Research Section

Name
Migration Control, Forced Immobility & Violent Mobilization
Identifier
UBT_MiCoFoIm2019
Summary
The results of the project offer an innovative understanding the controlling of movement
to contain human mobility that is undesired and designated as a security threat in general
and international migration towards Europe in particular. We showed the practices of remaking the local border a global one. A multiperspectival study of borders revealed that
the border is not only made by the state and their agents, but also by surrounding actors,
such as citizens winning and loosing from shifting border and mobility regimes. The
project was able to show how mobility as a context-specific ensemble of movement,
representations of this movement and concrete mobile practices is above all political. We
downscaled the concept of mobility regime to understand (im)mobility regimes as
constituted by a specific set of infrastructures and infrastructuring practices through
which movement is contained or, more generally, through which (im)mobilities are
governed, and the ways the targeted subjects respond. Thinking of the relations of
mobility and stasis as both an outcome of, and the shaping of, a regime allows us to reveal
the entangled power relations at work in the respective infrastructures.
Duration
2020 - 2021