Bethlehem, Occupied Palestinian Territories, Spring 2023 Migration continues to be a highly contested political issue around the world. 74 walls and counting now divide us from one another, augmented by a growing turn to digital technologies to supplement border enforcement. Technologies like drone surveillance, algorithmic decision-making, and even sci-fi seeming projects like robodogs at the Mexico/US border or AI lie detectors piloted in Europe are part of a global violent border regime that has claimed thousands of lives. And powerful actors like corporations and the private sector continue to benefit, with the global border industrial complex estimated to be close to trillion dollars by 2031. Surveillance has also long been used to repress. After the December 2024 fall of the Assad Regime in Syria, footage coming out from the recently liberated Sednayah prison complex is a stark reminder of the gruesome cost of government surveillance used to oppress, brutalize, and kill thousands, creating the largest refugee movement. Now, with the advent of the second Trump Administration, the ongoing genocide in Gaza, and the rise of nationalist populism in Europe. technologies continue to play a crucial part in the politics of fear. For example, in the United States, Trump has already signaled the ramping up of border surveillance, utilizing the immigration detention system expanded under the Biden Administration, and opening up the Oval Office to private sector influence. At the Migration and Technology Monitor, now more than ever, we remain committed to creating spaces of collaboration, care, and co-creation of knowledge. We started as an archive and a platform in 2020 but quickly grew into a community of collaboration, care, and co-creation of knowledge. And now finally with some much needed administrative support, we are starting a newsletter to share with you some of our work. On our multilingual platform available in Arabic, French, Spanish, and English, you will find a border tech tracker, resources, and visuals on border technologies. However, our flagship project has been our fellowship program for colleagues-on-the-move.
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