Dies ist eine Übersichtsseite mit Metadaten zu dieser wissenschaftlichen Arbeit. Der vollständige Artikel ist beim Verlag verfügbar.
The European Union and the Securitization of Migration
1.370
Zitationen
1
Autoren
2000
Jahr
Abstract
This article deals with the question of how migration has developed into a security issue in western Europe and how the European integration process is implicated in it. Since the 1980s, the political construction of migration increasingly referred to the destabilizing effects of migration on domestic integration and to the dangers for public order it implied. The spillover of the internal market into a European internal security question mirrors these domestic developments at the European level. The Third Pillar on Justice and Home Affairs, the Schengen Agreements, and the Dublin Convention most visibly indicate that the European integration process is implicated in the development of a restrictive migration policy and the social construction of migration into a security question. However, the political process of connecting migration to criminal and terrorist abuses of the internal market does not take place in isolation. It is related to a wider politicization in which immigrants and asylum‐seekers are portrayed as a challenge to the protection of national identity and welfare provisions. Moreover, supporting the political construction of migration as a security issue impinges on and is embedded in the politics of belonging in western Europe. It is an integral part of the wider technocratic and political process in which professional agencies – such as the police and customs – and political agents – such as social movements and political parties – debate and decide the criteria for legitimate membership of west European societies.
Ähnliche Arbeiten
Precarious Life: The Powers of Mourning and Violence
2004 · 7.766 Zit.
Super-diversity and its implications
2007 · 5.302 Zit.
<i>E Pluribus Unum</i>: Diversity and Community in the Twenty‐first Century The 2006 Johan Skytte Prize Lecture
2007 · 3.914 Zit.
Methodological nationalism and beyond: nation–state building, migration and the social sciences
2002 · 3.558 Zit.
Migrant “Illegality” and Deportability in Everyday Life
2002 · 3.270 Zit.