Publication type: | Book part |
Type of review: | No review |
Title: | High-tech migration control in the EU and beyond : the legal challenges of “enhanced interoperability” |
Authors: | Hanke, Philip Vitiello, Daniela |
et. al: | No |
DOI: | 10.1007/978-3-030-05648-3_1 |
Published in: | Use and Misuse of New Technologies |
Editors of the parent work: | Carpanelli, Elena Lazzerini, Nicole |
Page(s): | 3 |
Pages to: | 35 |
Issue Date: | 2019 |
Publisher / Ed. Institution: | Springer |
Publisher / Ed. Institution: | Cham |
ISBN: | 978-3-030-05647-6 978-3-030-05648-3 |
Language: | English |
Subject (DDC): | 341: Law of nations and European law |
Abstract: | New technologies are transforming human mobility while raising new legal issues. This is also affecting the control of migratory flows, with an increasing recourse to sensor technology and unmanned aerial vehicles. In the European Union, this trend is coupled with an acceleration of the standardisation process of computer systems’ interconnection, aimed at fine tuning access to information and personal data by surveillance authorities. The Chapter depicts the normative, institutional and operational design of the Union as an area in which the lion’s share of internal security is ensured through new technologies and information systems. It then turns to analyse the legal challenges arising from the crafting of “smart borders”, i.e. borders based upon automation of surveillance and system interoperability. Two main research questions are tackled: first, how these new features affect the EU integrated border management; and, second, whether the existing legal framework of EU law can accommodate this change. Apparently, the search for enhanced interoperability may stretch even further the tensions underpinning the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice, so that the more interoperable EU surveillance systems become, the less coherent the EU legal order risks being. |
URI: | https://digitalcollection.zhaw.ch/handle/11475/29237 |
Fulltext version: | Published version |
License (according to publishing contract): | Licence according to publishing contract |
Departement: | School of Management and Law |
Organisational Unit: | Institute of Regulation and Competition (IRW) |
Appears in collections: | Publikationen School of Management and Law |
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Hanke, P., & Vitiello, D. (2019). High-tech migration control in the EU and beyond : the legal challenges of “enhanced interoperability”. In E. Carpanelli & N. Lazzerini (Eds.), Use and Misuse of New Technologies (pp. 3–35). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-05648-3_1
Hanke, P. and Vitiello, D. (2019) ‘High-tech migration control in the EU and beyond : the legal challenges of “enhanced interoperability”’, in E. Carpanelli and N. Lazzerini (eds) Use and Misuse of New Technologies. Cham: Springer, pp. 3–35. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-05648-3_1.
P. Hanke and D. Vitiello, “High-tech migration control in the EU and beyond : the legal challenges of “enhanced interoperability”,” in Use and Misuse of New Technologies, E. Carpanelli and N. Lazzerini, Eds. Cham: Springer, 2019, pp. 3–35. doi: 10.1007/978-3-030-05648-3_1.
HANKE, Philip und Daniela VITIELLO, 2019. High-tech migration control in the EU and beyond : the legal challenges of “enhanced interoperability”. In: Elena CARPANELLI und Nicole LAZZERINI (Hrsg.), Use and Misuse of New Technologies. Cham: Springer. S. 3–35. ISBN 978-3-030-05647-6
Hanke, Philip, and Daniela Vitiello. 2019. “High-Tech Migration Control in the EU and beyond : The Legal Challenges of “Enhanced Interoperability”.” In Use and Misuse of New Technologies, edited by Elena Carpanelli and Nicole Lazzerini, 3–35. Cham: Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-05648-3_1.
Hanke, Philip, and Daniela Vitiello. “High-Tech Migration Control in the EU and beyond : The Legal Challenges of “Enhanced Interoperability”.” Use and Misuse of New Technologies, edited by Elena Carpanelli and Nicole Lazzerini, Springer, 2019, pp. 3–35, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-05648-3_1.
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