Common-Sense Borders
What do borders do? In conventional accounts, borders establish where one country ends and another begins. They are lines on maps, permanent and taken for granted. Borders delineate a country’s territory and mediate the movement of people and goods in and out. They keep out the things that are prohibited: undeclared sums of money, live animals, invasive plant species, disease, drugs – and of course, unauthorised people.
For affluent people in the global North, borders can be crossed with relative ease. There is the brief discomfort of luggage scanners and passport control, before the warm embrace of distant family and the languor of holidays. Law-abiding travellers accept the pat-downs and full-body X-ray scans because they believe that they have nothing to hide – and, indeed, because they share a desire for control, order and safety.
It is this desire for control and security that defines the politics of immigration more broadly: the headlines and political speeches that rail against the dangers of unchecked migration.
Borders are always being breached, it seems. Hence the watery metaphors – the ‘deluge’, ‘waves’, or ‘floods’ of migrants – surpassed only by the animalising language of ‘swarms’. Migrants usually come into focus as an assortment of their most threatening characteristics, and the arrival and settlement of migrants – too many, too fast, the wrong type – is seen as bringing only risk, insecurity and national decline.
In this context, governments seem continually compelled to allocate greater resources and more sophisticated technologies to strengthening their borders. The recent rise of right-wing governments has been accompanied by the proliferation of border walls, razor-wire fences, floating barriers in the sea, drones surveilling migrants crossing deserts and oceans, push-backs at the borders of Europe, and the processing of asylum claims in offshore detention camps. The intensification of violent and spectacular bordering is intimately connected to the ascendancy of racist, nationalist and right-wing governments in the present historical moment.1
But this is not only a problem on the right. Voices from across the political spectrum assert that borders are sensible and necessary. Many political parties and even trade unions argue that borders protect the working classes from low wages caused by a surplus of migrant labour, ease strains on housing and public services, and preserve the ‘way of life’ and ‘national culture’ of migrant-receiving societies. Borders are also said to combat people-smuggling and sex-trafficking, and to prevent the most valuable and talented individuals from abandoning poorer countries. Across these accounts, people on the move are reduced to statistics, units of labour, racialised threats, legal categories and abject victims. Their humanity is effaced, and the ‘push factors’ driving their decisions to migrate hang in the background: a kind of miasma of war, persecution and ecological collapse divorced from the actions and histories of countries in the global North.
Part of the problem is that the global system of nation-states is simply taken for granted, as if countries and the inequalities between them were natural and permanent. Citizenship – the political/legal system that assigns individuals to states – goes unquestioned. More than this, citizenship is seen as a universal good, a marker of political inclusion and subjectivity, and each individual is supposed to be a citizen ‘at home’, where they have deep cultural and social ties, and thus where they belong. In this context, immigration controls are seen as merely enforcing coherent legal and spatial distinctions between national populations, through such bureaucratic devices as visas, passports, border checks, and agreements between states. Borders between nation-states are seen to be vital for democracy: they demarcate the necessarily bounded demos.
To sustain this account of borders, all nation-states must be represented as formally equal and sovereign. But this conceit requires a deep historical amnesia about colonialism, and an unwillingness to consider ongoing relations of economic domination. Of course, not all citizenships are equal; citizens of Sweden, New Zealand or the United States have substantially better life chances and greater freedom of movement than citizens of Bangladesh, the Democratic Republic of Congo or Kyrgyzstan. Immigration controls do not simply carve up the world then, they enforce fixed legal and spatial distinctions between highly unequal nationalised populations.
This book challenges the entire logic of this global order, refusing to accept the world of grossly unequal nation-states. It argues that citizenship and borders, far from protecting democracy and rights, in fact reproduce various forms of inequality, injustice and harm at different scales.
Borders Are Everywhere
The glaring problem with these dominant accounts is that borders are not, in fact, very effective at achieving their stated aims. With or without legal authorisation, the right paperwork, or the right status, people move. Borders may force migrants to take different, longer and more dangerous routes; to use documents in other people’s names; and to pay people to facilitate the journey. By depriving people of safer and more direct routes, borders therefore often expose them to harms – robbery, extortion, exploitation and violence – but they do not stop them moving.
And so, people arrive. They make friends, fall in love (with people and with places) and sometimes decide to stay. If they do so without regular status, they might then be excluded from rights to work, to rent housing lawfully, and to access essential public services like health and education. In this context, they are compelled to take jobs within particular sectors, often with particularly bad working conditions, sometimes on pain of criminalisation.
Even migrants with legal status may not have the right to change employer, leave a spouse, or stay after their university course finishes. This limits their ability to express themselves freely, assert rights at work, or leave abusive relationships. Their loved ones may be unable to join or even visit them. Non-citizens may be obliged to submit to regular biometric checks, to pay significant sums to access essential services – on top of other taxes – and to pay lofty fees to maintain their immigration status. Labour migrants, asylum- seekers and undocumented people are often excluded from welfare benefits and free healthcare, even during a global pandemic.
Moreover, as was demonstrated by the so-called Windrush scandal, in which elderly Caribbean migrants in the UK were wrongfully denied access to healthcare and welfare benefits, and in some cases deported to countries they had left in the 1960s and ’70s, people can always be deprived of status and rights they have enjoyed for decades.2
People who have authorisation to live somewhere might wake up to find the rules have changed, and that they are suddenly ‘illegal’. We should not be fooled into thinking of this as an aberration; it is part of what borders do: they follow people around, excluding them in various ways at different times, thus producing the precarity and disposability that characterises the migrant condition.
All of this reminds us that borders do not materialise only at the edges of national territory, in airports, or at border walls. In fact, borders are everyday and everywhere, determining how people relate to partners, employers and the police where they live and work, and their access to healthcare and welfare support.3
Borders do not solely affect people on the move, or those who understand themselves to be migrants, but often impact long-settled individuals who have been illegalised – turned into migrants – as well as the family and friends of illegalised migrants. More than this, bordering practices have negative consequences for minoritised citizens, who are racialised as ‘migrants’ or as ‘of migrant background’ – regularly described as ‘second-generation immigrants’ despite shared political membership and formal equality (indeed, distinguishing migrants from citizens in multiracial societies is not straightforward).4 Meanwhile, some non-citizens (migrants in law) are not constructed as migrants in discourse – elite businesspeople, backpackers, and ‘expats’ are not visible in debates about immigration. Throughout the book we seek to unsettle simplistic oppositions between migrants and citizens, the mobile and the settled. Reality is much messier.
Once we move away from the idea that borders mark the edge of territory, we can see how immigration controls create divisions and hierarchies within individual nation-states. Immigration regimes are systems by which differentiated rights are bestowed, and therefore also by which basic rights are denied – such as the rights to work, to join family, to access welfare benefits and healthcare, and to move freely. Borders thus separate workers, neighbours and family members from one another, fuelling racist divisions and nativist resentments. Borders promise to unite citizens through the exclusion of migrants, but this promise proves hollow. Instead, borders are used to surveil and control whole populations, migrants and citizens both, and new forms of disentitlement and conditionality within welfare, education and health services tend to be trialled initially on migrants.5 Meanwhile, new biometric technologies and predictive analytics are catalysing states’ capacities to extend exclusionary and often fatal policing and surveillance practices at borders. None of these techniques will be reserved only for ‘migrants’. As we will demonstrate, borders harm us all, which is why we must all be committed to their abolition.
Borders Are New
Immigration controls as we know them are a relatively recent innovation. Before the late nineteenth century, controls on mobility – vagrancy laws, for example – tended to focus on preventing people from leaving state territory, or restricting their movement within domestic space. In 1882, the US government introduced the Chinese Exclusion Act, prohibiting the immigration of all Chinese labourers, and heralding the beginning of modern controls on immigration. In Canada, immigration controls were introduced at the turn of the twentieth century in response to racist resentment towards Indian immigrant labourers.6 Meanwhile, the ‘White Australia’ policy effectively prohibited the immigration of all non-European people to Australia – a policy that was backed by all governments and mainstream parties from the 1890s until the 1950s.
Prior to the introduction of immigration controls, the labour needs of these settler colonies had been served by transatlantic slavery, indenture and transportation. Indeed, it was the movement of negatively racialised yet legally free migrants into these territories in the late nineteenth century that seems to have precipitated the introduction of immigration controls. The response to the arrival and settlement of racially undesirable migrants in these settler colonies paved the way for the bordered world we now inhabit.7
One way of describing these historical processes is to note that, as states transition from colonial to national forms, they tend to introduce wide-ranging immigration restrictions. This perspective can help us explain the history of British immigration restrictions in the twentieth century, for example. The first immigration restrictions in the UK came with the 1905 Aliens Act, which was explicitly designed to limit the immigration of Jewish migrants escaping persecution in Eastern Europe. But the most significant extension of immigration controls came from 1962 onwards, with the advent of controls on Commonwealth immigrants. After the Second World War, thousands of colonial and Commonwealth subjects moved to the UK from the Caribbean, Africa and South Asia. The racist response from politicians, employers and the general public was intense. In this context, the British government introduced immigration and nationality laws that in effect excluded black and brown Commonwealth subjects from any rights of political membership. The UK defined itself as a nation-state, as an island nation, precisely through the exclusion of people from formerly colonised territories, via the introduction of border controls targeting black and brown colonial and Commonwealth migrants.
Bordered nation-states are thus relatively novel political formations that emerged out of long histories of empire, colonialism and slavery.8 When we recognise that colonialism ‘eats into the present’,9 divisions between territories and populations no longer appear so natural and just. Indeed, borders no longer seem ethically defensible. Most nation-states only became independent after the Second World War; previously, many were colonies of European imperial powers, which explains their global marginality and underdevelopment today. Contemporary borders therefore reproduce racial and colonial inequalities, which helps to explain why bordering practices are most intense precisely at the borders between the developed and underdeveloped world: at the edges of Europe and the southern border of the United States.
Borders Are Obsolete
This book proceeds from a simple point of departure: things do not have to be this way. Immigration controls do not prevent human movement, nor do they protect citizens. In fact, borders produce many of the social harms they claim to prevent, including loss of life, inhuman and degrading treatment, and rampant inequality. Borders fail to address the conditions that shape migration processes in the first place – global inequalities, the dispossession of lands and livelihoods, climate breakdown – and they render people on the move vulnerable to various forms of exploitation and abuse. Immigration controls cannot be used to protect people’s rights or to alleviate global inequality; they only ever worsen these problems.
Echoing Angela Davis in her account of prisons, we contend that immigration controls are obsolete and should be abolished.10 Borders and prisons are both punitive systems for managing undesirable subjects, and both punish people through immobilisation and forced exile. Whatever the important differences between prisons and borders, state violence is in both cases directed towards managing and restricting movement. The struggle for freedom is therefore in both cases a struggle over movement – a struggle for the right to locomotion, to move freely, over fences and out of cages.
What we call border abolition is concerned with expanding this freedom, the freedom to move and to stay. This does not mean advocating for free movement in the world as it is currently configured, but rather for transformation of the conditions to which borders are a response.11 Abolition is concerned with presence (the presence of life-sustaining goods, services and practices of care) as well as absence (of violent state practices like detention and deportation). Accordingly, border abolition seeks to dismantle violent borders, but also to cultivate new ways of caring for one another, nurturing forms of collectivity more conducive to human flourishing than the nation-states we currently inhabit. Border abolition is a revolutionary politics situated within wider struggles for economic justice, racial equality and sustainable ecologies, based on the conviction that there will be no liveable futures in which borders between political communities are violently guarded.
We do not provide a roadmap for how to get to border abolition. We do not know what that world will look like, and there is no single route to get us there. From prison abolition and the wider black feminist politics that shape it, we take a longer-term view of political change. We hope to offer some suggestions and guiding questions, considering the steps we should take and hazards we should avoid. Border abolition offers practical frameworks for acting strategically now, but always focusing on the possibility and urgency of building a world without borders. The first step is to increase our collective understanding of what borders do in the world. This book therefore offers an unflinching account of borders, discussing the connections between immigration control and other forms of state violence and surveillance.
Three broad themes guide our analysis in the chapters that follow. First, abolition requires that we are guided by dreams of a borderless future – our abolitionist visions. In the words of Berger, Kaba and Stein, abolition ‘is both a lodestar and a practical necessity’. Across the chapters that follow, we attempt to show how the world could be otherwise through an attentiveness to critical openings in the present.12 Second, our abolitionist framework is concerned with identifying non- reformist reforms – changes in the here-and-now that can reduce the power and permanence of borders. Non-reformist reforms offer a way out of the binary opposition between reform and revolution, and help us identify specific reforms in the present that will reduce the power and reach of borders in the short and long term, while avoiding reforms that perpetuate the logic and legitimacy of immigration control (see Chapter 8).
Finally, border abolition requires that we dismantle all the social structures underpinning the permanence of borders, which requires us to connect with wider struggles against connected forms of state violence – something radical activists tend to do much more effectively than those with professionalised roles in the migrant sector. Our invitation to get out of our silos – so that people working on issues surrounding migration engage more effectively with feminists, anti-racists, prison abolitionists, people resisting counter-terror policies and those working on issues surrounding tech and data (and, of course, vice versa) – shapes the structure of the book and the arguments it pursues.
Clearly, border abolition is easier said than done. The realisation that the one thing we need to change is everything can certainly be overwhelming.13 How do we fight to close detention centres and end deportations, stop transnational corporations ruining lives and destroying the planet, while at the same time nurturing spaces of sanctuary and safety in our neighbourhoods? How can we reduce the purview of surveillance, big data and algorithms, while at the same time developing new forms of intimacy beyond the family – all at a time when disaster nationalism seems to be extending its hold over popular political imaginaries? Though the road is long, we should recognise the hopeful signs around us – developments already in motion – and think about the strategies that can build on this work. We need to keep imagining and building, even as despair shadows hope.
In Ernst Bloch’s words, ‘The work of [hope] requires people who throw themselves actively into what is becoming, to which they themselves belong.’14 Clearly, this claim chimes with the politics of abolition. Mariame Kaba writes of hope as a discipline, while bell hooks writes that ‘[h]opefulness empowers us to continue our work for justice even as the forces of injustice may gain power for a time. To live by hope is to believe that it is worth taking the next step.’15 Hope is not the same as optimism, but rather defined by ‘a worldly attentiveness to what is emerging in the conditions of the present as they are carried into the future’.16 We offer this book as an example of such hope.
We invite you to consider what borders actually do in the world, and to entertain, however briefly, the possibility that communities across the world can relate to one another without recourse to immigration controls. We know that many of you will already share our dreams for a world without borders: for such readers, this book is intended to bolster your resolve, sharpen your critique, and suggest strategies for the long struggle. We are indebted to the radical activists who sustain dreams of revolution, not merely reform, especially in the UK, where we are based: police and prison abolitionists, groups like Corporate Watch, anti-raids networks, No Borders collectives, detainee support groups, and the motley crew of socialists, anarchists, students, queers and community members who show up to protest outside detention centres, chase immigration vans out of neighbourhoods and support illegalised migrants and criminalised populations with innumerable, unremarkable acts of care and solidarity.
That said, this book is written also for people working in NGOs, the legal sector and social services – including radical infiltrators – and is intended to have practical application beyond direct action, mutual aid and other revolutionary schemes. We hope the book will prove useful to those fighting for government policies that are less bad, and for more effective NGO campaigning and lobbying. We do not think mutual aid and policy work are mutually exclusive, nor that direct action and NGO campaigns necessarily need to be in conflict.
All of this may be unsurprising given our own biographies. One of us has spent several years working in the NGO sector, as well as being active in grassroots campaigning and abolitionist education initiatives. The other is an academic who teaches and writes about mobilities, borders and racism, but has also written expert reports for UK courts deciding people’s immigration cases. We do not pretend to have all the answers, and we have the humility to know that much of what we propose is not new. As Mariame Kaba reminds us, abolition is as much about asking the right questions as having the right answers.17 Ultimately, we hope this book can open up some space and shed some light for those of us working towards a world without borders and the false promises of race and nation.