Functional Actorness? Border Security in the EU and Turkey

2015 ◽  
Vol 38 (12) ◽  
pp. 849-859
Author(s):  
Theodore Baird
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Nick Vaughan-Williams

Since the peak of Europe’s so-called 2015 ‘migration crisis’, the dominant governmental response has been to turn to deterrent border security across the Mediterranean and construct border walls throughout the EU. During the same timeframe, EU citizens are widely represented—by politicians, by media sources, and by opinion polls—as fearing a loss of control over national and EU borders. Despite the intensification of EU border security with visibly violent effects, EU citizens are nevertheless said to be ‘threatened majorities’. These dynamics beg the question: Why is it that tougher deterrent border security and walling appear to have heightened rather than diminished border anxieties among EU citizens? While the populist mantra of ‘taking back control’ purports to speak on behalf of EU citizens, little is known about how diverse EU citizens conceptualize, understand, and talk about the so-called ‘crisis’. Yet, if social and cultural meanings of ‘migration’ and ‘border security’ are constructed intersubjectively and contested politically, then EU citizens—as well as governmental elites and people on the move—are significant in shaping dominant framings of and responses to the ‘crisis’. This book argues that, in order to address the overarching puzzle, a conceptual and methodological shift is required in the way that border security is understood: a new approach is urgently required that complements ‘top-down’ analyses of elite governmental practices with ‘bottom-up’ vernacular studies of how those practices are both reproduced and contested in everyday life.


Author(s):  
Nick Vaughan-Williams

Chapter 2 examines the role of elite governmental actors in producing the narrative of the so-called 2015 ‘migration crisis’ and creating the conditions under which walling and deterrent border security policies flourished. The first part of the chapter draws on key press releases, speeches, and policy documents issued by the EU Commission and its agencies in order to map the emergence and trajectory of this elite ‘crisis’ narrative from the so-called ‘ghost ship’ arrivals to the height of ‘irregular’ arrivals that year. The second part shows how this ahistorical, Euro-centric, and (post)colonial governmental frame—with its reductionist depiction of mobile populations and sanitized one-sided view of border-related violence—has been problematized and disaggregated by research that documents the experiences of those seeking entry to the EU. The third part draws on theoretical literatures on the politics of crisis in order to argue that, irrespective of its empirical accuracy, the so-called ‘crisis’ narrative has enabled the intensification of deterrent border security measures on- and off-shore and the re-emergence of disciplinary walling techniques among EU Member States in ways that would be otherwise unpalatable in liberal democracies during ‘non-crisis’ times. But while extant work on crisis enables a critical analysis of the politics of ‘crisis bordering’ that is essential for any attempt to grapple with the book’s overarching puzzle, ultimately it falls short of explaining why populist calls to ‘take back control’ have been stoked rather than satiated by such bordering and therefore it is necessary to investigate those calls—and their reception—among diverse publics in closer detail.


2019 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 123-140
Author(s):  
Ryszard Suduł

Author analyses in the article the problem of functioning of the external borders of the Republic of Poland in the Schengen area. The text frames the analysis in the context of the political science. The author discusses the changes in state system of protection of the state border of the Republic of Poland resulting from the integration of the Republic of Poland with the European Union, in particular with the Schengen area. The basic objective of the article is the analysis of the scope and type of organisational and administrative-logistic undertakings in the field of border protection after Poland’s participation in the Schengen Area. The analysis is started with characterisation of changes in the system of management of the state border and the ways of functioning of border services in connection with the accession to the EU were characterised. EU requirements for strengthening border infrastructure and the system of cooperation between institutions responsible for border security were also analysed. As a result, the accession of the Republic of Poland to the Schengen area entailed a complete change in the strategy of managing the state borders.


2008 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-49 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anneliese Baldaccini

AbstractThis article examines the way in which the EU amd its Member States have approached border security issues since the terrorist attacks in the US on 11 September 2001. A key aspect of this approach has been to tighten control of borders and the safety of documents by the use of biometric systems. The new policies on border security and document security are resulting in the mass collection and storage of biometric data in relation to third-country nationals seeking entry into the territory of EU Member States, and in relation to EU nationals within the context of travel and identity documents. These developments are significant as the Union is considering the potential offered by biometrics not only for the effective management of borders but also for the prevention and combating of crime.


2021 ◽  
pp. 167-198
Author(s):  
Nick Vaughan-Williams

Chapter 6 recovers vernacular counter-narratives of the border and alternative border imaginaries at work in citizens’ conversations. Beyond dominant narratives of crisis, securitization, abjection, and control, the analysis shows how some vernacular accounts mobilized border logics that questioned portrayals of obsessive walling practices as immutable and inevitable and thus disrupted elite scripts of the ‘crisis’. It is argued that another reason why populist calls to ‘take back control’ flourished despite augmented border security is that actually existing alternative imaginaries among citizens were subjugated in wider public discourse. The discussion begins by recalling the ‘affective atmospheres of welcoming’ that swept across the EU during the summer of 2015. While some vernacular narratives arguably perpetuated a problematic politics of pity akin to many elite governmental narratives of humanitarian crisis, others made arguments about EU citizens’ duties to new arrivals based on a politics of equality and/or of an awareness of the legacies of European colonialism. From here, the analysis considers a range of vernacular narratives that in various ways challenged the notion that there is ‘no alternative’ to tougher deterrent border security and walling. Finally, the chapter mines citizens’ vernacular narratives that do not start with abstract arguments about ‘borders’ at all. In such narratives we find glimpses of what Kristeva (1991) refers to as an ‘ethics of strangeness’: refusals of sovereign mastery of control, the fantasy of ontological security, and the desire to be ‘bordered’. This disrupts the grip of the dominant elite ‘crisis’ narrative and offers new grounds to engage the challenges wrought by increased arrivals and deaths at sea.


2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rinus van Schendelen
Keyword(s):  

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