Shaping Migrants as Threats: Multilayered Discretion, Criminalization, and Risk Assessment Tools

This article examines Operation Migrant, initiated by the Norwegian police following the so-called migration crises in Europe in 2015. One of its central aims was, by predicting challenges related to increased migration, to improve resource allocation and prevent crime. By drawing on research on ris...

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Main Author: Helene O. I. Gundhus
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Queensland University of Technology 2021-09-01
Series:International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.crimejusticejournal.com/article/view/2041
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spelling doaj-09f3700069364399842a5f4604e8a2a12021-09-03T03:50:46ZengQueensland University of TechnologyInternational Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy2202-79982202-80052021-09-01103567110.5204/ijcjsd.20412334Shaping Migrants as Threats: Multilayered Discretion, Criminalization, and Risk Assessment ToolsHelene O. I. Gundhus0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5279-7291University of Oslo; Norwegian Police University CollegeThis article examines Operation Migrant, initiated by the Norwegian police following the so-called migration crises in Europe in 2015. One of its central aims was, by predicting challenges related to increased migration, to improve resource allocation and prevent crime. By drawing on research on risk and threat assessment as a form of power, this article aims to analyze how risk categories are distributed and translated into a multilayered institutional arrangement where migration is policed as a potential crime. The article examines the indicators that the risk assessments are based on and the measures applied and investigates how discretionary practices make immigrants objects for law enforcement and policing. The article contributes to research on migration control in an ordinary police context, where immigration identity checks become part of the crime reduction strategy. Applying the concept of interpretive flexibility (Collins 1981), I will identify the steps in this chain of translation to explore the leap from targeting potentially criminal asylum seekers to targeting broader groups with temporary residency in Norway. The article analyzes the conditions determining how policing, technologies, and migrants are “co-constructed” in a chain of mediation and translation, which reinforces the view of migrants as risky and criminal. The final section discusses how risk and threat analysis is affected by the notion of the “crimmigrant other” (Franko 2020). In Norway, selectively targeting unwanted migrants as criminals has become dominant in police decision-making at a policy level and everyday practices affecting not only third country nationals but also unwanted eastern Europeans.https://www.crimejusticejournal.com/article/view/2041crimmigrant otherdiscretionpolicing migrationpredictive policingrisk assessment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Helene O. I. Gundhus
spellingShingle Helene O. I. Gundhus
Shaping Migrants as Threats: Multilayered Discretion, Criminalization, and Risk Assessment Tools
International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy
crimmigrant other
discretion
policing migration
predictive policing
risk assessment
author_facet Helene O. I. Gundhus
author_sort Helene O. I. Gundhus
title Shaping Migrants as Threats: Multilayered Discretion, Criminalization, and Risk Assessment Tools
title_short Shaping Migrants as Threats: Multilayered Discretion, Criminalization, and Risk Assessment Tools
title_full Shaping Migrants as Threats: Multilayered Discretion, Criminalization, and Risk Assessment Tools
title_fullStr Shaping Migrants as Threats: Multilayered Discretion, Criminalization, and Risk Assessment Tools
title_full_unstemmed Shaping Migrants as Threats: Multilayered Discretion, Criminalization, and Risk Assessment Tools
title_sort shaping migrants as threats: multilayered discretion, criminalization, and risk assessment tools
publisher Queensland University of Technology
series International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy
issn 2202-7998
2202-8005
publishDate 2021-09-01
description This article examines Operation Migrant, initiated by the Norwegian police following the so-called migration crises in Europe in 2015. One of its central aims was, by predicting challenges related to increased migration, to improve resource allocation and prevent crime. By drawing on research on risk and threat assessment as a form of power, this article aims to analyze how risk categories are distributed and translated into a multilayered institutional arrangement where migration is policed as a potential crime. The article examines the indicators that the risk assessments are based on and the measures applied and investigates how discretionary practices make immigrants objects for law enforcement and policing. The article contributes to research on migration control in an ordinary police context, where immigration identity checks become part of the crime reduction strategy. Applying the concept of interpretive flexibility (Collins 1981), I will identify the steps in this chain of translation to explore the leap from targeting potentially criminal asylum seekers to targeting broader groups with temporary residency in Norway. The article analyzes the conditions determining how policing, technologies, and migrants are “co-constructed” in a chain of mediation and translation, which reinforces the view of migrants as risky and criminal. The final section discusses how risk and threat analysis is affected by the notion of the “crimmigrant other” (Franko 2020). In Norway, selectively targeting unwanted migrants as criminals has become dominant in police decision-making at a policy level and everyday practices affecting not only third country nationals but also unwanted eastern Europeans.
topic crimmigrant other
discretion
policing migration
predictive policing
risk assessment
url https://www.crimejusticejournal.com/article/view/2041
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