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Post/humanitarian Border Politics between Mexico and the US: People, Places, Things: Mobility & Politics

Autor Dr Vicki Squire
en Limba Engleză Electronic book text – 12 mar 2015

What is the significance of the things that migrants leave behind in contemporary border struggles? In what ways do places like the desert play a role in such struggles? And what is the status of people in this context? The author addresses these questions by assessing the politics of different humanitarian interventions in the Mexico-US border region. Examining various artistic and academic engagements of things left behind, as well as legal struggles over the distribution of water bottles and practices of recycling of discarded belongings, this book develops a unique 'more-than-human' perspective on the significance of people, places and things to humanitarian border struggles. While drawing attention to the ambiguities of humanitarian interventions, Squire also focuses on the critical potential of a post/humanitarian border politics that transforms place by fighting for people, through things.

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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781137395894
ISBN-10: 1137395893
Pagini: 120
Ediția:
Editura: Palgrave MacMillan
Colecția Palgrave Pivot
Seria Mobility & Politics

Locul publicării:Basingstoke, United Kingdom

Cuprins

1. The Sonoran Borderzone
Introduction
The Sonoran Desert
State Borders And The Governing Of Mobility
Asymmetric Divisions
Unauthorised Border Crossings
Migrant Deaths
The Intensification And Contestation Of Control
The Politics Of Control
Humanitarian Activism Between Migration And Control
Post/Humanitarian Politics Across The Sonoran Borderzone
2. A More-Than-Human Analysis Of Humanitarian Border Politics
Critical Border And Migration Studies
The Proliferation Of Borders
Normalisation And Biopolitics
Migrant Agency As Given And/Or Denied
Humanitarian Activism
Humanitarian Ethics And Law
Humanitarian Government And Politics
Humanitarian Politics As Contestation
A More-Than-Human Analysis
People, Places, Things
3. People, Privilege And Pity
Toothbrushes In The Green Valley
Engaging People Through Things
Documenting Things
Las Madres, No Mas Lágrimas
Inscribing Privilege Through Pity
A Danger Unto Themselves (And Unto Others)
Violating Clandestine Acts Of Migration
Exclusionary At Heart
Cut I: A Pitiful Humanitarianism?
4. Places, Violence And Response-Ability
Water Bottles In The Desert
Changing The Desert To A Human/E Place
The Desert As A Site Of Biophysical Violence
Beyond A 'Minimalist Biopolitics'
Fighting For People By Transforming Place
Humanitarian 'Littering'
Contesting 'The Human' Through Things
Cut II: A More Response-Able Humanitarianism?
5. Things, Gifts And Solidarity
Hunting For 'Trash'
Renewing Things Through Exchange
Things That 'Go To Waste'
Regeneration Over Preservation
Humanitarian Recycling
Fighting For People By Transforming Things
Gifts As A Collective Force
Cut III: A Solidaristic Humanitarianism?
6. Post/Humanitarian Border Politics

Notă biografică

Vicki Squire is Associate Professor of International Security at the Department of Politics and International Studies (PAIS), University of Warwick, UK. She is author of The Exclusionary Politics of Asylum (2009), editor of The Contested Politics of Mobility (2011), and Associate Editor of the journal Citizenship Studies.