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Volume 6, Issue 3, 2016, Pages 22-40
Governing global aeromobility Canada and airport refugee claimants in the 1980s (Article)
Edwards B.*
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a
University of Toronto, Canada
Abstract
Th is article surveys Canada's regulatory response to global aeromobility in the late twentieth century. It examines the Canadian state's strategies to restrict the movement of refugee claimants landing at airports during the 1980s and the national discourse around this process. Mass air travel enabled more refugees, particularly from the Global South, to travel to Canada and, in the process, challenged how the country governed aerial and cosmopolitan populations. In response, Canadian authorities erected an enforcement regime at the country's international airports, which transformed them into contested entry points to national space and normative citizenship where links between mobility, borders, and nation were simultaneously reinforced and contested. This article thus provides an integral case study of national ambivalence toward global aeromobility in the late twentieth century.
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84994302302&doi=10.3167%2fTRANS.2016.060303&partnerID=40&md5=cbec9537f75dcb402e3f996e5b957f95
DOI: 10.3167/TRANS.2016.060303
ISSN: 20454813
Original Language: English