“…This politicisation takes many forms, from sophisticated biometric technologies to preventative governmentalised technologies such as risk management and surveillance. Since 2001, many have noted the expansion of digital and biometric technologies in public and private spaces (Aaltola, 2005;Adey, 2004;Amoore, 2006;Dodge and Kitchin, 2004;Muller, 2004) and the ways in which they work to produce new forms of citizenship and biopolitical enrollment (Bhandar, 2004;Isin, 2004;Rose and Novas, 2004). As Louise Amoore notes in her analysis of biometric security technologies at the border The biometric border is the portable border par excellence, carried by mobile bodies at the very same time as it is deployed to divide bodies at international boundaries, airports, railway stations, on subways or city streets, in the office or the neighbourhood (Amoore, 2006, p. 338).…”