土耳其的指纹识别和生物政治警察监视

0 ANTHROPOLOGY
Sociology Lens Pub Date : 2022-11-13 DOI:10.1111/johs.12388
Erhan Özşeker, Boran Ali Mercan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文对2007年土耳其《警察权力与义务法》(PPDL)第5条修正案提出质疑,该修正案通过指纹识别技术将所有公民归类为“潜在嫌疑人”。修改后的条款要求每个人在申请驾驶执照、护照和身份证等某些官方文件时提交指纹样本。因此,结果是戏剧性的:到目前为止,警方在发放这些文件的过程中主动记录了6000多万人的指纹。然而,目前还没有关于这一现象的研究。这篇论文表明,这种生物识别警察监视不是最近的发展,而是在维护“土耳其”国家利益的长期传统的一部分。遵循福柯的谱系方法论,本文认为,在广阔的领土上,一个庞大的异质人口的治理能力一直需要生物识别警务技术,解决现代安全机构能力建设与识别未知群体之间的生物政治接近性。通过对历史资料的比较研究发现,指纹识别最早是在欧洲记录罪犯和罪犯等特殊群体,而从奥斯曼帝国晚期到现代土耳其,大部分人口一直是警察法规的目标。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Fingerprinting and Biopolitical Police Surveillance in Turkey

This paper problematises the 2007 amendments to Article 5 of the Police Powers and Duties Law (PPDL) in Turkey that categorises all citizens as ‘potential suspects’ through fingerprinting technology. The amended article requires everyone to submit fingerprint samples when applying for certain official documents such as driver's licences, passports, and ID cards. Consequently, the result has been dramatic: the police have so far proactively recorded more than 60 million people's fingerprints in the process of issuing these documents. Yet, there has been no research into this phenomenon. This paper suggests that this sort of biometric police surveillance is not a recent development, rather part of a long tradition within policing ‘Turkish’ national interests. Following Foucault's genealogical methodology, the paper argues that the governability of a large heterogeneous population across a vast territory has always demanded biometric policing technologies, addressing biopolitical proximity between the capacity building of modern security apparatus and identifying the unknown masses. Studying the historical data comparatively reveals that fingerprinting first started with recording exceptional groups such as criminals and convicts in Europe, while from the late Ottoman Empire to modern Turkey, large sections of the population have always persistently been targeted by police regulations.

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