*VIDEO surveillance, *NATIONAL security, *PRIVACY, *CITIZENSHIP, *GOVERNMENT policy, *SOCIAL policy, MEXICAN politics & government, SOCIAL conditions in Mexico
Abstract
This paper analyze how the video surveillance puts the personal data that manage in a space of legal indeterminacy, and how generates process of social and space classification that derive, sometimes, in forms of social exclusion. The perspective that frame the capacity that individuals have to construct autonomy and control spaces against the stratification and domination logics. From this perspective, it's analyzed how the weak or inexistent regulation of video surveillance cameras in Mexico can affect the citizenship practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
*BORDERLANDS, *NATIONAL security, *BORDER security, *DISCOURSE theory (Communication), *GEOGRAPHIC boundaries, *GOVERNMENT policy, EMIGRATION & immigration in Mexico
Abstract
Discourse theory is useful for understanding the creation of borders, whether material or imaginary. This paper addresses three situations on Mexico's southern border between 2000 and 2015 in which elements of discourse theory may be applied. The outcomes were the following: 1) correlations may be made between the elements of the discourse moving from the northern to the southern border, but not in the opposite direction; 2) the process of securitising the discourse about migrants is continuous, and new securitising elements are regularly added; 3) an "elastic borders" phenomenon exists, where borders extend or retract, thereby creating new border regions; and 4) discourses around the southern border are constructed with more pejorative elements than the northern, despite the fact that crime rates are higher in the north. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Published
2015
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