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Agency within mobility: Conceptualising the geopolitics of migration management

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posted on 2022-07-21, 16:11 authored by Lisa Borrelli, Patrick Pinkerton, Hamza Safouane, Annette Jünemann, Sandra Göttsche, Stephan Scheel, Christina OelgemöllerChristina Oelgemöller
The movement of people across borders, and the varied governmental responses to that movement, is of crucial importance to contemporary geopolitics. Agency and mobility are two central themes in these debates. This Forum makes an intervention into such debates, by contributing to the conceptualisation of agency as a co-constitutive phenomena, and seeking a collaborative response to the question of how to rethink the paradigm of political agency. Within the diverse situations described in the Forum, the contributors trace the different ways in which migrant individuals enact and claim agency within the systems they encounter. While engaging with different case studies (migration to Germany, the UK, the EU and Japan; migration from and within West Africa) and utilising different methodologies (interviews, ethnographic research, policy analysis), the contributions are united by a determination to develop understandings of migrant and refugee agency that do justice to the complexity of the geopolitical situations in which persons find themselves: whether that is the inequalities produced by long-term factors such as colonialism and developmental interventions; or the contemporary cross-border movements driven by conflicts or regional, national and local circumstance. By recognising the various ways in which migrants, as political actors in their own right, engage with multiple forms of governance and management, we engage in a cumulative effort to make conceptual strides on the back of empirical research, in order to generate new avenues for productive research into the geopolitics of migration management.

Funding

Swiss National Science Foundation (51NF40- 182897)

History

School

  • Social Sciences and Humanities

Department

  • International Relations, Politics and History

Published in

Geopolitics

Volume

27

Issue

4

Pages

1140 - 1167

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Rights holder

© The authors

Publisher statement

This is an Open Access Article. It is published by Taylor and Francis under the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0). Full details of this licence are available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

Publication date

2021-09-29

Copyright date

2021

ISSN

1465-0045

eISSN

1557-3028

Language

  • en

Depositor

Dr Christina Oelgemoller. Deposit date: 13 October 2021

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