Lives in Transit : An Ethnographic Study of Refugees' Subjectivity Across European Borders.

Fontanari, Elena.

Lives in Transit : An Ethnographic Study of Refugees' Subjectivity Across European Borders. - London ; New York : Routledge, Taylor&Francis Group, 2018. ©2018. - 1 online resource (293 pages) - Studies in Migration and Diaspora .

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Cover -- Half Title -- Series Information -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Endorsement -- Table of contents -- Foreword -- Series editor's preface -- Acknowledgements -- Glossary -- Preface -- Note -- Introduction -- Beyond migration and refugee studies: the mobility lens -- Border as a dynamic process -- Subjectivity: looking at power from the perspective of the subjects -- An ethnography on the move: the structure of the research and the book -- Notes -- Part I The historical context -- 1 Asylum on the move: The humanitarian-security border regime in Europe -- 1.1 Where does the 'refugee' come from? -- 1.2 The 'refugee' and the 'economic migrant': two global regimes for the government of human mobilities -- 1.3 The foundations of Schengenland: 'illegal' mobility and the process of securitization -- 1.4 The humanitarian turn: erosion and depoliticization of asylum -- 1.5 The Dublin Regime: a temporary mobility, stuck and under control -- 1.6 Governing mobility: between humanitarian and security measures -- Notes -- 2 A turbulent.sea: From the Arab Spring to the Berliner Herbst -- 2.1 A Mediterranean mosaic: migrants' routes and EU borders -- Producing images of crisis: Libya, Lampedusa, and the sub-Saharan migrants -- 2.2 The year 2011: 'Arab Spring', Libyan war, and the emergency regime in Italy -- Into the ENA: waiting and struggling in uncertainty -- 2.3 Displacing Lampedusa: the Oranienplatz protest and 'Lampedusa in Berlin' -- Breaking the isolation of the German asylum system -- 2.4 Yesterday's barbarians against today's barbarians -- Notes -- Part II The ethnographic journey -- 3 Temporalities: Fragmented mobility and disrupted time in the everyday lives of refugees -- 3.1 Transitaly: no country for mobile-migrant man -- Milan, the gateway to Northern Europe: city of arrivals, transits, and further departures. Fragmented lives in the reception system in Milan: waiting, turning around, and queuing -- Shadows on the move across Italy: fragmented circuits -- 3.2 Berlin, Open City? -- Voices emerging from the shadows: the Oranienplatz protest -- Adrift on the Berliner island: the Oranienplatz (dis)Agreement -- The politics of dispersal: de-collectivization, invisibilization, and filtering through the lists -- 3.3 Errant orphans: the effects of policies of abandonment and control -- Notes -- 4 Interstices: Living between and beyond the borders -- 4.1 Categories on the move, mobilities between categories -- Abandoning Italy: turbulent trajectories heading North -- Renewing documents: back-and-forth trajectories between Italy and Germany -- 'Disrupted citizens': the ambiguity of legal status and the omnipresence of internal borders -- 4.2 Dwelling in transit: places of border enforcement and refugees' autonomous practices -- Invisible places: transit sites as crossroads of migrant mobilities -- Contested places: bordering practices and zero-tolerance.zones -- 4.3 Territorial, juridicial, and political interstices -- Notes -- 5 Becoming subjectivity in transit: Feelings, emotions, and everyday practices -- 5.1 'I feel, therefore I act' -- Moving on: desires, fears, frustration, anger, aspirations, and perceptions of the future -- Building awareness en.route -- 5.2 Everyday practices: expression of resistance or existence? -- 'Here I can calm down': time reappropriation practices in Milan -- 'We are here, and we will stay': space reappropriation practices in Berlin -- 5.3 Non-European subjects claiming for a temporal justice -- Notes -- Conclusion: Which Europe, for whom? -- Epilogure -- References -- Index -- Plates.

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