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Identification as translation: The art of choosing the right spokespersons at the securitized border. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The article explores how the process of identifying individuals at borders translates them into recognizable identities for authorities, highlighting the complexities behind migration security.
  • It contributes to discussions in Critical Security Studies (CSS) and Science and Technology Studies (STS) by employing empirical data collected from identification facilities in Greece and referencing early sociology theories.
  • The study suggests that understanding identity through a translational lens emphasizes the dynamic interaction among various actors and technology, revealing deeper insights into how securitization affects institutional structures and relationships in the context of migration.

Article Abstract

This article pursues a translational approach to the securitization of migration. It argues that sociotechnical processes of identification at the border can be conceived of as translations into legible identities of individuals who are unknown to authorities. The article contributes to the materiality debate on securitization across Critical Security Studies (CSS) and Science and Technology Studies (STS) by answering the call to conduct empirical explorations of security, and by revisiting the potential of the early sociology of translation (i.e. actor-network theory) to account for the identification of border crossers. Data collection was conducted at four identification facilities in the Hellenic Republic. Three sets of implications for the CSS-STS debate on the materiality of securitization are discussed. First, a translational approach can replace a representational understanding of identity with a performative apprehension of identification. Second, adopting a translational approach leads to acknowledge that the identification encounter is mediated by multiple, heterogeneous actors. It thus helps to open technological black boxes and reveal the key role of material qualities, affordances and limitations of artefacts. Third, a translational approach to the securitization of migration can help advance the field of 'alterity processing' by appreciating the de facto re-arrangements of institutional orders elicited by techno-political alignments with global security regimes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8283184PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0306312720983932DOI Listing

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