The role of social media as evidence in asylum procedures in Iceland

The role of technology in border control has grown steadily in recent years. While smart border technology has become commonplace in many states, the increasing popularity of social media amongst migrant populations offers immigration authorities unprecedented opportunities to access publicly availa...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Thorkelsdottir, N
Other Authors: Kurkchiyan, M
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:d5ba6606-972a-433b-a3d6-233fb5d51c8c
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author Thorkelsdottir, N
author2 Kurkchiyan, M
author_facet Thorkelsdottir, N
author_sort Thorkelsdottir, N
collection ORA - Oxford University Research Archive
description The role of technology in border control has grown steadily in recent years. While smart border technology has become commonplace in many states, the increasing popularity of social media amongst migrant populations offers immigration authorities unprecedented opportunities to access publicly available data on asylum applicants. Although this novel vetting technique has been criticised by human rights activists as invasive and unfair, little academic research exists on the extent to which social media content is exploited as a source of evidence in asylum procedures. The purpose of this study is to address this gap by examining how social media and open-source data shapes the evidentiary assessment in asylum cases in Iceland. Based on eight in-depth interviews with Icelandic immigration officials and legal representatives of asylum applicants, I examine the extent to which social media analyses are carried out and their relevance compared to other sources of evidence. The findings of the study suggest that while social media analysis is used on a regular basis in asylum procedures in Iceland, caseworkers face various structural, personal and bureaucratic hurdles in practice. It is argued herein that due to personal experiences and attitudes towards social media, caseworkers generally consider the evidentiary value of social media too weak to be routinely turned into direct evidence.
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spelling ftuloxford:oai:ora.ox.ac.uk:uuid:d5ba6606-972a-433b-a3d6-233fb5d51c8c 2025-01-16T22:32:57+00:00 The role of social media as evidence in asylum procedures in Iceland Thorkelsdottir, N Kurkchiyan, M 2021-12-09 https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:d5ba6606-972a-433b-a3d6-233fb5d51c8c eng eng https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:d5ba6606-972a-433b-a3d6-233fb5d51c8c info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Electronic surveillance Internet Asylum Right of Thesis 2021 ftuloxford 2022-11-17T23:06:10Z The role of technology in border control has grown steadily in recent years. While smart border technology has become commonplace in many states, the increasing popularity of social media amongst migrant populations offers immigration authorities unprecedented opportunities to access publicly available data on asylum applicants. Although this novel vetting technique has been criticised by human rights activists as invasive and unfair, little academic research exists on the extent to which social media content is exploited as a source of evidence in asylum procedures. The purpose of this study is to address this gap by examining how social media and open-source data shapes the evidentiary assessment in asylum cases in Iceland. Based on eight in-depth interviews with Icelandic immigration officials and legal representatives of asylum applicants, I examine the extent to which social media analyses are carried out and their relevance compared to other sources of evidence. The findings of the study suggest that while social media analysis is used on a regular basis in asylum procedures in Iceland, caseworkers face various structural, personal and bureaucratic hurdles in practice. It is argued herein that due to personal experiences and attitudes towards social media, caseworkers generally consider the evidentiary value of social media too weak to be routinely turned into direct evidence. Thesis Iceland ORA - Oxford University Research Archive
spellingShingle Electronic surveillance
Internet
Asylum
Right of
Thorkelsdottir, N
The role of social media as evidence in asylum procedures in Iceland
title The role of social media as evidence in asylum procedures in Iceland
title_full The role of social media as evidence in asylum procedures in Iceland
title_fullStr The role of social media as evidence in asylum procedures in Iceland
title_full_unstemmed The role of social media as evidence in asylum procedures in Iceland
title_short The role of social media as evidence in asylum procedures in Iceland
title_sort role of social media as evidence in asylum procedures in iceland
topic Electronic surveillance
Internet
Asylum
Right of
topic_facet Electronic surveillance
Internet
Asylum
Right of
url https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:d5ba6606-972a-433b-a3d6-233fb5d51c8c