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Article

Crisis, what Crisis? Immigrants, Refugees and Invisible Struggles

Details

Citation

Carastathis A, Spathopoulou A & Tsilimpounidi M (2018) Crisis, what Crisis? Immigrants, Refugees and Invisible Struggles. Refuge: Canada’s Journal on Refugees, 34 (1). https://doi.org/10.7202/1050852ar

Abstract
Different evocations of “crisis” create distinct categories that in turn evoke certain social reactions. After 2008 Greece became the epicentre of the “financial crisis”; since 2015 with the advent of the “refugee crisis,” it became the “hotspot of Europe.” What are the different vocabularies of crisis? Moreover, how have both representations of crisis facilitated humanitarian crises to become phenomena for European and transnational institutional management? What are the hegemonically constructed subjects of the different crises? The everyday reality in the crisis-ridden hotspot of Europe is invisible in these representations. It is precisely the daily, soft, lived, and unspoken realities of intersecting crises that hegemonic discourses of successive, overlapping, or “nesting crises” render invisible. By shifting the focus from who belongs to which state-devised category to an open-ended, polyvocal account of capitalist oppressions, we aim to question the state’s and supranational efforts to divide the “migrant mob” into discrete juridical categories of citi-zens (emigrants), refugees, and illegal immigrants, thereby undermining coalitional struggles between precaritised groups.

Keywords
crisis; hotspots; migrants; refugees; methodology; intersectionality; Greece

Journal
Refuge: Canada’s Journal on Refugees: Volume 34, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date31/12/2018
Publication date online30/06/2018
URL
ISSN0220-5113
eISSN1920-7336

People (1)

Dr Aila Spathopoulou

Dr Aila Spathopoulou

Lecturer in Criminology & Sociology, Sociology, Social Policy & Criminology

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