Tracing Asylum Journeys

Tracing Asylum Journeys
Title Tracing Asylum Journeys PDF eBook
Author Ugur Yildiz
Publisher Routledge
Pages 219
Release 2019-09-19
Genre Social Science
ISBN 0429775571

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This book explores the asylum journey of non-European asylum applicants who seek asylum in Turkey before resettling in Canada with the aid of the Canadian government’s assisted resettlement programme. Based on ethnographic research among Syrian, Afghan, Eritrean, Ethiopian, Iraqi, Iranian, Somali, Sudanese and Congolese nationals it considers the interactions of asylum seekers with both UNHCR’s refugee status determination and Canada’s refugee resettlement programme. With attention to the practices of migrants, the author shows how the asylum journey contains both mobility and stasis and constitutes a micro-political image of the fluidity and relativity of attributed identities and labels on the part of state migration systems. A multi-sited ethnography that shows how the migration journey is linked to the production and reproduction of knowledge, as well as the diffusion of produced knowledge among past, present, and future asylum seekers who form trans-local social networks in the course of their route, in Turkey, and in Canada. Tracing Asylum Journeys will appeal to sociologists and political scientists with interests in migration and transnational studies, and refugee and asylum settlement.

Refuge in a Moving World

Refuge in a Moving World
Title Refuge in a Moving World PDF eBook
Author Elena Fiddian-Qasmiyeh
Publisher UCL Press
Pages 564
Release 2020-07-17
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1787353176

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Refuge in a Moving World draws together more than thirty contributions from multiple disciplines and fields of research and practice to discuss different ways of engaging with, and responding to, migration and displacement. The volume combines critical reflections on the complexities of conceptualizing processes and experiences of (forced) migration, with detailed analyses of these experiences in contemporary and historical settings from around the world. Through interdisciplinary approaches and methodologies – including participatory research, poetic and spatial interventions, ethnography, theatre, discourse analysis and visual methods – the volume documents the complexities of refugees’ and migrants’ journeys. This includes a particular focus on how people inhabit and negotiate everyday life in cities, towns, camps and informal settlements across the Middle East and North Africa, Southern and Eastern Africa, and Europe.

Enrique's Journey

Enrique's Journey
Title Enrique's Journey PDF eBook
Author Sonia Nazario
Publisher Delacorte Books for Young Readers
Pages 298
Release 2013
Genre Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN 0385743270

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The true story of a boy who sets out with absolutely nothing to find his mother who went to the US from Honduras to look for work.

Solidarity Mobilizations in the ‘Refugee Crisis’

Solidarity Mobilizations in the ‘Refugee Crisis’
Title Solidarity Mobilizations in the ‘Refugee Crisis’ PDF eBook
Author Donatella della Porta
Publisher Springer
Pages 373
Release 2018-02-21
Genre Social Science
ISBN 3319717529

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This edited collection introduces conceptual innovations that critically engage with understanding refugee movements as part of the broader category of ‘poor people’s movements’. The empirical focus of the work lies on the protest events related to the so-called ‘long summer of migration’ of 2015. It traces the route followed by the migrants from the places of first arrival to the places of passage and on to the places of destination. Through qualitative and quantitative data, the authors map, within a cross-national comparative perspective, the wide set of actions and initiatives that are being created in solidarity with refugees who have made their journey seeking asylum to the European Union, either travelling across the Mediterranean Sea or through South Eastern Europe. It explores these cases from the perspective of social movement studies alongside critical studies on migration and citizenship.

Music, Forced Migration and Emplacement

Music, Forced Migration and Emplacement
Title Music, Forced Migration and Emplacement PDF eBook
Author Nicola De Martini Ugolotti
Publisher Springer Nature
Pages 167
Release
Genre
ISBN 3031551982

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The Coloniality of Asylum

The Coloniality of Asylum
Title The Coloniality of Asylum PDF eBook
Author Fiorenza Picozza
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield
Pages 221
Release 2021-02-11
Genre Political Science
ISBN 1538150107

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Through the concepts of the ‘coloniality of asylum’ and ‘solidarity as method’, this book links the question of the state to the one of civil society; in so doing, it questions the idea of ‘autonomous politics’, showing how both refugee mobility and solidarity are intimately marked by the coloniality of asylum, in its multiple ramifications of objectification, racialisation and victimisation. Taking an interdisciplinary approach, The Coloniality of Asylum bridges border studies with decolonial theory and the anthropology of the state, and accounts for the mutual production of ‘refugees’ and ‘Europe’. It shows how Europe politically, legally and socially produces refugees while, in turn, through their border struggles and autonomous movements, refugees produce the space of Europe. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork conducted in Hamburg in the wake of the 2015 ‘long summer of migration’, the book offers a polyphonic account, moving between the standpoints of different subjects and wrestling with questions of protection, freedom, autonomy, solidarity and subjectivity.

Viapolitics

Viapolitics
Title Viapolitics PDF eBook
Author William Walters
Publisher Duke University Press
Pages 187
Release 2021-11-15
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1478021594

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Vehicles, their infrastructures, and the environments they traverse are fundamental to the movement of migrants and states' attempts to govern them. This volume's contributors use the concept of viapolitics to name and foreground this contested entanglement and examine the politics of migration and bordering across a range of sites. They show how these elements constitute a key site of knowledge and struggle in migratory processes and offer a privileged vantage point from which to interrogate practices of mobility and systems of control in their deeper histories and wider geographic connections. This transdisciplinary group of scholars explores a set of empirically rich and diverse cases: from the Spanish and European authorities' attempts to control migrants' entire trajectories to infrastructures of escort of Indonesian labor migrants; from deportation train cars in the 1920s United States to contemporary stowaways at sea; from illegalized migrants walking across treacherous Alpine mountain passes to aerial geographies of deportation. Throughout, Viapolitics interrogates anew the phenomenon called “migration,” questioning how different forms of contentious mobility are experienced, policed, and contested. Contributors. Ethan Blue, Maribel Casas-Cortes, Julie Y. Chu, Sebastian Cobarrubias, Glenda Garelli, Charles Heller, Sabine Hess, Bernd Kasparek, Clara Lecadet, Johan Lindquist, Renisa Mawani, Lorenzo Pezzani, Ranabir Samaddar, Amaha Senu, Martina Tazzioli, William Walters