Reconfiguring Desecuritization: Contesting Expert Knowledge in the Securitization of Migration
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In: Geopolitics, Vol. 27, No. 4, 01.08.2022, p. 1042-1068.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Reconfiguring Desecuritization
T2 - Contesting Expert Knowledge in the Securitization of Migration
AU - Scheel, Stephan
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2020 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
PY - 2022/8/1
Y1 - 2022/8/1
N2 - This article introduces desecuritization as the missing supplement of the conception of securitization as a dispersed social process. It calls for the creative development of approaches that destabilise the credibility of security professionals’ claimed expert knowledge. To illustrate the potential of this approach, the article combines insights from the sociology of ignorance (agnotology) and the autonomy of migration literature to deconstruct the framing of migrants as cunning tricksters, a narrative that features prominently in processes of securitization. Within the Schengen visa regime discussed in this article, the trickster narrative emerges in the portrayal of visa applicants as deploying various modes of deception like ‘document fraud’ or ‘visa shopping’. Based on ethnographic fieldwork at consulates in North Africa, this article demonstrates, in contrast, that practices like applying at a consulate known for a more liberal decision-making practice constitute coping strategies by which migrants try to mitigate the uncertainty that a culture of suspicion, the discretionary power of consular staff and the heterogeneity of opaque decision-making criteria create for them. Ultimately, the analysis shows that security practices produce not only knowledge, but also various forms of nonknowledge which provoke the instances of ‘trickery’ that ever more pervasive security practices are supposed to forestall.
AB - This article introduces desecuritization as the missing supplement of the conception of securitization as a dispersed social process. It calls for the creative development of approaches that destabilise the credibility of security professionals’ claimed expert knowledge. To illustrate the potential of this approach, the article combines insights from the sociology of ignorance (agnotology) and the autonomy of migration literature to deconstruct the framing of migrants as cunning tricksters, a narrative that features prominently in processes of securitization. Within the Schengen visa regime discussed in this article, the trickster narrative emerges in the portrayal of visa applicants as deploying various modes of deception like ‘document fraud’ or ‘visa shopping’. Based on ethnographic fieldwork at consulates in North Africa, this article demonstrates, in contrast, that practices like applying at a consulate known for a more liberal decision-making practice constitute coping strategies by which migrants try to mitigate the uncertainty that a culture of suspicion, the discretionary power of consular staff and the heterogeneity of opaque decision-making criteria create for them. Ultimately, the analysis shows that security practices produce not only knowledge, but also various forms of nonknowledge which provoke the instances of ‘trickery’ that ever more pervasive security practices are supposed to forestall.
KW - Sociology
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85087512130&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/14650045.2020.1774749
DO - 10.1080/14650045.2020.1774749
M3 - Journal articles
AN - SCOPUS:85087512130
VL - 27
SP - 1042
EP - 1068
JO - Geopolitics
JF - Geopolitics
SN - 1465-0045
IS - 4
ER -