Affiliation:
1. Department of Sociological Studies, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK
Abstract
This paper draws on empirical data generated in the ‘Everyday Bordering in the UK’ project, with a focus on the experiences of people seeking asylum and hoping to establish a safe life in the UK. Specifically, we show that during the process of claiming asylum, people’s experiences of waiting and displacement—practices inherent in UK immigration policies—work as time- and space-based dimensions of power that are imbued with colonial logic. Existing studies apply the lens of Foucault’s governmentality approach to politics regulating people seeking asylum. In particular, the international literature describes the policy of dispersal, and associated periods of waiting, as a dynamic of power used by governments to control and regulate behaviours. However, these time- and space-related experiences are often considered separately, focusing on the rationalities underpinning these politics. This paper, by contrast, develops Foucault’s theories by examining how these two characteristics interconnect in the lived realities of people waiting for an asylum decision in the UK to create racialised politics of power and privilege that reproduce the colonial origins of European migration governance. In doing so, we contribute by illustrating how practices within the UK asylum system can be embodied by people seeking asylum to create a subject that modifies behaviours in response to being positioned as ‘less deserving’ than UK citizens—the ‘colonised self’.
Funder
Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) New Investigator Programme
Reference114 articles.
1. The neglected colonial legacy of the 1951 refugee convention;Abuya;International Migration,2021
2. Migration as decolonization;Achiume;Stanford Law Review,2019
3. “Biopower and Immigration”: A Biopolitical Perspective on Anti-Migration Policies;Apatinga;Research on Humanities and Social Sciences,2017
4. A pragmatic view of thematic analysis;Aronson;The Qualitative Report,1995
5. From Conflict Zones to Europe: Syrian and Afghan Refugees’ Journeys, Stories, and Strategies;Belabbas;Social Inclusion,2022