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ID137615
Title ProperHumanitarian politics of european border policing
Other Title Informationfrontex and border police in evros
LanguageENG
AuthorPallister-Wilkins, Polly
Summary / Abstract (Note)This paper explores humanitarianism in the practice of Frontex-assisted Greek border police in Evros and of Frontex at their headquarters in Warsaw. Building on the increase in humanitarian justifications for border policing practices as well as the charges of a lack of humanity, the paper analyzes the relations between humanitarian responses and border policing where humanitarianism is used for framing and giving meaning to institutional and operational practices. In offering an interpretive view of border policing undertaken by people in their working lives across sites and scales, it builds on the critical literature addressing the multifaceted nature of border control in Europe today. At the same time, it speaks to wider debates about the double-sided nature of humanitarian governance concerned with care and control. It argues that while humanitarian motivations have implications for operations in the field and help to frame “good practice” at the policy level, humanitarianism should not be seen as additional or paradoxical to wider border policing operations within forms of governance developed to address the problems of population. Conflict arises in the paradox of protection between the subject of humanitarianism and policing, the population, and the object of border control, the territorially bounded state or regional unit.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Political Sociology Vol. 9, No.1; Mar 2015: p. 53–69
Journal SourceInternational Political Sociology 2015-03 9, 1
Key WordsEurope ;  Border Policy ;  FRONTEX ;  Humanitarian Politics ;  European Border Policy ;  Border Police ;  Evros ;  Greek Border Police ;  Paradox of Protection