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Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 12 February, 2008 - 15:53
subject: Biopolitics | Border Activism | ID Cards | Identity | Immigration | Mute Vol 2 #7 | Precarity
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Submitted by unterschreber on Monday, 24 March, 2008 - 02:53
Private Eye (In the Back section) From Private Eye, a brief update on the lie detector system soon to be used across the UK on suspected 'benefit thieves'*, i.e. all claimants. The system comes from Mossad, but what's really alarming is that it is administered by scorched-earth PFI war machine Capita. subject: Biopolitics | Class | Identity | Information | Policy | Precarity | Psychology | State | Surveillance | Technology | War | Other
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Friday, 29 February, 2008 - 14:32
C. L-Stavrides While bird flu panic made a return to the UK mainland last autumn, the promised pandemic failed to materialise. What does continue to evolve, however, are repressive forms of population management sustained by hypothetical threats of megadeath – writes C. L-Stavrides subject: Asia | Biology | Biopolitics | Epidemic | Immigration | Labour Struggles | Mute Vol 2 #7 | Slums | Urbanism | War on Terror
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Thursday, 14 February, 2008 - 16:42
Elizabeth Povinelli On the pretext of a child sexual abuse crisis in Australia’s Northern Territory the Howard government passed emergency legislation and prepared a land invasion of aboriginal areas by police, doctors and the army. Elizabeth Povinelli locates this latest state of exception in a wider neoliberal project to impose work and austerity. Images and text box by Benedict Seymour
subject: Australasia | Biopolitics | Drugs | Law | Multiculturalism | Mute Vol 2 #7 | Nationalism | Neoliberal | Policy | Race
Editorial content |
subject: Australasia | Biopolitics | Class | Mute Vol 2 #7 | Policy | Race | State
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 12 February, 2008 - 14:53
Josephine Berry Slater We are standing on the brink of an immense revelation. The revelation of people to states. In the UK – the surveillance workshop of the world – people are becoming increasingly visible through IT projects like the Electronic Patients Record and the National Identity Register, as well as a forthcoming points-based immigration regime premised on the ability to identify subjects and then track and cross-reference their data as never before. Joining-up data, and hence governance, is the name of the game. What are the implications then of this dangerous regime of identity capture, assessment, and tracking for political demands for representation and rights? What are the risks and advantages of visibility, of joining the demos, when identification by the state triggers joined-up ‘knowledge’, often with punitive results? The bright light of IT in the hands of increasingly authoritarian regimes is chasing away the shadows that once provided the minimum of protection, income and manoeuvrability to people at the edges of society. The basic survival of the poor, undocumented or ‘illegalised’ often depends on the ability to operate without detection, the necessity of ID, or the creation of official records. This grey zone of anonymity is constantly squeezed in the interests of population management, border enforcement, welfare clamp-downs, technocratic convenience and, of course, the economy. This issue of Mute focuses on the exposure of subjects not just to state surveillance and databasing, but to sovereign state power enacted either through the ordinary rule of law or through its suspension in the state of emergency. As Elizabeth Povinelli writes in these pages, ‘The state of exception and its tethering to moral panic, is a routinised form of state action.’ State/media orchestrated panics, usually presenting a society on the brink of calamity, have become the precondition of the state’s operations. In order to justify massive social change such as ‘managed migration’, in which would-be immigrants to the UK will be subjected to an inhuman assessment based on ‘skills’, the emotive bomb of ‘swamping’ is detonated again and again. In order to roll back hard-won indigenous rights and ‘neoliberate’ communities and their lands in Australia, the bomb of culturally ingrained child sexual abuse amongst Aboriginals is detonated. As Povinelli says, these moral panics are like screaming fire in a movie theatre – no time to think, just act. The time of the here and now privileges those with power, after all, this is the time-frame in which the world’s traders make fortunes. subject: Biopolitics | Border Activism | Computing | Immigration | Information | Mute Vol 2 #7
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Friday, 8 February, 2008 - 15:29
Unterschereber Where the struggle for migrants’ rights can be risky and divisive, informal organising by ‘illegals’ is a means to ensure survival. But both formal and informal organising can combine to protect an essential buffer zone of invisibility for undocumented workers — writes Unterschreber subject: Biopolitics | Border Activism | Globalisation | Identity | Immigration | Mute Vol 2 #7
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