Focaal
Volume 2017, Issue 77, 2017, Pages 63-75
State desertion and “out-of-procedure” asylum seekers in the Netherlands (Article)
Kalir B.*
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a
Department of Anthropology, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
Abstract
Each year the Dutch authorities categorize scores of people as being “out of procedure” (uitgeprocedeerd). These are mostly “failed asylum seekers” who have exhausted all legal appeals in search of regularizing their status in the Netherlands. Out-of-procedure subjects, or OOPSs, have no formal rights and receive no state provision. They must leave the country voluntarily within one month or risk deportation. Many OOPSs who spent weeks or even months in Dutch detention centers are eventually released onto the streets, as the authorities cannot manage to deport them. This article interrogates the production and treatment of OOPSs as nonexistent human beings who are no longer considered by the state as “aliens” but merely as illegalized bodies. This intriguing case of the state deserting certain people within its sovereign territory is realized through a process of derecording OOPSs and formally pretending that they are not part of the governed population. © Stichting Focaal and Berghahn Books.
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85014245481&doi=10.3167%2ffcl.2017.770106&partnerID=40&md5=0eedcc0db79def845908de701da4b23d
DOI: 10.3167/fcl.2017.770106
ISSN: 09201297
Cited by: 6
Original Language: English