Labor Migration, Trafficking and Border Controls
Access status:
Open Access
Type
Book chapterAbstract
The increasing securitization of borders can make the process of border crossing more onerous and expensive for all individuals who seek to cross the border. As a result, borderlanders involved in routinized border crossings are subject to increasing state interest. They may be ...
See moreThe increasing securitization of borders can make the process of border crossing more onerous and expensive for all individuals who seek to cross the border. As a result, borderlanders involved in routinized border crossings are subject to increasing state interest. They may be harassed, subject to a range of "fines," and even arrested as traffickers or people smugglers (Eilenberg in press). Border policing activities also disrupt the livelihoods of smugglers, petty traders, and labor brokers, especially when government officials make them the target of antitrafficking campaigns and initiatives. In contexts where borderlanders lay claim to the unique and special character of their crossborder activities as being "illegal but licit" (Abraham and van Schendel 2005), countertrafficking efforts can threaten to disrupt what many see as a traditional way of life (Ford and Lyons in press-b). Understanding the impact of the antitrafficking movement on all forms of labor migration therefore necessitates attention to the discursive and material practices of bordering that take place not only in the center and "en route," but also in the borderlands themselves.
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See moreThe increasing securitization of borders can make the process of border crossing more onerous and expensive for all individuals who seek to cross the border. As a result, borderlanders involved in routinized border crossings are subject to increasing state interest. They may be harassed, subject to a range of "fines," and even arrested as traffickers or people smugglers (Eilenberg in press). Border policing activities also disrupt the livelihoods of smugglers, petty traders, and labor brokers, especially when government officials make them the target of antitrafficking campaigns and initiatives. In contexts where borderlanders lay claim to the unique and special character of their crossborder activities as being "illegal but licit" (Abraham and van Schendel 2005), countertrafficking efforts can threaten to disrupt what many see as a traditional way of life (Ford and Lyons in press-b). Understanding the impact of the antitrafficking movement on all forms of labor migration therefore necessitates attention to the discursive and material practices of bordering that take place not only in the center and "en route," but also in the borderlands themselves.
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Date
2012-01-01Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell PublishingLicence
The final, definitive version of this paper has been published as: Ford, M., Lyons, L. (2012). Labor Migration, Trafficking and Border Controls. In Thomas M. Wilson, Hastings Donnan (Eds.), A Companion to Border Studies, (pp. 438-454). Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell Publishing. Reproduced with permission of Wiley-Blackwell Publishing © 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd. Published 2012 by Blackwell Publishing Ltd. The definitive, published, version of record is available here: http://www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-1405198931.htmlCitation
Ford, M., Lyons, L. (2012). Labor Migration, Trafficking and Border Controls. In Thomas M. Wilson, Hastings Donnan (Eds.), A Companion to Border Studies, (pp. 438-454). Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell Publishing.Share