<p>"[This] book goes well beyond empowering us with information. It highlights the connections at all levels of government, from the local to the international; between private corporations and public policies; among states of the Global North that collude in sustaining global apartheid; and among organizations and movements across the globe that are fighting against the same corporations and technologies and against the shared root causes of oppression in imperialism and racial capitalism."<br />
<strong>—<em>Convergence</em></strong><br />
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"This volume... holds a mirror up to the everyday violence of borders that rarely capture widespread public attention, much less outrage. The essays and case studies that follow draw our attention to the policies and technologies that governments and companies are deploying quietly and viciously, tearing into people’s lives, ripping families apart, and hunting down the most vulnerable, one computer bit at a time."<br />
<strong>—Ruha Benjamin, from the Foreword</strong><br />
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"In a world awash with violent borders, this book serves as a beacon of hope guiding us towards a more just future."<br />
<strong>—Reece Jones, author of <em>Nobody Is Protected: How the Border Patrol Became the Most Dangerous Police Force in the United States</em></strong><em><br />
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"A valuable resource for those trying to dismantle technologized regimes of state terror around the world and create something life-giving in their place."<br />
<strong>—Ben Tarnoff, author of <em>Internet for the People: The Fight for Our Digital Future</em></strong></p>
The border regimes of imperialist states have brutally oppressed migrants throughout the world. To enforce their borders, these states have constructed a new digital fortress with far-reaching and ever-evolving new technologies. This pathbreaking volume exposes these insidious means of surveillance, control, and violence.
In the name of “smart” borders, the U.S. and Europe have turned to private companies to develop a neocolonial laboratory now deployed against the Global South, borderlands, and routes of migration. They have established immigrant databases, digital IDs, electronic tracking systems, facial recognition software, data fusion centers, and more, all to more “efficiently” categorize and control human beings and their movement.
These technologies rarely capture widespread public attention or outrage, but they are quietly remaking our world, scaling up colonial efforts of times past to divide desirables from undesirables, rich from poor, expat from migrant, and citizen from undocumented. The essays and case studies in Resisting Borders and Technologies of Violence shed light on this new threat, offering analyses of how the high-tech system of borders developed and inspiring stories of resistance to it.
The organizers, journalists, and scholars in these pages are charting a new path forward, employing creative tools to subvert the status quo, organize globally against high-tech border imperialism, and help us imagine a world without borders.
FOREWORD: Borders & Bits: From Obvious to Insidious Violence by Ruha Benjamin
Introduction: Resisting Technologies of Violence and Control By Mizue Aizeki, Matt Mahmoudi, and Coline Schupfer
SECTION 1: Ideologies of Exclusion:
Title? By Harsha Walia
Multiplying State Violence in the Name of Homeland Security by Mizue Aizeki
Empire’s Walls, Global Apartheid’s Infrastructure by Joseph Nevins and Todd Miller
Fortress Europe’s Proliferating Borders by Miriam Ticktin
Frontex and Fortress Europe’s Technological Experiments by Katy Fallon and Petra Molnar
Abolish Migration Deterrence by Jenna M. Loyd
Cruel Fictions in the Black Mediterranean by Ida Danewid, The Black Mediterranean Collective
CASE STUDY: Why We Need Local Campaigns to End Immigration Detention
CASE STUDY: Why We Took the U.K. to Court for their Discriminatory Visa Streaming Algorithm
SECTION 2: Conjuring the Perfect Threat: Techno-Securitization and Domestic Policing
Building the #NoTechforICE Campaign: An Interview with Jacinta Gonzalez
Big Tech, Borders and Biosecurity: Securitization in Britain after Covid-19 by Nisha Kapoor
Targeting Muslim communities in NYC: Interview with Fahd Ahmed
Global Palestine: Exporting Israel’s Regime of Population Control by Jeff Halper
Chicago’s Gang Database Targeting People of Color: Interview with Xanat Sobrevilla and Alyx Goodwin
Building Community Power in Unequal Cities: Interview with Hamid Khan
CASE STUDY: Why We Are Suing Clearview AI In California State Court
CASE STUDY: How We Fight Against (Tech-Facilitated) Persecution of Uyghurs in China and Abroad
CASE STUDY: Stop Urban Shield: How We Fought DHS’ Militarized Police Trainings
SECTION 3: Digital IDs: The Body as a Border
Digital ID: A Primer by Sara Baker, The Engine Room
IDs and the Citizen: Technologically Determined Identity in India by Usha Ramanathan
The cost of recognition by the state: IDs card as coercion: Interview with Rodjé Malcolm and Matthew McNaughton
The UK’s Production of Tech-enabled Precarity: An Interview with Gracie Mae Bradley
On Donkeys and Blockchains: A Conversation with Margie Cheesman
CASE STUDY: How We Mobilized Civil Society to Fight Tunisia’s Proposed Digital ID System
CASE STUDY: Why We Must Fight for Alternatives to the UK’s Digital-Only ID System
SECTION 4: Bordering Everyday Cities
Apartheid Tech: The Use and Expansion of Biometric Identification and Surveillance Technologies in the Occupied West Bank by Marwa Fartafta
The Encroachment of Smart Cities by Ben Green
CONTROL-X: Communication, Control, & Exclusion by Brian Jefferson
Data Justice in Mexico: How Big Data is Reshaping the Struggle for Rights and Political Freedoms by Arely Cruz-Santiago, Ernesto Schwartz-Marín, and Conor O’Reilly
Corporate Tech and The Legible City by Ryan Gerety, Mariah Montgomery, Mizue Aizeki and Nasma Ahmed
Seeing the Watched: Mass Surveillance in Detroit By Tawana Petty
Necropolitics and Neoliberalism Are Driving Brazil’s Surveillance Infrastructure By Rafael Evangelista
CASE STUDY: Why We Must Fight Against COVID-19 Surveillance and Technosolutionism
CASE STUDY: How We Challenged the German Migration Office’s Surveillance Technology
CASE STUDY: Fighting San Diego’s Smart Streetlights Super Surveillance System
SECTION 5: Looking Forward
Abolish National Security by Arun Kundnani
The First Step is Finding Each Other by Timmy Châu
The Red Deal: Indigenous Liberation and The Fight to Save the Planet by Nick Estes
Trying Harder to Build a World Where Life is Precious: An Interview with Ruth Wilson Gilmore
Editors and Contributors
Acknowledgments
CRITICAL NEW LENS ON MIGRANT REPRESSION: By focusing on tech and surveillance of migrants, and the industry that is being built up around it, the book offers a deeper understanding of the migrant and refugee crises, showing how global policing today is rooted in legacies of colonialism, imperialism, militarism, racial capitalism, and neoliberalism.
RACE AFTER TECHNOLOGY MEETS BORDER AND RULE: Technologies of Violence provides an abolitionist critique of the technologies of borders, surveillance, policing, and control, and will appeal to readers of books on mass incarceration and books on immigration.
CONTRIBUTOR SUPPORT: Technologies of Violence features contributions from journalists, academics, lawyers, organizers, policymakers, and activists, including Princeton scholar and author of Race After Technology Ruha Benjamin; journalist Nick Estes, author of Our History Is the Future; and author and anthropologist Jeff Halper. All the contributors will marshal their vast and varied networks in support of the book.
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Mizue Aizeki is the Director of Surveillance,Technology, and Immigration Policing at the Immigrant Defense Project (IDP). Aizeki’s photographic work appears in Dying to Live, A Story of U.S. Immigration in an Age of Global Apartheid and Policing the Planet.
Matt Mahmoudi is Researcher/Adviser on Artificial Intelligence & Human Rights at Amnesty Tech, where he has spent the last two years leading the effort to ban facial recognition technologies. He is an Affiliated Lecturer at the University of Cambridge. Mahmoudi is co-author of the book Digital Witness, published by Oxford University Press.
Coline Schupfer is a consultant working with the International Institute for Environment and Development and Open Society Foundations on community-based public interest litigation. She has written for publications including the International Justice Monitor, Border Criminologies, Opinio Juris, and the Asia Pacific Journal on Human Rights and the Law.
Ruha Benjamin is an internationally recognized writer, speaker, and professor of African American Studies at Princeton University, where she is the founding director of the Ida B. Wells Just Data Lab. She is the award-winning author of Race After Technology: Abolitionist Tools for the New Jim Code and editor of Captivating Technology, among many other publications. Her work has been featured widely in the media, including the New York Times, the Washington Post, CNN, The Root, and The Guardian.