During the past decade, Syria’s displacement crisis has made the Middle East one of the world’s foremost refugee-hosting regions. The measures to prevent refugees and migrants from leaving the region, and returning those who do, has made the region a zone of containment where millions remain displaced. The volume explores responses to mass migration and traces the genealogy of humanitarian containment from the Ottoman Empire and the emergence of the first refugee camps to the present-day displacement ‘crises’ and the re-bordering of Europe.
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List of Figures
Foreword
Michel Agier
Introduction: Continental Encampment: Genealogies of Humanitarian Containment in the Middle East and Europe
Are John Knudsen and Kjersti G. Berg
Chapter 1. An Imperial Lens on Refuge in Greater Syria: Antecedents to Contemporary Humanitarian Practices
Dawn Chatty
Chapter 2. The Global Origins of the Modern Refugee Camp: Military Humanitarianism and Colonial Occupation at Baquba, Iraq, 1918–1920
Benjamin Thomas White
Chapter 3. A Necessary Evil: A History of Palestinian Refugee Camps, UNRWA and Jordan (1950-1970)
Kjersti G. Berg
Chapter 4. Contained at the Margins: Syrian Refugees’ Settlement Experience in Northern Jordan
Kamel Doraï and Pauline Piraud-Fournet
Chapter 5. Iraqi Refugees in Syria, 2003-2011: The Emergence of UNHCR-led Migration Management in the Levant
Sophia Hoffmann
Chapter 6. Four Buildings and a Bungalow: Architectures of Containment in Sabra, Beirut
Are John Knudsen
Chapter 7. Turkey’s Biopolitical Buffer Zones and the Temporalities of Containment
Rebecca Bryant
Chapter 8. Journeys Interrupted: The Labyrinthine Border Experience Along the Balkan Route
Synnøve Kristine Nepstad Bendixsen
Chapter 9. Humanitarian Lampedusa and the Theatralisation of Crisis
Antonio De Lauri
Afterword
Thomas Hylland Eriksen
Index
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Kjersti G. Berg is a Postdoctoral Researcher at CMI, Bergen, and Associate Professor at NLA University College, Norway. Kjersti is a historian and researches encampment, Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, and the Palestine Question.