"Engineering Digitised Borders offers a rich and detailed examination of how the Visa Information System was produced and maintained. By telescoping into the detailed micropractices of digitised borders, it demonstrates a remarkable ability to show us why these actions matter politically, and what is at stake when humans and materials combine to enact border decisions. Glouftsios's analysis of VIS is careful, patient and utterly necessary as we debate the transformation of bordering in Europe and beyond."
-Debbie Lisle, Professor of International Relations, School of History, Anthropology, Philosophy and Politics, Queen's University Belfast, Belfast, UK
"What are the digitised borders traversing and stretching Europe today? How and where are they crafted, monitored and maintained? These are important questions which this impressive book answers, making it essential reading not just for scholars of borders and migration but anyone interested in the politicsat stake in novel practices of governing territories, populations and mobilities".
-William Walters, Professor of Political Sociology, Carleton University, Canada
This book focuses on the Visa Information System (VIS): a large-scale data infrastructure interconnecting a multiplicity of state authorities that enact border security and migration management in the European Union. The VIS is embedded within a setting of pan-European IT systems that filter international mobility, identify threatening elements, hamper the travels of poor, racialized, and alienated subjects, while at the same time facilitate the circulation of those expected to generate financial and other kinds of capital. The book examines the engineering of the VIS by analyzing how it was designed before its deployment in the field of border security, and how it is maintained to ensure continuous and secure operation. It illustrates how engineering processes that render the VIS functional are not just technoscientific, but inherently political, as they (re)configure and maintain the power to govern international mobility by digital means.
Georgios Glouftsios is Postdoctoral Researcher and Contract Professor at the University of Trento, School of International Studies.
-Debbie Lisle, Professor of International Relations, School of History, Anthropology, Philosophy and Politics, Queen's University Belfast, Belfast, UK
"What are the digitised borders traversing and stretching Europe today? How and where are they crafted, monitored and maintained? These are important questions which this impressive book answers, making it essential reading not just for scholars of borders and migration but anyone interested in the politicsat stake in novel practices of governing territories, populations and mobilities".
-William Walters, Professor of Political Sociology, Carleton University, Canada
This book focuses on the Visa Information System (VIS): a large-scale data infrastructure interconnecting a multiplicity of state authorities that enact border security and migration management in the European Union. The VIS is embedded within a setting of pan-European IT systems that filter international mobility, identify threatening elements, hamper the travels of poor, racialized, and alienated subjects, while at the same time facilitate the circulation of those expected to generate financial and other kinds of capital. The book examines the engineering of the VIS by analyzing how it was designed before its deployment in the field of border security, and how it is maintained to ensure continuous and secure operation. It illustrates how engineering processes that render the VIS functional are not just technoscientific, but inherently political, as they (re)configure and maintain the power to govern international mobility by digital means.
Georgios Glouftsios is Postdoctoral Researcher and Contract Professor at the University of Trento, School of International Studies.
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