Statelessness is incessantly produced in seas, cities, and law. Building around the postcolonial experiences of statelessness
Sites of Statelessness examines the entanglements of citizenship policies and practices with the spread of statelessness in contemporary times, something that defies any kind of a citizen/stateless binary. These policies are significant, the background of a shift in emphasis from jus soli to jus sanguinis, the proliferation of borderland populations and nowhere people, population flows across (post)colonial border formations and boundary delimitations, and the growth of regional, formal, and informal labor markets characterized by immigrant labor economies. In this context, contributors address the distinctive dynamics of the different sites in the production of statelessness and considers the impact of these sites as critical and does not merely treat them as a backdrop. They argue that these different sites evoke different histories and repertoires and also bring different possibilities of alignment with emerging problematics.
Tabela de Conteúdo
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Abandoned to be Stateless
Sabyasachi Basu Ray Chaudhury, Ayşe Çağlar, and Ranabir Samaddar
Part I: Law as a Site of Statelessness
1. Revisiting (Il)legal Sites of Statelessness in South Asia
Sabyasachi Basu Ray Chaudhury
2. The Production of Statelessness in Europe
Elspeth Guild and Sandra Mantu
3. The Banality of Statelessness and the Impossibility of Counting the Dispossessed
Nergis Canefe
Part II: City as a Site of Statelessness
4. The Conundrum of Trafficking and Statelessness in West Bengal
Paula Banerjee and Sangbida Lahiri
5. Can Undesirables Inhabit the World? From Camps to Instant Cities
Michel Agier (translated by Helen Morrison)
6. Stateless in Informal Settlements
Efadul Huq and Faranak Miraftab
7. Statelessness and Camp Settlements: The Curious Case of South Asia
Nasreen Chowdhory and Shamna Thacham Poyil
Part III: Sea as a Site of Statelessness
8. The Tragic Journey of Komagata Maru: Empire, Immigrants, and Anxiety
Subhas Ranjan Chakraborty
9. Subjects at Sea: Jahaji Relationships and Their Discontents
Samata Biswas
10. Governing Migrant Mobilities in the Aegean Sea: From Moral Rhetoric to Blatant Use of Violence
Sibel Karadağ
11. Sea, Refugees, and Stateless Migrants on the Bay: The Rohingya
Sucharita Sengupta
12. Logistics of Maritime Capitalism: Flags of Convenience and the Statelessness at Sea
Joyce C. H. Liu, Yu-Fan Chiu, and Jonathan S. Parhusip
Bibliography
List of Contributors
Index
Sobre o autor
Ayşe Çağlar is Professor at the Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology, Vienna University, and a Permanent Fellow at the Institute for Human Sciences, Vienna.
Sabyasachi Basu Ray Chaudhury is Professor of Political Science at the Rabindra Bharati University, Kolkata, India.
Ranabir Samaddar is Distinguished Chair Professor of Migration and Forced Migration Studies at the Calcutta Research Group, Kolkata, India.