Abstrakti
Responding to the self-declared Mediterranean migration crisis in 2015, the European Commission launched a Hotspot Approach to speed up the handling of incoming migrants in the frontline states of Greece and Italy. A key element in this operation is the identification of those eligible for asylum, which requires effective communication across cultural and linguistic difference between the asylum system and the migrants, facilitated by officially designated cultural mediators. We assess the hotspot governance as a form of outsourcing border control within the EU territory. Beyond sorting out and separating migrants into the categories of deservingness and undeservingness, we propose that the hotspot mechanism represents governing by communication, with cultural mediators as key players in this humanitarian bordering strategy. A focus on how cultural mediators provide the precarious human labor for this governance, offers, we argue, a productive inroad into the ways in which the hotspot economies of deterrence, containment, and care sustain inequalities embedded in race, socioeconomic status, and citizenship.
Alkuperäiskieli | Englanti |
---|---|
Sivut | 359-377 |
Sivumäärä | 19 |
Julkaisu | INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL SOCIOLOGY |
Vuosikerta | 15 |
Numero | 3 |
DOI - pysyväislinkit | |
Tila | Julkaistu - 22 heinäk. 2021 |
OKM-julkaisutyyppi | A1 Alkuperäisartikkeli tieteellisessä aikakauslehdessä |
Julkaisufoorumi-taso
- Jufo-taso 2
!!ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Sociology and Political Science