Every year, millions of people from around the world grapple with the
European Union's emerging migration management apparatus. Through border
controls, biometric information technology, and circular migration
programs, this amorphous system combines a whirlwind of disparate
policies. The Migration Apparatus examines the daily practices of
migration policy officials as they attempt to harmonize legal channels
for labor migrants while simultaneously cracking down on illegal
migration.
Working in the crosshairs of debates surrounding national security and
labor, officials have limited individual influence, few ties to each
other, and no serious contact with the people whose movements they
regulate. As Feldman reveals, this complex construction creates a world
of indirect human relations that enables the violence of social
indifference as much as the targeted brutality of collective hatred.
Employing an innovative "nonlocal" ethnographic methodology, Feldman
illuminates the danger of allowing indifference to govern how we
regulate population--and people's lives--in the world today.