This book is an interdisciplinary attempt to understand the contemporaneous human condition of asylum seekers through analysis of their entrapment and the resultant new forms of resistance that have emerged to combat it. Based on qualitative research data, the chapters support the claim that asylum seekers are entrapped in social, legal and economic precariousness amidst the complex relationship between individual agency and social structure.
By exploring the practices and lived experiences of asylum seekers and other parties involved in their migration and reception, the authors explore the structural and individual agency factors that entrap asylum seekers in precarious livelihoods and lead to marginalization and social exclusion. A bold and timely study, this edited collection will be essential reading for academics and students of criminology, sociology, anthropology, urban studies and social policy.
Cuprins
Chapter 1. Entrapping Asylum Seekers: Introduction; Alison Gerard, Francesco Vecchio.- Chapter 2. Unmasking the Cultural Construction of Asylum Screening at the Border; Olga Jubany.- Chapter 3. Beyond the Border Spectacle: Migration across the Mediterranean Sea; Pierluigi Musarò.- Chapter 4. Seeking Asylum in Neoliberal Cairo: Refugee Protests and the Securitization of Humanitarianism; Elisa Pascucci.- Chapter 5. Contesting Entrapment: Women Asylum Seekers in Hong Kong; Alison Gerard.- Chapter 6. ‘This Time I Am Going to Cross!’: Fighting Entrapment Processes through the Provision of human Smuggling Services on the US/Mexico Border; Gabriella Sanchez.- Chapter 7. Asylum Seekers and Strategic Litigation^ganization and Refugee Negotiation of Italian and European Asylum Policies; Michele Manocchi.- Chapter 10. Asylum Seeker Materiality and Identity-Building: Shapers of Socio-Legal Incarceration; Francesco Vecchio
Despre autor
Francesco Vecchio is an Adjunct Assistant Professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, and an Adjunct Research Fellow at Charles Sturt University’s Centre for Law and Justice, Australia.
Alison Gerard is an Associate Professor in Law and Director of the Centre for Law and Justice at Charles Sturt University, Australia.