Citizenship Studies
Volume 15, Issue 1, 2011, Pages 1-19

Bordering solidarities: Migrant activism and the politics of movement and camps at Calais (Article)

Rygiel K.*
  • a Department of Political Science, Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, Canada

Abstract

The proliferation of more restrictive border controls governing global mobility provides important sites of crystallization through which differentiated and stratified rights to movement are produced, negotiated, and reimagined. One such form, the detention of migrants, is often understood through a logic of exception as the exclusion of unwanted migrants from the borders of the political community. Critical scholarship on detention informed by an autonomous migration perspective suggests a more nuanced reading of detention as the differential inclusion of migrants through positions of precariousness, transformations of legal statuses and subjectivities, and control over the direction and temporality of migratory flows. Building on this trajectory, this paper argues that the very meaning of the camp also needs to be brought into the analysis of a politics of migration and of control. For spaces of detention are sites of contestation that can be used by migrants (and those in solidarity with them) as resources to navigate border controls, reimagine political community and subjectivities and through which migrants engage in practices of citizenship. Reflecting on the destruction of the migrant camps in and around Calais, the paper examines three different images of the camp space known as 'the jungle' and draws attention to camp spaces as social and political spaces, in which the struggles to define them are an integral part of what is at stake in the struggle between a politics of control and a politics of migration. © 2011 Taylor & Francis.

Author Keywords

Agamben Calais Border controls Detention migrant activism camp

Index Keywords

international migration Pas de Calais Calais migrants experience Nord Pas de Calais political conflict France citizenship population migration political border

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-79851499928&doi=10.1080%2f13621025.2011.534911&partnerID=40&md5=4e164e796071c4448f1ca37262e827c9

DOI: 10.1080/13621025.2011.534911
ISSN: 13621025
Cited by: 109
Original Language: English