ID | 071964 |
Title Proper | Global visa regime and the political technologies of the international self |
Other Title Information | borders, bodies, biopolitics |
Language | ENG |
Author | Salter, Mark B |
Publication | 2006. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article examines the micropolitics of the border by tracing the interface between government and individual body. In the first act of confession before the vanguard of governmental machinery, the border examination is crucial to both the operation of the global mobility regime and of sovereign power. The visa and passport systems are tickets that allow temporary and permanent membership in the community, and the border represents the limit of the community. The nascent global mobility regime through passport, visa, and frontier formalities manage an international population through and within a biopolitical frame and a confessionary complex that creates bodies that understand themselves to be international. The author charts the way that an international biopolitical order is constructed through the creation, classification, and contention of a surveillance regime and an international political technology of the individual that is driven by the globalization of a documentary, biometric, and confessionary regime. The global visa regime and international borders are crucial in constructing both international mobile populations and international mobile individuals. |
`In' analytical Note | Alternatives Vol. 31, No. 2; Apr-Jun 2006: p167-189 |
Journal Source | Alternatives Vol: 31 No 2 |
Key Words | Borders ; Micropolitics ; Visas ; Biopolitics ; Migration |