
Automating Migration and Citizenship
Description
The proposed book undertakes a critical examination of the relationship between technologies of automation, migration and citizenship. Automation is refers to the use of technological systems to carry out operations independently, without human intervention (Nof, 2009). Typically automation is used to augment, improve, and complete tasks in a more efficient manner, promising significant benefits, from standardization to financial savings, freeing labour time for humans (Borry and Getha-Taylor, 2019; Restrepo, 2023). While technologies of automation are accompanied by narratives of progress and freedom, they are linked not only with increased surveillance but also with a shift in surveillance practices from discipline to prediction (Andrejevic, 2019; Zuboff, 2019). Automating technologies, especially machine learning algorithms, operate through sorting and categorisation, which are subsequently used to identify patterns and make predictions on the basis of these patterns. It comes as no surprise therefore that such technologies are involved in replicating discriminatory patterns of the past.
More details
Persons
Mariangela Veikou is a Researcher at the Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities and Social Sciences in the Netherlands.
Eugenia Siapera is a Professor in the School of Information and Communication Studies at University College Dublin, Ireland.
Content
Chapter 1: Automating Migration and Citizenship in Europe.- Chapter 2 The use of algorithmic technologies in migration in Germany and the Netherlands.- Chapter 3 Digital Identity Politics: Informal Migration and the Right to an ID.- Chapter 4 Balancing the Scales: Quality, Ethics, and AI in Migration Governance.- Chapter 5 Surveillance and Solidarities: Dutch Muslims making citizenship work by talking back online.- Chapter 6 Surveilling the Subaltern: Asylum, Aid, and Containment Through Everyday Technologies.- Chapter 7 Privatisation of the Digital Hostile Environment.- Chapter 8 Digital legibility of asylum seeker trajectories: the interplay between state practices with experiences from below.- Chapter 9 Technological Futures in migration and citizenship.