Crime Prevention, Migration Control and Surveillance Practices

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A01=Veronika Nagy
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Author_Veronika Nagy
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Banopticon
Bureaucratic Field
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Child Tax Credit
Civil Society
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Crime Prevention
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EU Citizenship
EU Migrant
Housing Benefits
Identity Fraud
Institutional Ethnography
intra-European Mobility
Jobseeker’s Allowance
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Migration
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Roma
Roma Ethnic Identity
Roma Ethnicity
Roma Groups
Roma Migrants
Roma Mobility
Roma Newcomers
Romani Activists
Social sorting
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Surveillance
Tax Credit Claims
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Welfare Providers
Welfare Reform
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Product details

  • ISBN 9780367586249
  • Weight: 370g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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EU expansion has stoked fears that criminals from the East may abuse freedom of movement to exploit the benefit systems of richer states. This book examines the way in which physical state borders are increasingly being replaced by internal border controls in the form of state bureaucracies as a means of regulating westward migration. The work examines the postmodern effect of globalisation and how ontological anxieties contribute to securitisation and social sorting in Western countries. It discusses the changes in control societies and how targeted surveillance as a geopolitical tool leads to new digitalised mechanisms of population selection. The book presents a casestudy of Roma migrants in the UK to examine the coping strategies adopted by those targeted. The book also critically evaluates the limitations of digitalised bureaucratic systems and the dangers of reliance on virtual data and selection methods.

Veronika Nagy, PhD, is an assistant professor of criminology at the Willem Pompe Institute at the Faculty of Law Governance and Economics, Utrecht University. Her research interest includes surveillance, digital inequality with a focus on a broad connection between mobility and technology, securitisation of international migration, criminalisation and digital self-censorship. She conducted research on specific forms of ethnic mobility, human trafficking and digital profiling (exploitation of workers, forced criminal activities and trafficking of children).