[2] Extraction

The second book in the Managing Displacement series departs from extraction as an ongoing process of enclosure and exploitation of resources. These financially driven practices are not only causes of human and non-human displacement but are also central to how migration management exercises control and extracts profit from people on the move. This, in turn, amplifies forced displacement. How has extraction shaped migration, past and future? || Contributions by: Ariana Dongus, Radha D’Souza, Stefanos Levidis, Angela Melitopoulos

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[1] Outsourcing

The first book in the Managing Displacement series examines how European countries systematically place borders beyond the edges of national boundaries in so-called third countries. As the European Union proliferates its managerial approach to migration, the practice of outsourcing has taken centre stage, leading to routine border violence and the obfuscation of rights of displaced people. How can outsourcing and its effects be challenged? || Contributions by: Border Violence Monitoring Network, FRAUD, Nadine El-Enany, Hassan Ould Moctar

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The System of Systems

This collection of essays attempts to demonstrate that the process of seeking asylum is indeed a system, but it is not the EU's ideal, frictionless, single system. Rather, it is a system composed of many ‘systems’ which are complex, hierarchical, interlinked, abrasive and messy. || Contributions by: Lawrence Abu Hamdan, James Bridle, Kamil Dalkir, Ayesha Hameed, Paul Feigelfeld, Melanie Friend, Eugenio Grosso, Andrew Herscher, Thomas Keenan, Sohrab Mohebbi, Daniela Ortiz, Daniel Trilling, Nana Varveropoulou, and others

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