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Riding Routes and Itinerant Borders: Autonomy of Migration and Border Externalization
Authors:Maribel Casas‐Cortes  Sebastian Cobarrubias  John Pickles
Institution:1. Department of Geography, University of North Carolina–Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA;2. Department of Global, International and Area Studies, University of North Carolina–Charlotte, Charlotte, NC, USA
Abstract:Despite technological upgrading of borders at the edges of Europe, “Fortress Europe” continues to fail as an effective means of controlling irregular migration. As a consequence, European states are restructuring their border regimes by externalizing migration management to non‐EU countries beyond the border and creating new programs and policies to do so. Autonomy of Migration (AoM) offers a distinct way for thinking about border control mechanisms and goals of managing mobility. AoM does not read this off‐shoring of borders through the lens of centralized and coordinated state powers, but develops an autonomous gaze that supplements these institutional readings of apparatuses of capture with a view that takes as its starting point the ways in which border architectures, institutions, and policies interact with and react to the turbulence of migrant mobilities. By engaging current EU externalization policies, this paper illustrates the shifting relationship between border control and mobility.
Keywords:autonomy  migration  externalization  borders  EU  North Africa  autonomí  a  migració  n  externalizació  n  fronteras  UE  Africa del Norte
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