Refugees from Syria assemble at the Turkish border in August 2013. Credit: Digital Globe/Getty

As debates over migration, refugees and freedom of movement intensify, technologies are increasingly monitoring the movements of people. Biometric passports and databases containing iris scans or fingerprints are being used to check a person's right to travel through or stay within a territory. India, for example, is establishing biometric identification for its 1.3 billion citizens.

But technologies are spreading beyond borders. Security policies and humanitarian considerations have broadened the landscape. Drones and satellite images inform policies and direct aid to refugees. For instance, the United Nations Institute for Training and Research (UNITAR), maps refugee camps in Jordan and elsewhere with its Operational Satellite Applications Programme (UNOSAT; see www.unitar.org/unosat/map/1928).

Nature special: Human migration

Three areas are in need of research, in my view: the difficulties of joining up disparate monitoring systems; privacy issues and concerns over the inviolability of the human body; and 'counter-surveillance' deployed by non-state actors to highlight emergencies or contest claims that governments make.

Ideally, state monitoring of human mobility would be bound by ethical principles, solid legislation, periodical evaluations and the checks and balances of experts and political and public debates. In reality, it is ad hoc. Responses are arbitrary, fuelled by the crisis management of governments that have failed to anticipate global and regional migration patterns. Too often, this results in what the late sociologist Ulrich Beck called organized irresponsibility: situations of inadequacy in which it is hard to blame a single actor.

Non-governmental organizations, activists and migrant groups are using technologies to register incidents and to blame and shame states. For example, the Forensic Architecture research agency at Goldsmiths, University of London, has used satellite imagery and other evidence to reconstruct the journey of a boat that left Tripoli on 27 March 2011 with 72 passengers. A fortnight later, it returned to the Libyan coast with just 9 survivors. Although the boat had been spotted by several aircraft and vessels, no rescue operation had been mounted (go.nature.com/2mbwvxi). Whether the states involved can be held accountable is still being considered.

In the end, technologies to monitor mobility are political tools. Their aims, design, use, costs and consequences should be developed and evaluated accordingly.

Policy patchwork

Since the end of the cold war, international mobility has been regulated by a patchwork of policies, treaties, diplomacy and technologies. Cooperation between countries has increased. For example, the European Union's Schengen Agreement opened that region's internal borders while making the external borders more selective. The EU has also increased data sharing across Europe: large databases containing visa, mobility and security information are used to monitor migrants as well as ordinary travellers.

Border controls and the management of migration have also been moved outwards, to other countries. Approaches range from improved coordination between authorities that control regional land and sea borders, such as the Seahorse network across West Africa, to investment and development programmes aimed at limiting migration and international crime. One example is the EU's 'new deal for Africa' partnership framework. Tens of billions of euros will be invested over the next few years through financial instruments and funds (notably the EU Emergency Trust Fund for Africa) to create jobs and strengthen communities, policies and border controls in Niger, Tunisia and other African countries.

Such projects interfere with movements of refugees towards Europe, and interrupt regular labour migration between African countries. Uganda, for example, is tightening its border security to combat terrorism and fight passport forgery. Citizens will be issued with an e-passport including a radio-frequency identification (RFID) chip that stores data about them along with a photograph, fingerprint and iris scans. But closing the gate and filtering migrants hardly ever stops human mobility. Like walls, intensified border controls and biometric fences block seasonal migration or move the pressure elsewhere, forcing migrants to take riskier routes or pay a higher price to reach their destination.

Instead of creating an 'all-seeing eye' or a 'seamless web', the coupling of different technologies leads to a blend of systems. As I was reminded when I attended the European Day for Border Guards in Warsaw in 2015, monitoring mobility goes beyond technology. It requires protocols and personnel to gather, interpret, compare and apply information. The key word is interoperability. When I asked a researcher working for the European Border and Coast Guard Agency (then known as Frontex) about its European Border Surveillance System (EUROSUR), he described its aim as “coordination, training and funding”. Technology wasn't mentioned.

The aim of such monitoring is to create 'situational awareness'1. Originally a military term, situational awareness involves visualizing critical situations, such as irregular border crossings or emergencies, to assess whether interventions are required. In addition to boats, cameras and radar, EUROSUR has used satellite imagery since 2014, obtained through the European Union Satellite Centre.

For example, when the Hellenic Coast Guard spots an unregistered ship in Greek waters, it contacts the national coordination centre in Piraeus. The centre asks the European Border and Coast Guard Agency in Warsaw to compare the crew's observation with satellite images. On the basis of that combined information, the Hellenic Coast Guard decides what to do.

Monitoring is usually done on the cheap. Variability and inadequate interventions are the result. For example, during field work in the Aegean islands, I saw how migration management is often improvised. Fingerprinting machines were in short supply and coastguards had to bring their own laptops to receive shipping information.

Overemphasis on technology also complicates rather than simplifies border controls because many professions are involved and responsibilities are fragmented. Government departments and policies on labour, health, security, humanitarian efforts and development mingle. Many borders are militarized, for instance by NATO operations, or are patrolled by security guards from private firms. Customs officers and police are increasingly supported by data analysts, software developers and IT managers, as well as by medical professionals.

Sometimes the simplest tools work best. Migrants trying to reach European countries by sea from Turkey and Libya are often rescued after calling for help on a mobile phone, or after being spotted by a patrol ship — not because they've been identified on integrated satellite images from EUROSUR.

Border encounters

Identification, authentication and registration increasingly rely on information derived from our bodies — fingerprints, DNA and iris scans. These processes may invade people's privacy and affect how they view their bodies. Such interventions place high demands on the integrity of professionals and companies. Over-restrictive interpretations of the tests result in questionable rejections or passes.

We are seeing 'dragnet policies' in which large amounts of biophysical data are collected for undefined future purposes. The European Dactyloscopy fingerprint-identification system (EURODAC) was intended to prevent individuals making multiple asylum applications and to stop unauthorized entry. Access was extended later to police and public prosecutors and Europol2. There are no guarantees that its function will not be extended further.

Technology does not capture the reasons why people migrate.

Speech-recognition technology is applied in the Netherlands when testing the language proficiency of people acquiring a residence permit. But experts disagree on whether such software is accurate enough for this purpose. In Sweden and Cyprus, asylum seekers can voluntarily have X-rays taken to show whether they are children or adults, but that distinction is subjective even among medical professionals. DNA tests of family relationships reduce ties to biological kin and may exclude distant relatives or children who are not biologically related to a parent.

Technologies also affect the discretionary decision-making powers of civil servants3. When a person applies for asylum, examiners have to probe their flight stories using detailed regional maps and automated decision trees, for example, to check the country of origin. Because assumptions are made when applying these tools, technologies cannot be disentangled from the decisions that they enable.

Technology is viewed by many immigration services as more accurate than interviews in authenticating people's accounts. But it is limited in use and prone to errors, especially when systems are not harmonized and poor-quality data are collected. It does not capture the reasons why people migrate. Such information is valuable to governments when setting asylum policies, for example, because it allows them to determine which countries can be considered safe and which are dangerous.

Non-state surveillance

With state monitoring a mess, non-state agencies are applying their own technologies. Migrant organizations use electronic devices to connect to online mapping platforms. In Europe, these include Watch the Med (www.watchthemed.net) and the Alarm Phone (https://alarmphone.org/en), which aim to monitor deaths and violations of migrants' rights at the maritime borders of the EU.

To visualize dramatic events or to gather evidence, some non-governmental organizations run their own satellites. For example, in 2010, actor George Clooney and rights activist John Prendergast started the Satellite Sentinel Project (www.satsentinel.org; now no longer operating) to document violent attacks, human displacement and mass graves in Sudan. Despite good intentions and lots of media coverage, such projects have been criticized for offering no more information than was already available from other sources, such as the testimonies of survivors4.

Such 'border theatre' fuels controversies and increases the risk of fraud and corruption. Mobility becomes a security issue, with a constant stream of crises and emergencies.

Scandals erupt when governments fail to follow the law or use violence. For example, in January 2014 a boat carrying 28 passengers that had entered Greek waters from Turkey capsized close to the island of Farmakonisi. According to the survivors, it was being towed back to Turkey by a Greek coastguard vessel. Greek authorities said it was being taken to the island. Eleven people from Afghanistan, including eight children, drowned. Activists and relatives of the victims demanded an investigation. The Greek authorities refused, considering the testimonies unfounded.

Information on the precise positions of the boats has not been forthcoming, even though coordinates are normally registered through coastal positioning systems and radar. The Greek authorities released handwritten logs and said that the coastguard ship's video cameras had been switched off. On behalf of the survivors, a team of Greek lawyers filed a complaint with the European Court of Human Rights. So far, there has been no trial and the court's decision is pending.

Activists and legal advisers to migrants therefore urge people at sea to use mobile phones and other devices to track their whereabouts during crossings as proof of their experiences.

Non-governmental organizations and university departments are studying how monitoring technologies and big-data analysis can be used to support ethical and legal frameworks. In its Science for Human Rights project with the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Amnesty International is spurring the development of new geospatial tools, such as satellite imagery for human-rights monitoring (go.nature.com/2lehsxr). The Eyewitness to Atrocities project, developed by the International Bar Association, lets people document human-rights violations by taking photos and recording videos with their smartphones (www.eyewitnessproject.org).

Such 'counter-surveillance' can be used by migrants to post information on databases about violations while they are travelling or waiting at borders, to hold states accountable and raise public awareness. Examples include the border-crossing observatory in Australia, the Arizona OpenGIS Initiative for Deceased Migrants (http://humaneborders.info) and, in Europe, the Migrants' Files (www.themigrantsfiles.com), Watch the Med and the Deaths at the Borders Database (www.borderdeaths.org).

Next steps

When introducing new technologies, from drones to databases, governments rarely ask whether the tools will improve on current systems, or at what price. Proportionality and effectiveness ought to be criteria in every major decision, together with solid ethical principles such as purpose limitation and non-discrimination.

Scientists who help to develop monitoring technologies should work more closely with researchers who are specialists in law and the social consequences of technologies. This will further the development of regulatory and ethical frameworks.

Collaborations of scientists and research consortia with non-governmental organizations and the UN should encourage the development of instruments to monitor humanitarian dramas, as well as of devices and apps that migrants themselves can use in emergencies.

Providing decision-makers and the public with an accurate overview of technology's role in managing international human mobility is crucial for establishing solid migration policies.

Because migration is increasingly bound up with questions of security, technological developments should be treated with discretion. Moving border controls and the management of migration to other countries places the consequences of this externalization out of sight of citizens. Researchers who study the application of technologies and their consequences should collaborate with journalists to point out the gaps in the policy patchwork.