Denmark pioneered a strategy of "negative nation branding" to discourage asylum applications. This involves deliberately publicizing harsh policies, such as confiscating asylum seekers' jewelry, to make the country appear as unattractive as possible to potential migrants, thereby managing immigration through perception control.
In a counter-intuitive argument, the UK's Home Secretary, herself the daughter of immigrants, posits that restricting immigration is necessary to protect social harmony. The theory is that a perceived lack of control fuels public panic and racism, so tightening controls will calm tensions and ultimately shore up multiculturalism.
Historian Gillian Tindall interpreted urban landscapes as layered historical records. She believed modern streets follow ancient riverbeds and hedgerows, and that the ground beneath a supermarket holds the bones of those who worshipped at a medieval chapel on the same site. For her, the past was a tangible presence compounded in the city's earth.
Military balloons, a technology from the 1700s, are making a high-tech comeback. Armed forces are developing them as cost-effective platforms for surveillance, guiding munitions, and even deploying armed drones behind enemy lines. They fill a strategic gap between traditional aircraft and satellites, especially for persistent, low-altitude surveillance.
Britain is modeling its new asylum system on Denmark's, even though Denmark is far less successful at integrating immigrants into its society and workforce. This strategic shift risks importing Denmark's integration failures in an attempt to deter new arrivals and address political pressures from populist parties.
