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"This volume explores the digitization, privatization, and spatial displacement of border security and the effects this has on political accountability and migrant rights. The governance of security and migration is unfolding in new political spaces. Cooperation and competition among immigration officials, border guards, transnational security corporations, IT companies, local police, and international organizations has decoupled migration governance from national political structures. The chapters in the volume examine how these dynamics affect the deployment and constraint of sovereign power in the United States, Canada, the UK, and the EU. Contributors trace this process from the disciplinary perspectives of law, political science, sociology, criminology, and geography. Part I of the book explores the reconfiguration of security and migration governance through historical processes of privatization, digitization, and the rescaling of border control technologies to local and global spaces. Part II explores how migrant rights actors have responded by rescaling resistance to global and local levels. This book will be of much interest to students of critical security studies, global governance, migration studies, and International Relations"--

This volume explores the digitization, privatization, and spatial displacement of border security and the effects this has on political accountability and migrant rights.



This volume explores the digitization, privatization, and spatial displacement of border security and the effects these have on political accountability and migrant rights.

The governance of security and migration is unfolding in new political spaces. Cooperation and competition among immigration officials, border guards, transnational security corporations, IT companies, local police, and international organizations has decoupled migration governance from national political structures. The chapters in the volume examine how these dynamics affect the deployment and constraint of sovereign power in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the EU. Contributors trace this process from the disciplinary perspectives of law, political science, sociology, criminology, and geography. Part I of the book explores the reconfiguration of security and migration governance through historical processes of privatization, digitization, and the rescaling of border control technologies to local and global spaces. Part II explores how migrant rights actors have responded by rescaling resistance to global and local levels.

This book will be of much interest to students of critical security studies, global governance, migration studies, and international relations.

Introduction Graham Hudson and Idil Atak Part I: Security and
surveillance
1. Refugee system as a bordering site: security, surveillance,
and the rights of asylum seekers in Canada Idil Atak, Claire Ellis, and
Zainab Abu Alrob
2. European Union information systems for border and
migration enforcement: trajectories, programmatics, and uses Julien
Jeandesboz
3. Surveillance sovereignty: migration management technologies and
the politics of privatization Petra Molnar
4. Privatization of security,
border management, and defense in the EU: does reliance on tech companies
erode states sovereignty? Eleftherios Chelioudakis
5. Urban securitization
and inland border enforcement Graham Hudson and Sasha Kovalchuk Part II:
Rescaling resistance: local and global perspectives
6. Local resistance to
outlawing sanctuary in Texas: changing forms of US migratory governance in
the protection of undocumented migrants rights Benjamin Bruce
7. Municipal
immigration policing and resistance to internal bordering in Canada David
Moffette
8. Urban sanctuary and solidarity: a global challenge to sovereignty
and migrant repression? Harald Bauder
9. Border management and technology: a
challenge to the right to privacy Elif Mendos Kukonmaz
10. The Marrakesh
Compact: a new international framework for state cooperation on national
security and migration? Elspeth Guild
11. Migration control and resistance:
toward a multiscalar approach Anna Triandafyllidou
Graham Hudson is an Associate Professor and Associate Dean, Academic in the Faculty of Law, Ryerson University, Canada.

Idil Atak is an Associate Professor in the Department of Criminology, cross-appointed to the Faculty of Law of Ryerson University, Canada.