The rise of the surveillance school

Emmeline Taylor*

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

    34 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Borders are the key sites in the distinction of territories. As places of the sorting and effective differentiation of the (global) mobilities of people and things, borders are married to the practice and evolution of surveillance. This chapter is concerned with such processes of border-making or bordering which act to instate or reinforce existing regimes of regulation and governance over mobilities by way of a manifold array of surveillance techniques and technologies. Perhaps borders are the focus of such intense practices of monitoring, surveillance and sorting because they are “pinch points,�? the �?lters in a hydraulic system of flows of movement that circulate and move between and within national state and supra-national state boundaries. Constituting the contact zones between populations, borders are the site of political exertion, of decisions over who gets in, who leaves and who doesn’t, moments of the sovereign decision over who or what is inside or outside the regime of their care. If critical decisions like this are to be made, then critically they require surveillance measures in order to provide the basis upon which decisions may be taken, although we will complicate this later.

    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationRoutledge Handbook of Surveillance Studies
    PublisherTaylor and Francis
    Pages225-231
    Number of pages7
    ISBN (Electronic)9781136711077
    ISBN (Print)9780415588836
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2012

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