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‘It sounds like they shouldn't be here’: immigration checks on the streets of Sydney

机译:“听起来好像他们不应该在这里”:悉尼街头的移民检查

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Australian state police have historically held wide-ranging powers which reflect their origins as all-encompassing administrators and agents of control over unruly colonial subjects. Contemporary police powers to stop and question individuals to establish whether they are lawfully present stem from at least 1958 when they were incorporated into section 188 of the Migration Act. There is no official monitoring of the use of stop and search powers in this or any other context, and the capacity for police to make on-the-spot checks has been enhanced by the establishment of the Immigration Status System which provides immediate feedback about immigration status, 24 hours a day. This paper will draw on statistical data, survey responses and interviews with senior New South Wales police to build up a picture of their immigration status checking practices, concentrating on opportunistic street encounters. The reported starting point - of directing attention to those who are perceived to be ‘out of place’ - embeds street-level border control into everyday practices of order maintenance policing. Questions of immigration status are found to be closely intertwined with determinations of identity, highlighting the importance in a globalising world of marking non-citizens as ‘surveillable subjects’, and raising deeper questions about entitlement and belonging.View full textDownload full textKeywordsstreet policing, surveillance, stop and search, migration policing, identityRelated var addthis_config = { ui_cobrand: "Taylor & Francis Online", services_compact: "citeulike,netvibes,twitter,technorati,delicious,linkedin,facebook,stumbleupon,digg,google,more", pubid: "ra-4dff56cd6bb1830b" }; Add to shortlist Link Permalink http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10439463.2011.610196
机译:澳大利亚国家警察历来拥有广泛的权力,这反映了他们作为无所不能的殖民主体的无所不包的行政管理人员和控制人员的出身。当代的警察制止和质疑个人以确认他们是否合法存在的权力至少可以追溯到1958年,当时他们被纳入《移民法》第188条。在这种情况下或其他任何情况下,都没有官方对停火权和搜查权的使用情况进行监控,并且通过建立移民身份系统来增强对警察进行现场检查的能力,该系统可提供有关移民的即时反馈状态,每天24小时。本文将利用统计数据,调查回复以及与新南威尔士州高级警员的访谈来构建他们的移民身份检查做法的图片,重点是机会性街头遭遇。报告的起点-将注意力转移到被认为“过时的”人群上-将街道一级的边境管制纳入了日常秩序维护策略。人们发现移民身份问题与身份确定紧密相关,突显了在全球化世界中将非公民标记为“可监视的主体”的重要性,并提出了关于权利和归属的更深层次的问题。查看全文下载全文治安,监视,停止和搜索,迁移治安,身份相关var addthis_config = {ui_cobrand:“泰勒和弗朗西斯在线”,servicescompact:“ citeulike,netvibes,twitter,technorati,delicious,linkedin,facebook,stumbleupon,digg,google,更多” ,pubid:“ ra-4dff56cd6bb1830b”};添加到候选列表链接永久链接http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10439463.2011.610196

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