TY - JOUR AU - Massaro, Vanessa A. AU - Boyce, Geoffrey L1 - internal-pdf://2044897693/Massaro-Carceral Geographies, Police Geographi.pdf ST - Carceral Geographies, Police Geographies, and the Networked Continuum of State-Sanctioned Coercion and Control T2 - ACME: An International Journal for Critical Geographies TI - Carceral Geographies, Police Geographies, and the Networked Continuum of State-Sanctioned Coercion and Control ID - 6590 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Schwitzgebel, Robert L1 - internal-pdf://3172685917/Schwitzgebel-1969-A Belt from Big Brother.pdf PY - 1969 ST - A Belt from Big Brother T2 - Psychology Today TI - A Belt from Big Brother VL - April ID - 6577 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Ingraham, Barton AU - Smith, Gerald IS - 2 L1 - internal-pdf://0719885272/Ingraham-1972-The Use of Electronics in the Ob.pdf PY - 1972 SP - 35-53 ST - The Use of Electronics in the Observation and Control of Human Behavior and Its Possible Use in Rehabilitation and Parole T2 - Issues in Criminology TI - The Use of Electronics in the Observation and Control of Human Behavior and Its Possible Use in Rehabilitation and Parole VL - 7 ID - 6576 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Stone, Christopher L1 - internal-pdf://3075096549/Stone-2000-Supervised Release As An Alternativ.pdf PY - 2000 ST - Supervised Release As An Alternative To Detention In Removal Proceedings: Some Promising Results Of A Demonstration Project T2 - Georgetown Immigration Law Journal TI - Supervised Release As An Alternative To Detention In Removal Proceedings: Some Promising Results Of A Demonstration Project ID - 6436 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Heyman, Josiah IS - 4 L1 - internal-pdf://3006968038/Heyman-2001-U.S. Ports of Entry on the Mexican.pdf PY - 2001 SP - 681-700 ST - U.S. Ports of Entry on the Mexican Border T2 - Journal of the Southwest TI - U.S. Ports of Entry on the Mexican Border VL - 43 ID - 7618 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Heyman, Josiah DO - 10.1080/10702890490493518 IS - 3 L1 - internal-pdf://2044897728/Heyman-2004-Ports of Entry as Nodes in the Wor.pdf PY - 2004 SE - 303 SN - 1070-289X 1547-3384 SP - 303-327 ST - Ports of Entry as Nodes in the World System T2 - Identities TI - Ports of Entry as Nodes in the World System VL - 11 ID - 7611 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Carney, Molly L1 - internal-pdf://3829176219/Carney-2012-Correction through Omniscience_ El.pdf PY - 2012 SP - 279-305 ST - Correction through Omniscience: Electronic Monitoring and the Escalation of Crime Control T2 - Journal of Law and Policy TI - Correction through Omniscience: Electronic Monitoring and the Escalation of Crime Control UR - https://journals.library.wustl.edu/lawpolicy/article/id/1540/ VL - 40 ID - 6575 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Kilgore, James DO - 10.1007/s10612-012-9165-0 IS - 1 KW - alternatives to detention L1 - internal-pdf://2044897709/Kilgore-2012-Progress or More of the Same_ Ele.pdf internal-pdf://1967513924/Kilgore-2012-Progress or More of the Same_ El2.pdf PY - 2012 SE - 123 SN - 1205-8629 1572-9877 SP - 123-139 ST - Progress or More of the Same? Electronic Monitoring and Parole in the Age of Mass Incarceration T2 - Critical Criminology TI - Progress or More of the Same? Electronic Monitoring and Parole in the Age of Mass Incarceration VL - 21 ID - 6394 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Sampson, Robyn AU - Mitchell, Grant IS - 3 KW - alternatives to detention L1 - internal-pdf://3829176296/Sampson-2013-Global Trends in Immigration Dete.pdf PY - 2013 SP - 97-121 ST - Global Trends in Immigration Detention and Alternatives to Detention: Practical, Political and Symbolic Rationales T2 - Journal on Migration and Human Security TI - Global Trends in Immigration Detention and Alternatives to Detention: Practical, Political and Symbolic Rationales VL - 1 ID - 6230 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Vanhaelemeesch, Delphine AU - Vander Beken, Tom AU - Vandevelde, Stijn DO - 10.1177/1477370813493846 IS - 3 L1 - internal-pdf://1726956428/Vanhaelemeesch-2013-Punishment at home_ Offend.pdf internal-pdf://1801979801/Vanhaelemeesch-2013-Punishment at home_ Offen1.pdf PY - 2013 SE - 273 SN - 1477-3708 1741-2609 SP - 273-287 ST - Punishment at home: Offenders’ experiences with electronic monitoring T2 - European Journal of Criminology TI - Punishment at home: Offenders’ experiences with electronic monitoring VL - 11 ID - 6622 ER - TY - JOUR AU - van Dijk, José IS - 3 L1 - internal-pdf://2970374320/van Dijk-2014-Datafication, dataism and datave.pdf PY - 2014 SP - 197-208 ST - Datafication, dataism and dataveillance: Big Data between scientific paradigm and ideology T2 - Surveillance & Society TI - Datafication, dataism and dataveillance: Big Data between scientific paradigm and ideology VL - 12 ID - 6447 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Boyce, Geoffrey A. DO - 10.1177/0263775815611423 IS - 2 L1 - internal-pdf://3829176328/Boyce-2015-The rugged border_ Surveillance, po.pdf internal-pdf://1726956424/Boyce-2015-The rugged border_ Surveillance, p1.pdf PY - 2015 SE - 245 SN - 0263-7758 1472-3433 SP - 245-262 ST - The rugged border: Surveillance, policing and the dynamic materiality of the US/Mexico frontier T2 - Environment and Planning D: Society and Space TI - The rugged border: Surveillance, policing and the dynamic materiality of the US/Mexico frontier VL - 34 ID - 5827 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Koulish, Robert DO - 10.1177/1743872111433376 IS - 1 L1 - internal-pdf://1889947177/Koulish-2015-Spiderman’s Web and the Governmen.pdf internal-pdf://1918502650/Koulish-2015-Spiderman’s Web and the Governme2.pdf PY - 2015 SE - 83 SN - 1743-8721 1743-9752 SP - 83-108 ST - Spiderman’s Web and the Governmentality of Electronic Immigrant Detention T2 - Law, Culture and the Humanities TI - Spiderman’s Web and the Governmentality of Electronic Immigrant Detention VL - 11 ID - 6432 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Newell, Bryce Clayton AU - Gomez, Ricardo AU - Guajardo, Verónica DA - 2016-05-26 DO - 10.1080/01972243.2016.1153013 IS - 3 L1 - internal-pdf://0719885200/Newell-2016-Information seeking, technology us.pdf N1 - OA status: green_published PY - 2016 SN - 0197-2243 SP - 176-191 ST - Information seeking, technology use, and vulnerability among migrants at the United States–Mexico border T2 - The Information Society TI - Information seeking, technology use, and vulnerability among migrants at the United States–Mexico border UR - https://pure.uvt.nl/ws/files/17262311/Information_seeking_technology_use_Newell.pdf VL - 32 Y2 - 2023-02-20T19:10:12 ID - 7739 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Anderson, Christopher G. DO - 10.1080/02722011.2017.1406964 IS - 4 L1 - internal-pdf://4059243584/Anderson-2017-Out of Sight, Out of Mind_ Elect.pdf PY - 2017 SE - 385 SN - 0272-2011 1943-9954 SP - 385-407 ST - Out of Sight, Out of Mind: Electronic Travel Authorization and the Interdiction of Asylum Seekers at the Canada–US Security Perimeter T2 - American Review of Canadian Studies TI - Out of Sight, Out of Mind: Electronic Travel Authorization and the Interdiction of Asylum Seekers at the Canada–US Security Perimeter VL - 47 ID - 7621 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Cervantes, Andrea Gómez AU - Menjívar, Cecilia AU - Staples, William IS - 3 L1 - internal-pdf://3829176124/Cervantes-2017-“Humane” Immigration Enforcemen.pdf PY - 2017 SP - 269-292 ST - “Humane” Immigration Enforcement and Latina Immigrants in the Detention Complex T2 - Feminist Criminology TI - “Humane” Immigration Enforcement and Latina Immigrants in the Detention Complex VL - 12 ID - 7631 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Marouf, Fatma KW - alternatives to detention L1 - internal-pdf://3829176300/Marouf-2017-Alternatives to Immigration Detent.pdf PY - 2017 SP - 2141-2192 ST - Alternatives to Immigration Detention T2 - Cardozo Law Review TI - Alternatives to Immigration Detention VL - 38 ID - 6208 ER - TY - JOUR AU - McGreevy, Gail DO - 10.1177/0264550517719105 IS - 3 L1 - internal-pdf://0719885270/McGreevy-2017-‘Changing Lives’_ Using technolo.pdf PY - 2017 SE - 276 SN - 0264-5505 1741-3079 SP - 276-281 ST - ‘Changing Lives’: Using technology to promote desistance T2 - Probation Journal TI - ‘Changing Lives’: Using technology to promote desistance VL - 64 ID - 6588 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Scholarship on the expansion of the U.S. carceral state has primarily focused on imprisonment rates. Yet the majority of adults under formal criminal justice control are on probation, an "alternative" form of supervision. This article develops the concept of mass probation and builds a typology of state control regimes that theorizes both the scale and type of punishment states employ. Drawing on Bureau of Justice Statistics data from 1980 and 2010, I analyze whether mass probation developed in the same places, affecting the same demographic groups and driven by the same criminal justice trends, as mass imprisonment. The results show that mass probation was a unique state development, expanding in unusual places like Minnesota and Washington. The conclusions argue for a reimagining of the causes and consequences of the carceral state to incorporate the expansion of probation. AD - Dept. of Sociology, University of Minnesota. AN - 29937694 AU - Phelps, M. S. C2 - PMC6010031 DA - Jan DO - 10.1177/1462474516649174 ET - 2017/01/01 IS - 1 L1 - internal-pdf://3450939383/Phelps-2017-Mass probation_ Toward a more robu.pdf internal-pdf://2381148770/Phelps-2017-Mass probation_ Toward a more rob1.pdf PY - 2017 SN - 1741-3095 (Electronic) 1462-4745 (Linking) SP - 53-73 ST - Mass probation: Toward a more robust theory of state variation in punishment T2 - Punishm Soc TI - Mass probation: Toward a more robust theory of state variation in punishment UR - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29937694 VL - 19 ID - 6621 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Ruppert, Evelyn AU - Isin, Engin AU - Bigo, Didier DO - 10.1177/2053951717717749 IS - 2 L1 - internal-pdf://3829176104/Ruppert-2017-Data politics.pdf PY - 2017 SE - 205395171771774 SN - 2053-9517 2053-9517 ST - Data politics T2 - Big Data & Society TI - Data politics VL - 4 ID - 7737 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Gill, Nick AU - Conlon, Dierdre AU - Moran, Dominique AU - Burridge, Andrew IS - 2 L1 - internal-pdf://3780591762/Gill-2018-Carceral Circuitry_ New Directions i.pdf PY - 2018 SP - 183–204 ST - Carceral Circuitry: New Directions in Carceral Geography T2 - Progress in Human Geography TI - Carceral Circuitry: New Directions in Carceral Geography VL - 42 ID - 69 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Jefferson, Brian Jordan DO - 10.1177/0308518x18767427 IS - 5 L1 - internal-pdf://3829176257/Jefferson-2018-Computerizing carceral space_ C.pdf PY - 2018 SE - 969 SN - 0308-518X 1472-3409 SP - 969-988 ST - Computerizing carceral space: Coded geographies of criminalization and capture in New York City T2 - Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space TI - Computerizing carceral space: Coded geographies of criminalization and capture in New York City VL - 50 ID - 6477 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Jefferson, Brian Jordan DO - 10.1080/02723638.2018.1446587 IS - 8 L1 - internal-pdf://3829176223/Jefferson-2018-Policing, data, and power-geome.pdf PY - 2018 SE - 1247 SN - 0272-3638 1938-2847 SP - 1247-1264 ST - Policing, data, and power-geometry: intersections of crime analytics and race during urban restructuring T2 - Urban Geography TI - Policing, data, and power-geometry: intersections of crime analytics and race during urban restructuring VL - 39 ID - 6566 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Leurs, Koen AU - Smets, Kevin L1 - internal-pdf://3006968035/Leurs-2018-Five Questions for Digital Migratio.pdf PY - 2018 SP - 1-16 ST - Five Questions for Digital Migration Studies: Learning From Digital Connectivity and Forced Migration In(to) Europe T2 - Social Media + Society TI - Five Questions for Digital Migration Studies: Learning From Digital Connectivity and Forced Migration In(to) Europe ID - 7750 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Ollivon, Franck DO - 10.1111/area.12432 IS - 2 L1 - internal-pdf://1350490025/Ollivon-2018-The other side of electronic moni.pdf PY - 2018 SE - 225 SN - 0004-0894 1475-4762 SP - 225-232 ST - The other side of electronic monitoring: Ethics of care in a control‐oriented technology T2 - Area TI - The other side of electronic monitoring: Ethics of care in a control‐oriented technology VL - 51 ID - 6620 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Arnett, Chaz L1 - internal-pdf://3829176233/Arnett-2019-From Decarceration to E-Carceratio.pdf PY - 2019 SP - 641-720 ST - From Decarceration to E-Carceration T2 - Cardozo Law Review TI - From Decarceration to E-Carceration VL - 41 ID - 6555 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Couldry, Nick AU - Mejias, Ulises A. DA - 2019-05-01 DO - 10.1177/1527476418796632 IS - 4 L1 - internal-pdf://3172685871/Couldry-2019-Data Colonialism_ Rethinking Big.pdf N1 - OA status: green_accepted PY - 2019 SN - 1527-4764 SP - 336-349 ST - Data Colonialism: Rethinking Big Data’s Relation to the Contemporary Subject T2 - Television & New Media TI - Data Colonialism: Rethinking Big Data’s Relation to the Contemporary Subject UR - http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/89511/1/Couldry_Data-colonialism_Accepted.pdf VL - 20 Y2 - 2023-02-20T19:27:28 ID - 7741 ER - TY - JOUR AB - [The focus of this Note is the government's excessive use of GPS monitoring ankle bracelets on asylum-seekers through the Intensive Supervision Appearance Program ("ISAP")—an alternative-to-detention program used by Immigration and Customs Enforcement to supervise certain noncitizens in removal proceedings. This Note explores how the ISAP enrollment process violates the due process rights of asylum-seekers and how these violations have facilitated the excessive use of ankle monitors on these individuals. The first part of this Note explores ISAP's initial purpose and the program's failure to meet it. ISAP originated as a cost-saving, more humane option than detention for certain high-risk noncitizens already detained. Because detaining noncitizens is expensive, ISAP was intended to alleviate some of the financial burden of the detention system by releasing certain detainees from physical detention with GPS monitoring ankle bracelets and supervision. However, ISAP has shifted from its initial focus of removing noncitizens from detention to targeting low-risk asylum-seeking individuals who otherwise would not have been detained. As a result, ISAP has failed to decrease detention costs and failed its initial purpose as an alternative option for noncitizens already detained. The second part of this Note argues that the excessive enrollment of asylum-seekers in ISAP GPS monitoring is facilitated through due process violations. In particular, this Note argues that the enrollment process violates asylum-seekers' due process rights by contravening substantive due process, procedural due process, and fundamental fairness requirements. Finally, the Note proposes solutions to the constitutional deficiencies and advocates for returning ISAP to its initial purpose as a true alternative to detention.] AU - DeStefano, Sara DP - JSTOR IS - 8 L1 - internal-pdf://0719885265/DeStefano-2019-Unshackling the Due Process Rig.pdf OP - Virginia Law Review PY - 2019 SN - 00426601, 19429967 SP - 1667-1716 ST - Unshackling the Due Process Rights of Asylum-Seekers T2 - Virginia Law Review TI - Unshackling the Due Process Rights of Asylum-Seekers UR - https://www-jstor-org.libezproxy2.syr.edu/stable/26891058 VL - 105 Y2 - 2022/06/15/ ID - 6641 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Dobson, Jerome E. AU - Fisher, Peter F. DO - 10.1111/j.1931-0846.2007.tb00508.x IS - 3 L1 - internal-pdf://3273381814/Dobson-2019-The Panopticon's Changing Geograph.pdf PY - 2019 SE - 307 SN - 0016-7428 1931-0846 SP - 307-323 ST - The Panopticon's Changing Geography T2 - Geographical Review TI - The Panopticon's Changing Geography VL - 97 ID - 6623 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Madianou, Mirca DA - 2019-07-01 DO - 10.1177/2056305119863146 IS - 3 L1 - internal-pdf://0719885208/Madianou-2019-Technocolonialism_ Digital Innov.pdf PY - 2019 SN - 2056-3051 SP - 205630511986314 ST - Technocolonialism: Digital Innovation and Data Practices in the Humanitarian Response to Refugee Crises T2 - Social Media + Society TI - Technocolonialism: Digital Innovation and Data Practices in the Humanitarian Response to Refugee Crises UR - https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/2056305119863146 VL - 5 Y2 - 2023-02-20T19:27:20 ID - 7740 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Mancini, Tiziana AU - Sibilla, Federica AU - Argiropoulos, Dimitris AU - Rossi, Michele AU - Everri, Marina DA - 2019-12-02 DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0225684 IS - 12 L1 - internal-pdf://2426206447/Mancini-2019-The opportunities and risks of mo.pdf PY - 2019 SN - 1932-6203 SP - e0225684 ST - The opportunities and risks of mobile phones for refugees’ experience: A scoping review T2 - PLOS ONE TI - The opportunities and risks of mobile phones for refugees’ experience: A scoping review VL - 14 Y2 - 2022-12-09T06:15:57 ID - 7047 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Pattavina, April AU - Corbett, Ronald P. DO - 10.1080/15564886.2019.1659894 IS - 7 L1 - internal-pdf://3829176214/Pattavina-2019-How Smartphone Technology Can L.pdf PY - 2019 SE - 777 SN - 1556-4886 1556-4991 SP - 777-792 ST - How Smartphone Technology Can Link the Theoretical, Policy, and Practical Contexts of Community Supervision Reform: Voices from the Field T2 - Victims & Offenders TI - How Smartphone Technology Can Link the Theoretical, Policy, and Practical Contexts of Community Supervision Reform: Voices from the Field VL - 14 ID - 6587 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Ricaurte, Paola IS - 4 KW - decoloniality, data activism, datafication, digital colonialism, colonialism, capitalism L1 - internal-pdf://2044897661/Ricaurte-2019-Data Epistemologies, The Colonia.pdf PY - 2019 SP - 350-365 ST - Data Epistemologies, The Coloniality of Power, and Resistance T2 - Television & New Media TI - Data Epistemologies, The Coloniality of Power, and Resistance VL - 20 ID - 7742 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Technology challenges social, economic and political borders. This article analyses the role smartphones and social media play in constructing social memory (and consciousness) of bordering practices, examining predominant accounts of migration, de-securitizing and re-humanizing mobility and attaining freedom of movement. Using the case study of the Western Balkans as one of the main transit routes in Europe and building on Stefania Milan’s ‘stealing the fire’ theory, this article investigates transformation of borders from below, as migrants reclaim technology to enable safe passage and create counter-narratives of migration. They do so by contributing to the ‘digital knowledge commons’—a collaborative body of knowledge that can shift restrictive migration policies. The article highlights the importance of studying the technology–mobility nexus, and greater theoretical engagement vis-a-vis the use of technology as a tool for social change, as migration continues to play a pivotal role in political and pu... AU - Sanja, Milivojevic DO - 10.1177/1362480618806921 N1 - 2897145416 PY - 2019 ST - ‘Stealing the fire’, 2.0 style? Technology, the pursuit of mobility, social memory and de-securitization of migration T2 - Theoretical Criminology TI - ‘Stealing the fire’, 2.0 style? Technology, the pursuit of mobility, social memory and de-securitization of migration UR - https://doi.org/10.1177/1362480618806921 ID - 7801 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Humanitarian organizations frequently do not fully address the implications of collecting, storing, and using data about vulnerable populations. We propose a conceptual framework for Humanitarian Information Activities (HIA), especially in the context of undocumented migration. We examine this framework in the light of both a survey of the literature and a pilot study that examines HIA activities in three distinct contexts: (1) higher education institutions that provide support to undocumented students, (2) non-profit organizations that provide legal support to undocumented immigrants, and (3) humanitarian organizations assisting undocumented migrants near the US-Mexico border. We discuss both technological and human risks in HIA, the limitations of privacy self-management, and the need for clear privacy-related guidelines for HIA. We conclude suggesting guidelines to strengthen the privacy protection offered to vulnerable populations by humanitarian organizations in the context of irregular migration. AU - Sara, Vannini AU - Ricardo, Gomez AU - Bryce Clayton, Newell DO - 10.1007/978-3-030-15742-5_23 N1 - 2921113016 PY - 2019 ST - Documenting the Undocumented: Privacy and Security Guidelines for Humanitarian Work with Irregular Migrants TI - Documenting the Undocumented: Privacy and Security Guidelines for Humanitarian Work with Irregular Migrants UR - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-15742-5_23 https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-15742-5_23 ID - 7806 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Sivunen, Nina DA - 2019-01-09 DO - 10.3390/soc9010002 IS - 1 L1 - internal-pdf://3829176102/Sivunen-2019-An-ethnographic-study-of-deaf-refug.pdf N1 - OA status: gold_doaj PY - 2019 SN - 2075-4698 SP - 2 ST - An Ethnographic Study of Deaf Refugees Seeking Asylum in Finland T2 - Societies TI - An Ethnographic Study of Deaf Refugees Seeking Asylum in Finland UR - https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4698/9/1/2/pdf VL - 9 Y2 - 2023-02-21T02:52:36 ID - 7770 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Updegrove, Alexander H. AU - Shadwick, Joshua T. AU - O’Neal, Eryn Nicole AU - Piquero, Alex R. DO - 10.1080/01639625.2019.1572068 IS - 4 L1 - internal-pdf://2426206495/Updegrove-2019-“If They Notice I’m Mexican”_ N.pdf PY - 2019 SE - 458 SN - 0163-9625 1521-0456 SP - 458-482 ST - “If They Notice I’m Mexican”: Narratives of Perceived Discrimination from Individuals Who Crossed the U.S.-Mexico Border at Ports of Entry T2 - Deviant Behavior TI - “If They Notice I’m Mexican”: Narratives of Perceived Discrimination from Individuals Who Crossed the U.S.-Mexico Border at Ports of Entry VL - 41 ID - 7614 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Over the past decade, an expanding literature has explored the ways in which refugees rely on mobile communication technologies to stay in touch with a wider community and to access relevant information and services in their new places. Nevertheless, challenges linked to (a lack of) digital literacy and accessibility among refugees, and associated risks of technology use can negatively affect their empowerment and participation in a “mediatized” society. In light of the mutually shaping processes emerging between technology and society, this article provides an overview of studies focusing on the relationship between mobile communication practices and refugee lives under different circumstances. Using the concept of affordances as an analytic tool, this article looks into ways in which existing studies address the possibilities and vulnerabilities of mobile communications, the social conditions, and the agency of refugees in engaging with mobile technologies in the different temporal and spatial dimensions of their migration trajectories. Future studies should explore more collective processes and the power dynamics involved in the appropriation of mobile technologies by different migration actors. AU - Amanda Paz, Aléncar DO - 10.1111/soc4.12802 L1 - internal-pdf://0628174974/Amanda Paz-2020-Mobile communication and refug.pdf N1 - 3033328282 PY - 2020 ST - Mobile communication and refugees: an analytical review of academic literature T2 - Sociology Compass TI - Mobile communication and refugees: an analytical review of academic literature UR - https://doi.org/10.1111/soc4.12802 https://compass.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdfdirect/10.1111/soc4.12802?download=true ID - 7798 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Aradau, Claudia DO - 10.1080/14650045.2020.1853103 IS - 1 L1 - internal-pdf://0304089096/Aradau-2020-Experimentality, Surplus Data and.pdf PY - 2020 SE - 26 SN - 1465-0045 1557-3028 SP - 26-46 ST - Experimentality, Surplus Data and the Politics of Debilitation in Borderzones T2 - Geopolitics TI - Experimentality, Surplus Data and the Politics of Debilitation in Borderzones VL - 27 ID - 7743 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Numerous organizations work to provide humanitarian aid to undocumented migrants along the US-Mexico border—from running shelters in Mexico to placing water on migratory trails. Resistance to infor... AU - Bryce Clayton, Newell AU - Sara, Vannini AU - Sara, Vannini AU - Ricardo, Gomez DO - 10.1080/01972243.2020.1761918 N1 - 3028323110 PY - 2020 ST - The information practices and politics of migrant-aid work in the US-Mexico borderlands T2 - The Information Society TI - The information practices and politics of migrant-aid work in the US-Mexico borderlands UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/01972243.2020.1761918 ID - 7804 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Eife, Erin AU - Kirk, Gabriela DO - 10.1177/1462474520941936 IS - 1 L1 - internal-pdf://3797244137/Eife-2020-“And you will wait …”_ Carceral tran.pdf PY - 2020 SE - 69 SN - 1462-4745 1741-3095 SP - 69-87 ST - “And you will wait …”: Carceral transportation in electronic monitoring as part of the punishment process T2 - Punishment & Society TI - “And you will wait …”: Carceral transportation in electronic monitoring as part of the punishment process VL - 23 ID - 6619 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Gidaris, Constantine DO - 10.1177/2632666320936436 IS - 1 L1 - internal-pdf://4103781186/Gidaris-2020-Rethinking confinement through Ca.pdf PY - 2020 SE - 263266632093643 SN - 2632-6663 2632-6663 SP - 1-14 ST - Rethinking confinement through Canada’s alternatives to detention program T2 - Incarceration TI - Rethinking confinement through Canada’s alternatives to detention program VL - 1 ID - 6434 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Martinez-Aranda, Mirian G. DO - 10.1080/1369183x.2020.1822159 IS - 1 L1 - internal-pdf://1548233366/Martinez-Aranda-2020-Extended punishment_ crim.pdf PY - 2020 SE - 74 SN - 1369-183X 1469-9451 SP - 74-91 ST - Extended punishment: criminalising immigrants through surveillance technology T2 - Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies TI - Extended punishment: criminalising immigrants through surveillance technology VL - 48 ID - 6430 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Pittman, Julie KW - alternatives to detention L1 - internal-pdf://3780591763/Pittman-2020-Released into Shackles_ The Rise.pdf PY - 2020 SP - 587-618 ST - Released into Shackles: The Rise of Immigrant E-Carceration T2 - California Law Review TI - Released into Shackles: The Rise of Immigrant E-Carceration VL - 108 ID - 6440 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Axster, Sabrina AU - Danewid, Ida AU - Goldstein, Asher AU - Mahmoudi, Matt AU - Tansel, Cemal Burak AU - Wilcox, Lauren DO - 10.1093/ips/olab013 IS - 3 L1 - internal-pdf://2740693088/Axster-2021-Colonial Lives of the Carceral Arc.pdf PY - 2021 SE - 415 SN - 1749-5679 1749-5687 SP - 415-439 ST - Colonial Lives of the Carceral Archipelago: Rethinking the Neoliberal Security State T2 - International Political Sociology TI - Colonial Lives of the Carceral Archipelago: Rethinking the Neoliberal Security State VL - 15 ID - 6438 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Bhatia, Monish DO - 10.1177/0306396820963485 IS - 3 L1 - internal-pdf://2807744403/Bhatia-2021-Racial surveillance and the mental.pdf PY - 2021 SE - 18 SN - 0306-3968 1741-3125 SP - 18-36 ST - Racial surveillance and the mental health impacts of electronic monitoring on migrants T2 - Race & Class TI - Racial surveillance and the mental health impacts of electronic monitoring on migrants VL - 62 ID - 6437 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Bolhuis, Maarten P AU - Van Wijk, Joris DA - 2021-08-25 DO - 10.1093/jrs/feaa029 IS - 2 L1 - internal-pdf://3516616672/Bolhuis-2021-Seeking Asylum in the Digital Era.pdf PY - 2021 SN - 0951-6328 SP - 1595-1617 ST - Seeking Asylum in the Digital Era: Social-Media and Mobile-Device Vetting in Asylum Procedures in Five European countries T2 - Journal of Refugee Studies TI - Seeking Asylum in the Digital Era: Social-Media and Mobile-Device Vetting in Asylum Procedures in Five European countries VL - 34 Y2 - 2023-02-20T20:50:32 ID - 7748 ER - TY - JOUR AB - This literature review aims to identify conscious, intentional, repetitive and transferrable information-related decisions and activities (i.e. information practices) for individuals to alleviate their information vulnerability. Information vulnerability refers to the lack of access to accurate, affordable, complete, relevant and timely information or the inability to use such information, which can place individuals, communities or society at disadvantage or hurt them.,Conceptual literature review.,This review presents seven conscious, intentional, repetitive and transferrable information practices to alleviate information vulnerability.,Due to the transferability potential of the seven information practices, diverse populations in varied contexts could refer to, adapt and benefit from appropriate combinations of information practices and their manifestations. The framework can be used by individuals for alleviating information vulnerability. Thus, this paper responds to the call for conducting action-driven research in information science for addressing real-world problems. Information professionals can help individuals select and implement appropriate combinations of seven information practices for alleviating information vulnerability.,We propose (1) a parsimonious, episodic framework for alleviating information vulnerability, which depicts the inter-relationship among the seven information practices and (2) a three-dimensional plot with information access, use and value as three axes to map the manifestation and outcome of alleviating information vulnerability. AU - Devendra, Potnis AU - Joseph, Winberry DO - 10.1108/jd-05-2021-0106 N1 - 3213264715 PY - 2021 ST - Seven information practices for alleviating information vulnerability T2 - Journal of Documentation TI - Seven information practices for alleviating information vulnerability UR - https://doi.org/10.1108/jd-05-2021-0106 ID - 7805 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Since 2015, an increased number of asylum seekers is coming to Europe. These migration movements increasingly rely on digital infrastructure, such as mobile internet access and online services, in order to reach their targeted destination countries. Asylum seekers often use smartphones for information and communication purposes. Even though there are many positive aspects in the use of such technologies, researchers have to consider the perceived risks of this specific user group. This work aims at investigating the use of mobile information technologies by asylum seekers during their flight, especially taking privacy into account. Thus, it examines asylum seekers' digital privacy perceptions and identifies privacy protection behaviors by conducting a qualitative interview study with 14 asylum seekers who applied for asylum in Germany. The results show that asylum seekers are often aware of the various risks deriving from the use of smartphones and ICT, such as surveillance and persecution by state or non-state actors as well as extortion by criminals. Based on this, this work furthermore outlines different strategies used to manage these risks. Since the lack of privacy and trust leads to avoidance behavior, the insights of this study provide valuable information for the design of assistance apps and collaboration platforms, which appropriately address the specific needs for digital privacy in the context of flight, or for the conception of privacy-enhancing technologies helping to achieve this. AU - Enno, Steinbrink AU - Lilian, Reichert AU - Michelle, Mende AU - Christian, Reuter DO - 10.1145/3479526 N1 - 3205858893 PY - 2021 ST - Digital Privacy Perceptions of Asylum Seekers in Germany: An Empirical Study about Smartphone Usage during the Flight TI - Digital Privacy Perceptions of Asylum Seekers in Germany: An Empirical Study about Smartphone Usage during the Flight UR - https://doi.org/10.1145/3479526 ID - 7802 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Koulish, Robert AU - Evans, Kate KW - act, role, conclusion, policy, criminal law, criminal justice, bail reform act L1 - internal-pdf://0719885263/Koulish-2021-Punishing With Impunity_ The Lega.pdf PY - 2021 ST - Punishing With Impunity: The Legacy of Risk Classification Assessment In Immigration Detention T2 - Georgetown Immigration Law Journal TI - Punishing With Impunity: The Legacy of Risk Classification Assessment In Immigration Detention ID - 6639 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Ledvora, Lisa L1 - internal-pdf://2970374321/Ledvora-2021-(No) Libre By Nexus_ The Fight Ag.pdf PY - 2021 SP - 687-694 ST - (No) Libre By Nexus: The Fight Against Immigrant E-Carceration And Exploitation T2 - Georgetown Immigration Law Journal TI - (No) Libre By Nexus: The Fight Against Immigrant E-Carceration And Exploitation VL - 35 ID - 6441 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Undocumented Central American migrants in Mexico are legally eligible for free access to the public health system through the new Instituto para la Salud y el Bienestar (INSABI) health program, but many experience structural vulnerability and stigmatization that prevent them from accessing health-care facilities. The purpose of this study is to investigate the discrepancy between the migrants’ Human Right to health, proclaimed by the Mexican Government and supposedly guaranteed by law, and the reality of the migration process.,This study reviewed relevant literature on the health risk factors, social and structural vulnerability, stigmatization and structural violence experienced by undocumented migrants as obstacles to their Human Right to health. It also reviews the current legal framework in Mexico and internationally.,This review demonstrates the lack of implementation of the current legal framework in Mexico and identifies a set of complex obstacles to effective access to health for undocumented migrants. Although the migration process itself was not found to be directly associated with major health issues, the social conditions of the migratory journey expose the migrants to serious threats, especially sexually transmitted diseases and tuberculosis.,This paper makes 10 practical recommendations for interventions collectively involving the state, international and civil organizations and the migrant community. These are especially relevant since the implementation of the INSABI health program in 2020.,The paper lays the basis for influencing Mexican health system stakeholders to improve the health of migrants.,The sociological barriers to health access for undocumented populations in Mexico have not been fully explored. In addition, this paper provides a unique reflection on opportunities and challenges linked to the 2020 health system reform. AU - Philippe, Stoesslé AU - Francisco, González-Salazar DO - 10.1108/ijmhsc-03-2020-0028 N1 - 3217572694 PY - 2021 ST - Right to health for undocumented migrants in Mexico: from theory to practice in the context of the health system reform T2 - International Journal of Migration, Health and Social Care TI - Right to health for undocumented migrants in Mexico: from theory to practice in the context of the health system reform UR - https://doi.org/10.1108/ijmhsc-03-2020-0028 ID - 7803 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Pianezzi, Daniela AU - Cinquini, Lino AU - Grossi, Giuseppe AU - Sargiacomo, Massimo DO - 10.1080/01559982.2021.1927606 IS - 2 L1 - internal-pdf://1734575167/Pianezzi-2021-Migration and the neoliberal sta.pdf PY - 2021 SE - 134 SN - 0155-9982 1467-6303 SP - 134-159 ST - Migration and the neoliberal state: accounting ethics in the Italian response to the refugee crisis T2 - Accounting Forum TI - Migration and the neoliberal state: accounting ethics in the Italian response to the refugee crisis VL - 46 ID - 7751 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Rothe, Delf AU - Fröhlich, Christiane AU - Rodriguez Lopez, Juan Miguel DO - 10.1093/ips/olaa021 IS - 1 L1 - internal-pdf://2426206448/Rothe-2021-Digital Humanitarianism and the Vis.pdf PY - 2021 SE - 41 SN - 1749-5679 1749-5687 SP - 41-62 ST - Digital Humanitarianism and the Visual Politics of the Refugee Camp: (Un)Seeing Control T2 - International Political Sociology TI - Digital Humanitarianism and the Visual Politics of the Refugee Camp: (Un)Seeing Control VL - 15 ID - 7746 ER - TY - JOUR AD - Nishant Uppal is with Harvard Medical School and Harvard Business School, Boston, MA. Raquel Sofia Sandoval is with Harvard Medical School, Boston, and Harvard Kennedy School, Cambridge, MA. Parsa Erfani is with Harvard Medical School and Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston. Ranit Mishori is with Georgetown University School of Medicine, Washington, DC, and Physicians for Human Rights, New York, NY. Katherine R. Peeler is with Harvard Medical School, Boston Children's Hospital, and Physicians for Human Rights. AN - 34464204 AU - Uppal, N. AU - Sandoval, R. S. AU - Erfani, P. AU - Mishori, R. AU - Peeler, K. R. C2 - PMC8489646 DA - Aug DO - 10.2105/AJPH.2021.306399 ET - 2021/09/01 IS - 8 L1 - internal-pdf://1984210011/Uppal-2021-Alternatives to Detention_ Immigrat.pdf N1 - Uppal, Nishant Sandoval, Raquel Sofia Erfani, Parsa Mishori, Ranit Peeler, Katherine R eng Editorial Comment Am J Public Health. 2021 Aug;111(8):1395-1397. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2021.306399. PY - 2021 SN - 1541-0048 (Electronic) 0090-0036 (Linking) SP - 1395-1397 ST - Alternatives to Detention: Immigration Reform Grounded in Public Health T2 - American Journal of Public Health TI - Alternatives to Detention: Immigration Reform Grounded in Public Health UR - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34464204 VL - 111 ID - 6433 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Information and communication technologies (ICTs) have increasingly become vital for people on the move including the nearly 80 million displaced due to conflict, violence, and human right violations globally. However, existing research on ICTs and migrants, which almost entirely focused on migrants' ICT use 'en route' or within developed economies principally in the perspectives of researchers from these regions, is very fragmented posing a difficulty in understanding the key objects of research. Moreover, ICTs are often celebrated as liberating and exploitable at migrants' rational discretion even though they are 'double-edged swords' with significant risks, burdens, pressures and inequality challenges particularly for vulnerable migrants including those forcefully displaced and trafficked. Towards addressing these limitations and illuminating future directions, this paper, first, scrutinises the existing research vis-a-vis ICTs' liberating and authoritarian role particularly for vulnerable migrants whereby explicating key issues in the research domain. Second, it identifies key gaps and opportunities for future research. Using a tailored methodology, broad literature relating to ICTs and migration/development published in the period 1990-2020 was surveyed resulting in 157 selected publications which were critically appraised vis-a-vis the key themes, major technologies dealt with, and methodologies and theories/concepts adopted. Furthermore, key insights, trends, gaps, and future research opportunities pertaining to both the existing and missing objects of research in ICTs and migration/development are spotlighted. AU - Yidnekachew Redda, Haile L1 - internal-pdf://0719885202/Yidnekachew Red-2021-The Liberalities and Tyra.pdf N1 - 3194991982 PY - 2021 ST - The Liberalities and Tyrannies of ICTs for Vulnerable Migrants: The Status Quo, Gaps and Directions T2 - arXiv: Computers and Society TI - The Liberalities and Tyrannies of ICTs for Vulnerable Migrants: The Status Quo, Gaps and Directions UR - https://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=The Liberalities and Tyrannies of ICTs for Vulnerable Migrants: The Status Quo, Gaps and Directions ID - 7799 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Alencar, Amanda AU - Camargo, Julia DA - 2022-09-28 DO - 10.17645/mac.v10i3.5468 IS - 3 L1 - internal-pdf://2442186131/Alencar-2022-WhatsApp as a Tool for Researchin.pdf PY - 2022 SN - 2183-2439 SP - 261-272 ST - WhatsApp as a Tool for Researching the Everyday Lives of Venezuelan Refugees Settling in Brazil T2 - Media and Communication TI - WhatsApp as a Tool for Researching the Everyday Lives of Venezuelan Refugees Settling in Brazil VL - 10 Y2 - 2023-02-20T20:40:48 ID - 7745 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Beckett, Anne G. AU - Viaud, Loune AU - Heisler, Michele AU - Mukherjee, Joia DA - 2022-04-21 DO - 10.1056/nejmp2200274 IS - 16 L1 - internal-pdf://2953234470/Beckett-2022-Misusing Public Health as a Prete.pdf PY - 2022 SN - 0028-4793 SP - e41 ST - Misusing Public Health as a Pretext to End Asylum — Title 42 T2 - New England Journal of Medicine TI - Misusing Public Health as a Pretext to End Asylum — Title 42 VL - 386 Y2 - 2023-02-21T00:37:53 ID - 7758 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Daniel, Ghezelbash DO - 10.1080/14747731.2022.2051274 L1 - internal-pdf://3172685865/Technology and countersurveillance holding gov.pdf internal-pdf://3450939379/Daniel-2022-Technology and countersurveillance.pdf N1 - 4220909820 PY - 2022 SP - 1-15 ST - Technology and countersurveillance: holding governments accountable for refugee externalization policies T2 - Globalizations TI - Technology and countersurveillance: holding governments accountable for refugee externalization policies UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/14747731.2022.2051274 ID - 7800 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Fabi, Rachel AU - Rivas, Saul AU - Griffin, Marsha IS - 8 L1 - internal-pdf://4059243576/Fabi-2022-Not in Our Name_ The Disingenuous Us.pdf PY - 2022 SP - 1115-1119 ST - Not in Our Name: The Disingenuous Use of "Public Health" as Justification for Title 42 Expulsions in the Era of the Migrant Protection Protocols T2 - American Journal of Public Health TI - Not in Our Name: The Disingenuous Use of "Public Health" as Justification for Title 42 Expulsions in the Era of the Migrant Protection Protocols VL - 112 ID - 7755 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Okidegbe, Ngozi L1 - internal-pdf://3829176270/Okidegbe-2022-Discredited Data.pdf PY - 2022 ST - Discredited Data T2 - Cornell Law Review TI - Discredited Data ID - 6450 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Purpose The paper aims to explore the value of various notions of precarity for the study of information practices and for addressing inequities and marginalization from an information standpoint. Design/methodology/approach Several interrelated conceptualizations of precarity and associated terms from outside of library and information science (LIS) are presented. LIS studies involving precarity and related topics, including various situations of insecurity, instability, migration and transition, are then discussed. In that context, new approaches to information precarity and new directions for information practices research are explored. Findings Studies that draw from holistic characterizations of precarity, especially those engaging with theories from beyond the field, are quite limited in LIS research. Broader understandings of precarity in information contexts may contribute to greater engagement with political and economic considerations and to development of non-individualistic responses and services. Originality/value The presentation of a framework for an initial model of information precarity and the expansion of connections between existing LIS research and concepts of precarity from other fields suggest a new lens for further addressing inequities, marginalization and precarious life in LIS research. AU - Owen, Stewart-Robertson DO - 10.1108/jd-04-2021-0084 N1 - 4213386585 PY - 2022 ST - Embracing theories of precarity for the study of information practices T2 - Journal of Documentation TI - Embracing theories of precarity for the study of information practices UR - https://doi.org/10.1108/jd-04-2021-0084 ID - 7807 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Sherman-Stokes, Sarah DA - 2022-01-01 DO - 10.2139/ssrn.4192032 L1 - internal-pdf://0719885243/Sherman-Stokes-2022-Detention Abolition and th.pdf PY - 2022 SN - 1556-5068 ST - Detention Abolition and the Violence of Digital Cages T2 - SSRN Electronic Journal TI - Detention Abolition and the Violence of Digital Cages Y2 - 2022-09-29T18:11:58 ID - 6817 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Zard, Monette AU - Mccann, Katherine AU - Heisler, Michele AU - Spiegel, Paul B. AU - Waldman, Ronald DA - 2022-07-01 DO - 10.1038/s41591-022-01814-2 IS - 7 L1 - internal-pdf://4084960708/Zard-2022-Public health law must never again b.pdf PY - 2022 SN - 1078-8956 SP - 1333-1334 ST - Public health law must never again be misused to expel asylum seekers: Title 42 T2 - Nature Medicine TI - Public health law must never again be misused to expel asylum seekers: Title 42 VL - 28 Y2 - 2023-02-21T00:37:42 ID - 7757 ER -