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Scientific article

Published:

Everyday migration hierarchies: negotiating the EU’s visa regime

Written by

Paul Beaumont
Senior Research Fellow
Katharina Glaab
Former employee

Ed.

IR 37.PNG

Summary:

Critical security studies have shed invaluable light on the diffuse governmental technologies and pernicious effects of the EU’s bordering practices. While scholars have focused upon the experience of precarious migrant groups, this article suggests that extending our critical gaze to include seemingly privileged migrants can further understanding of just how far the insecurity produced by the EU’s migration regime reaches. Focusing on the migration process of international students in Norway, this article inquires into how these migrants experience, theorize and negotiate the EU’s visa regime and its governmental technologies. We show how their subjective understandings of ‘broad’ and ‘narrow’ hierarchies of the visa regime play out in their bureaucratic encounters, influencing their everyday lives. Ultimately, the article shows how the regime’s disciplinary effects extend further than prior critical research has appreciated.

Themes

  • Migration
  • The EU

Written by

Paul Beaumont
Senior Research Fellow
Katharina Glaab
Former employee