“…From a focus on top–down securitization scholars have moved to study, often ethnographically, everyday acts and processes of securitization. Thus, scholars have increasingly begun to critically question concepts of security and securitization generally (Maguire et al, 2014; Diphoorn and Grassiani, 2015, 2019; Gluck and Lowe, 2017; Neocleous and Rigakos, 2011), in specific geopolitical settings (El Dardiry and Hermezm, 2020), and in relation to the body (Higate, 2012; Maguire et al, 2014), race (Machold and Charrett, 2021; Ybarra, 2019), neoliberal global economy (Diphoorn and Grassiani, 2016; Grassiani, 2017), and especially border control and irregular migration (Andreas, 2000; Ben Ze’ev and Gazit, 2018; Bigo, 2011; De Genova, 2013; Fassin, 2011; Samimian-Darash and Stalcup, 2017). Moreover, there is a growing acknowledgment regarding the normative and ethical dimensions of securitization (Floyd, 2019; Nyman and Burke, 2016; Taureck, 2006) and its influence on social relations.…”