2018
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351181389

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EU expansion has stoked fears that criminals from the East may abuse freedom of movement to exploit the benefit systems of richer states. This book examines the way in which physical state borders are increasingly being replaced by internal border controls in the form of state bureaucracies as a means of regulating westward migration. The work examines the postmodern effect of globalisation and how ontological anxieties contribute to securitisation and social sorting in Western countries. It discusses the changes in control societies and how targeted surveillance as a geopolitical tool leads to new digitalised mechanisms of population selection. The book presents a casestudy of Roma migrants in the UK to examine the coping strategies adopted by those targeted. Finally, the book critically evaluates the limitations of digitalised bureaucratic systems and the dangers of reliance on virtual data and selection methods.

Recenzijas

`This book is important reading for anyone who is interested in online surveillance, privacy, the digitalized bureaucracy and social control since her conceptualization of digitization and surveillance can be applied to general application of social surveillance and securitization. Deborah Komarnisky, Ph.D. Student, Department of Law and Legal Studies, Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada; AmeriQuests 15.1 (2020)

Acronyms viii
Acknowledgements ix
1 Introduction
1(9)
1.1 Roma mobility in the EU
2(2)
1.2 Social sorting as modality of governance power
4(2)
1.3 The relevance of welfare surveillance studies
6(1)
1.4 Overview of chapters
7(3)
2 Critical theories -- social sorting and surveillance in a digital welfare labyrinth
10(13)
2.1 Securitisation and EU population control
11(3)
2.2 Virtual Panopticon as migration control
14(2)
2.3 The funnel of expulsion
16(1)
2.4 Surveillance and social sorting
17(1)
2.5 Managerialism and new borders in the bureaucratic field
18(4)
2.6 Conclusion
22(1)
3 Roma, a global ethnic minority
23(29)
3.1 The hidden dynamics of ethnic identities
24(4)
3.2 Contextual roots of Roma ethnic classification
28(3)
3.3 Politicising marginalisation -- the criminalisation of Roma
31(5)
3.4 Mobility and ethnic history
36(3)
3.5 Contextuality and the liquid research field
39(4)
3.6 Research process
43(7)
3.7 Ethical issues
50(2)
4 Welfare policy and the new social sorting of Europe
52(24)
4.1 The new values in welfare management
54(3)
4.2 The reality of welfare tourism
57(3)
4.3 Geopolitics through welfare regimes
60(2)
4.4 Social sorting tools and restrictions
62(3)
4.5 Trapped in a loop -- welfare restrictions as mobility control
65(5)
4.6 Criminalised by welfare-perceptions of welfare fraud
70(2)
4.7 Conclusion -- differential surveillance treatment or the digital poorhouse
72(4)
5 Mediators, protectors and pathfinders -- invisible players in mobility approaches
76(34)
5.1 Constructing belonging-framing the Roma with margins
77(4)
5.2 Ethnic framing of Roma from academic perspectives
81(7)
5.3 Interrelations between activism and civil society
88(5)
5.4 Living for or living off the Roma? -- the role of funding in civil society
93(7)
5.5 Transmitted stigmas, bureaucratic guides, migrant interpreters working with Roma
100(8)
5.6 Conclusion
108(2)
6 Accessing benefits abroad
110(24)
6.1 The first stage -- preconditions for settling
111(3)
6.2 Documented traces abroad
114(5)
6.3 The ivory tower of fob Centre Plus
119(8)
6.4 Narrative management technics self-censorship and self-profiling
127(3)
6.5 Housing as a capital
130(2)
6.6 Conclusion
132(2)
7 Commodification online -- social security claims in virtual bureaucracies
134(16)
7.1 Tax credit procedures and HMRC's electronic monitoring mechanisms
135(3)
7.2 Working tax credit online -- "dividuals" in the web of spidergrams
138(2)
7.3 Child tax credit claims -- identity management online
140(2)
7.4 The commodification of identity
142(5)
7.5 The commodification of debt
147(2)
7.6 Conclusion -- investing in virtual citizenship
149(1)
8 Conclusion
150(8)
8.1 Roma migrants under the surveillance gaze
151(2)
8.2 Managing the stranger
153(3)
8.3 Virtual bureaucracies and the rise of the "dividual"
156(2)
References 158(21)
Appendix A Overview of Roma participant informants 179(2)
Appendix B Overview of interpreters 181(1)
Appendix C Overview of academics 182(2)
Appendix D Overview of professionals 184(1)
Appendix E Overview of non-governmental organisations 185(2)
Appendix F The basic model for application procedures in the UK welfare system 187(1)
Index 188
Veronika Nagy, PhD, is an assistant professor of criminology at the Willem Pompe Institute at the Faculty of Law Governance and Economics, Utrecht University. Her research interest includes surveillance, digital inequality with a focus on a broad connection between mobility and technology, securitisation of international migration, criminalisation and digital self-censorship. She conducted research on specific forms of ethnic mobility, human trafficking and digital profiling (exploitation of workers, forced criminal activities and trafficking of children).