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Statelessness and Citizenship - Camps and the Creation of Political Space (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,349
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Statelessness and Citizenship - Camps and the Creation of Political Space (Paperback)
Series: Routledge Explorations in Development Studies
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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What does it mean to be a citizen? In depth research with a
stateless population in Bangladesh has revealed that, despite
liberal theory's reductive vision, the limits of political
community are not set in stone. The Urdu-speaking population in
Bangladesh exemplify some of the key problems facing uprooted
populations and their experience provides insights into the long
term unintended consequences of major historical events. Set in a
site of camp and non-camp based displacement, it illustrates the
nuances of political identity and lived spaces of statelessness
that Western political theory has too long hidden from view. Using
Bangladesh as a case study, Statelessness and Citizenship: Camps
and the creation of political space argues that the crude binary
oppositions of statelessness and citizenship are no longer
relevant. Access to and understandings of citizenship are not just
jurally but socially, spatially and temporally produced. Unpicking
Agamben's distinction between 'political beings' and 'bare life',
the book considers experiences of citizenship through the camp as a
social form. The camps of Bangladesh do not function as bounded
physical or conceptual spaces in which denationalized groups are
altogether divorced from the polity. Instead, citizenship is
claimed at the level of everyday life, as the moments in which
formal status is transgressed. Moreover, once in possession of
'formal status' internal borders within the nation-state render
'rights-bearing citizens' effectively 'stateless', and the
experience of 'citizens' is very often equally uneven. While
'statelessness' may function as a cold instrument of exclusion,
certainly, it is neither fixed nor static; just as citizenship is
neither as stable nor benign as the dichotomy would suggest. Using
these insights, the book develops the concept of 'political space'
- an analysis of the way history and space inform the identities
and political subjectivity available to people. In doing so, it
provides an analytic approach of relevance to wider problems of
displacement, citizenship and ethnic relations. Shortlisted for
this year's BSA Philip Abrams Memorial Prize.
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