Arrival at the Margins 2: Mobility, promise & the politics of difference in sites of exclusion
Type: Virtual Paper
Day: 2/26/2022
Start Time: 3:40 PM
End Time: 5:00 PM
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Organizer(s):
Natasha Iskander
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Chairs(s):
Loren Landau, Oxford University
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Description:
Narratives that represent migrants as interlopers into threatened national communities are fueling anti-immigrant rhetoric and policy around the world. Yet the socio-spatial forms of contemporary mobility fundamentally challenge this representation. Migration has never been a matter of homogenous hosts welcoming or rejecting new arrivals. Instead, it is often ethnic, political, or religious minorities who receive migrants in sites on the socio-spatial margins of economic and social centers. This panel explores the politics of these encounters.
Departures and arrivals can create possibilities for novel forms of solidarity and membership and can open new avenues for political mobilization. As migration routes and destinations diversify, so does the scope for social experimentation: new forms of social belonging, new economic practices, and the invention of rights that borrow from both formal and informal legal frameworks. But the margins can also disguise or legitimize forms of social and economic exclusion and marginalization. Heightened heterogeneity offers the possibilities to foster divisions readily exploited by power brokers and politicians. In its focus on dynamics at the margins, this panel seeks to examine the ways in which responses to migration at the periphery may entrench patterns of privilege and create cleavages that reinforce, reconfigure, or respatialize social divisions.
Drawing on perspectives from human geography and complementary social science, this panel (second of two) documents, describes, and begins to theorize the political dimensions of often poorly understood modes of through which communities, migrants, and the state construe and manage diversity and difference at the margins.
Presentation(s), if applicable
May Aldabbagh, ; The “Messy Middle”: Serial Migrant Mothers and Permanent Temporariness in Dubai |
Nicole Constable, ; Continual arrival and the longue durée: Emplacement as activism among migrant workers in Hong Kong |
Loren Landau, ; The Centre Cannot Hold: Arrival, Margins, and the Politics of Ambivalence |
Sealing Cheng, ; The Poetics of Togetherness: Long-term asylum-seekers Organizing |
Kristen Sarah Biehl, ; Spectrums of in/formality and il/legality: negotiating business and migration related statuses in arrival spaces |
Non-Presenting Participants Agenda
Role | Participant |
Panelist | Nicole Constable |
Panelist | Sealing Chang Hong Kong University |
Panelist | May Dabbagh New York University -- Abu Dhabi |
Panelist | Mary Setrana University of Ghana |
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Arrival at the Margins 2: Mobility, promise & the politics of difference in sites of exclusion
Description
Virtual Paper
Contact the Primary Organizer
Natasha Iskander - natasha.iskander@nyu.edu