Thank you so much. Ultimately, it comes down to the power imbalances, like you say, in this context. We already are dealing with an opaque and discretionary decision-making system in which, when humans are making really complex decisions, oftentimes it's really difficult to know why particular decisions are rendered and what we can do if mistakes are made. Now, imagine that we start augmenting or replacing human decision-makers with automated decision-making and increasing surveillance. It basically just muddies the already very discretionary space of immigration and refugee processing and decision-making.
Again, it's all along historical lines of power and privilege, and oftentimes, again, we're talking about communities that already have less access to justice and an inability, for example, to challenge mistakes that have really far-reaching implications.