Affiliation:
1. Institution for Social Anthropology, Universitetet i Bergen , PO Box 7802, No 5020 , Bergen, Norway
Abstract
Abstract
This article features a long-term refugee in Greece who decided to return to his home country in the face of severe illness. I ask what his illness and treatment in Greece, and ultimately his return to Sudan, reveal about protection regimes: as he sought care, respite from pain, and a good—or at least dignified—death. His return enabled him to be among family again, in once-familiar places, and to be laid to rest among ancestors. Yet rather than reading his return as a form of closure or resolution, I probe its afterlives: the frayed, tangled, still-unfurling edges of the story, which speak to the ongoing nature of displacement.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Geography, Planning and Development