The EU’s maritime techno-borderscape: a socio-legal analysis of digital infrastructures and the structural (dis)protection along the migrant journey
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Abstract
This thesis explores the digitalisation of the European Union’s maritime borders and its implications
for the human rights of migrants and asylum seekers. It argues that the increasing use of technological
infrastructures is not merely a question of operational efficiency but reveals a deeper legal and political
architecture that governs mobility at sea.
Drawing from critical border studies, legal anthropology, and mobility theory, the thesis demonstrates
that mobility is not a neutral or universal right, but a legally produced condition—one that is often
stratified and conditional. The study shows how legal norms and digital infrastructures co-produce
what it defines as an architecture of (dis)protection: a regime where protection exists, but access to it is
increasingly filtered through data, risk, and legal ambiguity.
This thesis calls for a reimagining of border governance. It recognises the EU’s institutional capacity to
lead with values, and proposes that the same technological and legal resources currently used for
deterrence can be redirected towards strengthening safe pathways, timely protection, and legal clarity.
Ultimately, the thesis offers a new lens to approach migration governance—one that places the dignity
of the human being at its centre, and urges for a shift from surveillance to solidarity.
Keywords: EU maritime border, (im)mobility, digital border control, human rights, asylum seekers,
techno-borderscapes, structural (dis)protection
Description
Second semester University: University of Graz