The use of advanced digital technologies (ADTs) in migration management has notably increased in recent years, facilitating the processing of migrants’ personal data (Collins, 2023). Blockchain, Internet of Things (IoT), artificial intelligence and machine learning, cloud computing, social media, big data analysis, biometric technologies, and various smart border solutions offer diverse opportunities for state and civil society actors (governments, NGOs, transnational institutions) dealing with both legal and irregular migrants, refugees and asylum-seekers (Nalbandian, 2022; Nalbandian and Dreher, 2023). Growing access to digital technology for institutional actors and migrants themselves, coupled with an abundance of information, can promote efficiency and streamline migration processes, and has the potential to lead to better decision-making, improved access to protection, more accountability, and enhanced public scrutiny (Madon and Schoemaker, 2021).
However, the datafication of migration through the implementation of ADTs raises significant ethical concerns regarding migrants’ fundamental human rights including the rights to privacy and data protection (Roessler, 2017; Dignum, 2018; Molnar, 2019), as well as procedural rights such as rights to due process, non-discrimination (Akhmetova, 2020), appeal, and the right to an effective remedy (Molnar and Gill, 2018; Beduschi, 2020). Migrants are vulnerable to the effects of the use of ADTs in data management because they are often unable to protect their own interests and are under threat of experiencing various harms (European Commission, 2010). The ethical implications of the use of ADTs in migration data management extend to issues of transparency, consent, and accountability in the handling and processing of sensitive personal data. The potential for surveillance, profiling, discriminatory practices, subjection to violence, and lack of legal rights necessitates a critical examination of how these technologies are deployed and regulated.
As such, there has been a surge of interest among practitioners and scholars in the potential applications of the use of ADTs in migration data management and their ethical implications (Bither and Ziebarth, 2021). Digitalization impacts all areas of migration and asylum, including forecasting migration patterns (HAG de Valk et al., 2022; Nalbandian et al., 2022), advanced border control through behavior recognition, the use of open-source intelligence through social media, online forums, or satellite imagery, speech recognition, and mobile data analysis (Kariuki et al., 2021) to inform decision-making as well as aiding immigration detention, relocation, and settlement. The COVID-19 pandemic has further accelerated the need to adapt bureaucratic processes (McAuliffe et al., 2021).
We invite submissions that explore the impact of digitalization, automation, and technological advancements on the cross-border movement of people, with a particular focus on the ethical implications of immigration data management. How do different actors deploy ADTs to manage and control migratory movements and how do they cooperate with tech corporations in this regard? How do migration and border technologies influence transnational migration and border regimes? How are migrants affected by migration and advanced border technologies? What role do digital technologies play in the governance of asylum and humanitarian protection? How do information systems and underlying epistemic practices alter power dynamics and impact immigrant rights? How are the data infrastructures of migration and border control shaped within intersecting dimensions of power such as race, gender, sexuality, disability, nationality, age, and generation? In what ways can they be contested to protect and advance migrants’ interests?
To this end, we invite submissions from any discipline, methodology, or a combination of them that address the themes listed below, including, but not limited to:
Ethical frameworks and principles guiding the use of ADTs in migration management
Case studies on the implementation of ethical guidelines in migration data handling
Challenges and effects of digitization of borders
Surveillance and border policing and its impact on migrants and refugees
Big data, AI, social media, and their impact on migrants and refugees
Digital economy, data centers, and migrant populations
Legal implications and ethical considerations of digitization in migration contexts
Humanitarian discourse and intervention in migration challenges
Intersection of ADTs with migrants’ welfare and security, such as the use of ADTs by migrants themselves to advance their own interests
Digital activism in migrant advocacy
Ecocritical migration studies on the human, natural, and technological relationships
Deadline for abstract submission: July 31, 2025, 11:59 PM (AoE)
The evaluation process will follow the steps below:
Editorial review of the abstract and references (desk review).
Submissions must be made through the journal’s website, including the title, abstract (in English, up to 500 words), author information, at least three keywords, and references. At this stage, uploading the full manuscript is not required.
Authors whose abstracts are approved in the desk review must submit their full manuscripts by August 31, 2025, following IRIE guidelines.
Manuscripts will undergo double-blind peer review.
After revisions, a final editorial decision will be made by September 31, 2025.
The article will be formatted according to the journal’s template and published by October 15, 2025.
For more information, please visit the IRIE website.