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FORCED-MIGRATION  January 2019

FORCED-MIGRATION January 2019

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Subject:

Call for Papers: RGS-IBG 2019: The politics of hope within systems of border control

From:

Forced Migration List <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Forced Migration List <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Tue, 22 Jan 2019 16:46:34 +0000

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With apologies for cross-posting,
 
Call for Papers: RGS-IBG Annual Conference | London | Tuesday 27 to Friday 30 August 2019
https://www.rgs.org/research/annual-international-conference/
 
Session theme: The Politics of hope within systems of border control. Troubled subjects, materials and temporalities. 
Organisers: Sarah Hughes (Durham University) & Daniel Fisher (Exeter University)

The politics of hope within systems of border control.
Troubled subjects, materials and temporalities
 
“Is there a better optimism? And a right way to lose hope? It depends who’s hoping, for what, for whom – and against whom. We must learn to hope with teeth.”
China Miéville 2018, The limits of Utopia
 
The contemporary landscape of border control is not widely considered to be hopeful. Profit margins and a political rhetoric of ‘secure borders’ are valued more than life lived in fullness. The UK’s hostile environment policies, the measures put in place by ‘Fortress Europe’, ‘Brexit’ and anxieties of settled status, escalating family detention and Trump’s border wall are but a few examples of increasing hostility to migrants. Simply put, things are getting worse.
 
And yet hope remains. The politics of migration control can also be characterised as a struggle for/over hope. We encounter hopeful actions in those moving to find family, escape war, find work and in aims for a better life. We find them in the activists and charities working to kindle hope within these systems. Yet we also see hope in the policy strategies to deter ‘hopeful’ migrants, to reduce incentives and to ‘increase border security’. What then, does it mean to talk of ‘hope’ in the context of such increasingly pervasive, hostile and deadly systems of border control? What forms of politics does a focus upon hope open up, and what does it risk precluding? And what might it mean to “hope with teeth” (Mieville 2018)?
 
The aim for border scholars and activists, however, cannot be to simply engender a sense of hopefulness in the face of such strategies. In this session we therefore seek to further unpack the politics of hope in the context of borders and immigration control by recognising that hope is not necessarily positive, nor is it inherently progressive. We trouble the potentially dangerous simplicity of the ‘hopeful migrant subject’, focusing instead on the multiple forms of hopeful, incoherent subjectivities that are emerging within systems of border control. We also seek to investigate the power of objects and things in shaping the forms and intensities of hope or despair. Furthermore, what temporalities of hope emerge in the context of border control?
 
We welcome papers and submissions in non-traditional formats (for example video or visual submissions) that explore themes including but not limited to:
 
•       The relation between hope and resistance
•       The performativity of hope and the variations that occur between subjects and temporalities
•       The temporalities that a focus on hope may open up
•       Hopeful subjectivities: beyond the ‘hopeful migrant’
•       Possible/realised consequences of hoping or engendering hope
•       Hope and the more than human
•       The affectual politics of hope
•       Researcher encounters with hope ‘in the field’
•       The communication of hope and sort of publics that hope may gather
•       Forms of hope engendered through organised action
•       The role of academics in providing a productive form of despair
 
Please send abstracts of 200 words to Sarah Hughes ([log in to unmask]) and Daniel Fisher ([log in to unmask]) by midnight on the 1st February 2019.
 
Reference:
Miéville, China. “The Limits of Utopia” Climate and Capitalism, March 2nd 2018 https://climateandcapitalism.com/2018/03/02/china-mieville-the-limits-of-utopia/

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Note: The material contained in this communication comes to you from the Forced Migration Discussion List which is moderated by the Refugee Studies Centre (RSC), Oxford Department of International Development, University of Oxford. It does not necessarily reflect the views of the RSC or the University. If you re-print, copy, archive or re-post this message please retain this disclaimer. Quotations or extracts should include attribution to the original sources.

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