Biometric citizenship and alienage: new and re-structuring technology of government of mobility?

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperResearch

Abstract

Biometric identifiers (finger prints, face scans, iris scans etc.) have increasingly become a key element in technology of EU border and migration management. SIS II, EURODAC and VIS are centralized systems that contain fingerprints of different groups of non-EU citizen, and the biometric identifier is stored in order to link a specific body to specific information related to status (asylum seeker, entry banned, convicted etc.). Finger prints are also integrated in passports in the EU, but this biometric information is restricted to establish only the link between the body and the passport.
This paper asks if and how biometric techniques are the basis of a re-structuring of management of migration and mobility: Is the suggestion of biometric identifiers reflecting the withdrawal from the principle of rights applied to human beings as an abstract of the universal individual all being equal, to the (re)introduction the concept of rights being engraved in your body, depended first and foremost on one’s birth, kinship and geography ?
The paper will discuss biometric technology in a historical context and explore the apparent biometric divide between citizens and migrants, the latter positioned and managed technologically as risks through surveillance and storage of data, whereas citizens are managed as holders of access to privileges. The technique however of both circuits is using bodily coded information through fingerprints and emphasizes the general tendency of ‘securitization of identity’ (Rose 1999, 2000) not only in Europe or the US.
Original languageEnglish
Publication date2012
Number of pages11
Publication statusPublished - 2012
EventBorder and mobility dynamics : Reconfiguring borders and mobility in times of crisis - DIIS, Strandgade Kbh K, København, Denmark
Duration: 26 Sept 201228 Sept 2012
http://www.diis.dk/sw119264.asp

Conference

ConferenceBorder and mobility dynamics
LocationDIIS, Strandgade Kbh K
Country/TerritoryDenmark
CityKøbenhavn
Period26/09/201228/09/2012
Internet address

Keywords

  • Migration management
  • Biometric technology
  • Citizenship
  • Surveillance

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