“It’s To Protect the Country!”: The Everyday Performance of Border Security in Sweden

In 2015, Sweden introduced inner border control. Five years later, the ‘temporary’ controls remain. Their increasing permanence raises urgent questions about the logics that undergird the exercise of biopolitical border security and the relationship between intent and practices on the ground. Drawin...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mette Catarina Skaarup
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Helsinki University Press 2021-06-01
Series:Nordic Journal of Migration Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal-njmr.org/articles/422
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spelling doaj-e3ced273e7ce48bc845c218f0c9effaf2021-07-14T06:30:42ZengHelsinki University PressNordic Journal of Migration Research1799-649X2021-06-0111210.33134/njmr.422352“It’s To Protect the Country!”: The Everyday Performance of Border Security in SwedenMette Catarina Skaarup0University of Copenhagen, CopenhagenIn 2015, Sweden introduced inner border control. Five years later, the ‘temporary’ controls remain. Their increasing permanence raises urgent questions about the logics that undergird the exercise of biopolitical border security and the relationship between intent and practices on the ground. Drawing on in-depth interviews with Swedish border guards and fieldwork conducted at Hyllie Station—the first station en route from Denmark—this article contributes original ethnographic research on the sparsely researched Swedish border control and the work routines of Swedish border professionals. The central theoretical contribution of the article is the consideration of how discretion and a range of mundane factors complicate the realisation of biopolitics. The article further contributes to the scholarship on everyday bordering practices with methodological reflections on the importance of studying the ‘unspectacular’ border sites and a firm reminder that not all borders have turned into semi-automated, smart data borders. Overall, the article argues that the border control at Hyllie functions according to a ‘leaky’ (Marr 2012: 84) biopolitics; not a monolithic performance of overarching state objectives, but one assembled 'ad hoc', constrained by resource availability and shaped by the discretion exercised by border officers.https://journal-njmr.org/articles/422swedenbordersborder securitybiopoliticsfoucault
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mette Catarina Skaarup
spellingShingle Mette Catarina Skaarup
“It’s To Protect the Country!”: The Everyday Performance of Border Security in Sweden
Nordic Journal of Migration Research
sweden
borders
border security
biopolitics
foucault
author_facet Mette Catarina Skaarup
author_sort Mette Catarina Skaarup
title “It’s To Protect the Country!”: The Everyday Performance of Border Security in Sweden
title_short “It’s To Protect the Country!”: The Everyday Performance of Border Security in Sweden
title_full “It’s To Protect the Country!”: The Everyday Performance of Border Security in Sweden
title_fullStr “It’s To Protect the Country!”: The Everyday Performance of Border Security in Sweden
title_full_unstemmed “It’s To Protect the Country!”: The Everyday Performance of Border Security in Sweden
title_sort “it’s to protect the country!”: the everyday performance of border security in sweden
publisher Helsinki University Press
series Nordic Journal of Migration Research
issn 1799-649X
publishDate 2021-06-01
description In 2015, Sweden introduced inner border control. Five years later, the ‘temporary’ controls remain. Their increasing permanence raises urgent questions about the logics that undergird the exercise of biopolitical border security and the relationship between intent and practices on the ground. Drawing on in-depth interviews with Swedish border guards and fieldwork conducted at Hyllie Station—the first station en route from Denmark—this article contributes original ethnographic research on the sparsely researched Swedish border control and the work routines of Swedish border professionals. The central theoretical contribution of the article is the consideration of how discretion and a range of mundane factors complicate the realisation of biopolitics. The article further contributes to the scholarship on everyday bordering practices with methodological reflections on the importance of studying the ‘unspectacular’ border sites and a firm reminder that not all borders have turned into semi-automated, smart data borders. Overall, the article argues that the border control at Hyllie functions according to a ‘leaky’ (Marr 2012: 84) biopolitics; not a monolithic performance of overarching state objectives, but one assembled 'ad hoc', constrained by resource availability and shaped by the discretion exercised by border officers.
topic sweden
borders
border security
biopolitics
foucault
url https://journal-njmr.org/articles/422
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