The Digitalization of EU Borders - Panel #2 "The Colonial Legacies of Border Digitalization"

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  • Опубліковано 5 лис 2024
  • International Conference, 13.06.2024
    The Digitalization of EU Borders and the Production of Vulnerabilities
    Panel #2 "The Colonial Legacies of Border Digitalization" -
    The symposium takes a closer look at the digitalization of EU border security and to place it in the broader context of the EUI law recently adopted by the EU and the "New Pact on Migration and Asylum".
    On two panels we ask: How is artificial intelligence being used and what are the consequences of this technology for people on the run? To what extent does the digitalization of EU borders endanger the fundamental and human rights of refugees? At the same time: How do those affected defend themselves? How do the expanded video surveillance, the use of robodogs, lie detectors and the intensified use of language and dialect recognition programs affect the right to asylum? And what can politicians and civil society do to strengthen the right to asylum, mobility and humanitarian aid?
    It is important for us to understand these new digitalization technologies in the context of flight and asylum as a legacy of colonialism and to shed light on the extent to which they reinforce the marginalization of people and create vulnerabilities.
    Program
    Dr. Ines Kappert, Co-Director of the Gunda Werner Institute
    Dr. Mengia Tschalär, Professor of Anthropology, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, Co-Director Queer European Asylum Network
    Francesca Schmidt, Founding and board member of Netzforma e.V.
    Keynote
    Myria Georgiou, Professor of Media and Communication, London School of Economics and Political Science
    Moderation: Dr. Ines Kappert
    Panel #1 "EU Borders in Digital Shift: AI, Migration and Fundamental Rights": 11.45 am - 1.15 pm
    Alexandra Geese, Member of the European Parliament and Vice-Chair of the Greens/EFA Group since 2022. Her focus is on digital policies and feminism.
    Lena Rohrbach, Human Rights in the Digital Age Officer, Amnesty International, Berlin
    Caterina Rodelli, EU Policy Analyst, Brussels
    Moderation: Monika Remé, Political Scientist
    Panel #2 "The Colonial Legacies of Border Digitalization": 2.30 pm- 4.15 pm
    Pin Lean Lau, legal scholar and Professor of Bio-Law at Brunel University London
    Mirca Madianou, Professor of Media, Communication and Cultural Studies at Goldsmiths, University of London
    Michelle Pfeifer, postdoctoral researcher in the research project "Artificial Intelligence, Emerging Technologies, and Social Change" at the Technical University of Dresden
    Moderation: Monika Remé, Political Scientist

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