Collaborative Cross-Border Security Infrastructure and Systems

2013 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 21-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luis Felipe Luna-Reyes ◽  
Douglas C. Derrick ◽  
Brent Langhals ◽  
Jay F. Nunamaker

A long-standing problem in the US-Mexico bilateral agenda is migration. Although both countries have important agreements to promote economic exchange and trade, the events of 9/11 and other acts of terrorism have increased concerns about border security. Since the US-Mexico border is one of the most important borders in the world in terms of activity, securing it without interfering with the legitimate flow of people and goods, poses an important challenge. The purpose of this paper is to propose conceptual frameworks and models to facilitate collaboration across national borders, by discussing and considering key factors for collaborative US-Mexico Border Security Infrastructure and Systems. Border security technical solutions pose an interesting domain because there are a myriad of concerns (e.g., political, economic, social and cultural) outside the technical implementation that must be deliberated and examined. In this conceptual study, unique aspects of trust, governance, information sharing, culture, and technical infrastructure are identified as the key ingredients in a cross-border collaboration effort. A bi-national organizational network appears to be an effective institutional design to develop a better understanding of the problem, as well as required policies and technologies. This approach is consistent with experiments, research, and conclusions found in the European Union.

2017 ◽  
pp. 640-658
Author(s):  
Luis Felipe Luna-Reyes ◽  
Douglas C. Derrick ◽  
Brent Langhals ◽  
Jay F. Nunamaker Jr.

A long-standing problem in the US-Mexico bilateral agenda is migration. Although both countries have important agreements to promote economic exchange and trade, the events of 9/11 and other acts of terrorism have increased concerns about border security. Since the US-Mexico border is one of the most important borders in the world in terms of activity, securing it without interfering with the legitimate flow of people and goods, poses an important challenge. The purpose of this paper is to propose conceptual frameworks and models to facilitate collaboration across national borders, by discussing and considering key factors for collaborative US-Mexico Border Security Infrastructure and Systems. Border security technical solutions pose an interesting domain because there are a myriad of concerns (e.g., political, economic, social and cultural) outside the technical implementation that must be deliberated and examined. In this conceptual study, unique aspects of trust, governance, information sharing, culture, and technical infrastructure are identified as the key ingredients in a cross-border collaboration effort. A bi-national organizational network appears to be an effective institutional design to develop a better understanding of the problem, as well as required policies and technologies. This approach is consistent with experiments, research, and conclusions found in the European Union.


2006 ◽  
Vol 105 (688) ◽  
pp. 64-68 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Andreas

The politically tricky challenge is to tap heightened attention and concern over border security in a manner that promotes rather than poisons cross-border cooperation.


2020 ◽  
pp. 238-267
Author(s):  
Sara H. Katsanis ◽  
Katherine M. Spradley

This chapter examines the challenges of identification of migrant remains at the US-Mexico border, highlighting the logistical and ethical considerations for cross-border identifications. Each year hundreds of human remains are found along the southern US border. Migrants fleeing violence and poverty are increasingly forced by US immigration policy to cross the border through treacherous terrain, risking death from exposure or violence. The infrastructure for DNA identification developed for missing persons is inadequate for migrant families, who might be residing in another country or living in the United States undocumented. Fear of US immigration and law enforcement authorities complicates the normal processes for reporting missing migrant cases and thereby limits family reference DNA collection. Many remains are buried without identification, some are buried without collection of DNA, some are buried without a marker to enable future identification, and some are cremated. Both governmental and nongovernmental efforts to collect DNA from relatives of missing migrants are further complicated by questions of sovereignty, privacy, and national security. International missing persons databases are underdeveloped and disconnected, and the informed consent process for relatives of the missing is inadequate for migrant families. The challenges of identification at the US-Mexico border underscore the systemic biases that exclude migrant populations from access to law enforcement processes that would enable identification of their family members and repatriation of their remains for respect and burial. Addressing these challenges at the US-Mexico border can inform cross-border policies for other migrant populations around the world.


Significance Trump declared the emergency to access funding to build his campaign-pledged US-Mexico border security barrier. Impacts Trump’s base will welcome his continuing commitment to building the US-Mexico border wall. Democrats might need to offer Trump more wall-building money to avoid the risk that the courts side with him. Greater use of emergencies would destabilise policymaking; private firms would face higher risks supplying the government. Trump wants to work with Democrats on major immigration reform; success is possible but pre-2020, time and goodwill are limited.


Author(s):  
Ersela Kripa ◽  
◽  
Stephen Mueller ◽  

Airborne particulate in the US/Mexico border region indexes an emerging transnational security concern, enabling the proliferation of novel managerial infrastructures. Through an investigation of the weaponized atmospheres and securocratic frontiers of cross-border dust, the paper uncovers an invisible agent with the capacity to reshape bodies, buildings, cities, and territories in its image.


Author(s):  
Maria Cristina Morales

This chapter illustrates the manufacturing of the US.-Mexico border crisis by providing a historical overview and a discourse analysis of contemporary US public-policies that contribute to the subjugation of the region and by extension to the vulnerability of border communities and migrants on their journey to the United States. The chapter begins with a vignette on a border patrol agent’s excessive use of force actions that resulted in the death of a Mexican youth. This tragedy is a testament of border security policies that enact state-sanctioned violence that continues to threaten the collective safety of residents on both sides of the United States—Mexico border and migrants. The chapter then discusses how the borderlands has historically been marked by conquest and violence from its creation to the present where national security policies created community insecurity. Next, the chapter discusses border-crossing-related deaths including the upward trend in these tragedies, the use of these deaths to expand anti-immigrant legislation, and concerns with migrant death statistics. Lastly, the chapter conducts a critical discourse analysis of the Executive Order: Border Security and Immigration Enforcement Improvements released on January 2017 under the Trump presidency to illustrate how political rhetoric and power over the US-Mexico border are created and exacerbated the manufacturing of the border crisis.


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