Projects per year
Abstract
This paper provides a reading of the European border regime taking special interest in Denmark through an analysis of deportation and detention. This focus allows addressing how the border regime manages and controls territories and populations by obeying a colonial and imperial logic that is a de facto enforcement of apartheid on a global and a local level, and involves European political, economic and legal frameworks. The enforcement of these frameworks is directly connected to the desire to repress the disobedience to the global apartheid structure practiced by migrants and refugees from the global south, as they move across colonially drawn national borders. Indeed, camps, border control, deportations, and other forms of state violence are tools used to manage the political and socioeconomic inequalities produced by historical colonialism and the present round of neocolonial dispossessions in the global south.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Journal | KULT. Postkolonial Temaserie |
Volume | 15 |
Pages (from-to) | 107-127 |
ISSN | 1904-1594 |
Publication status | Published - 2018 |
Projects
- 1 Finished
-
Freedom of Movements: Appearing as Resistance
Suárez-Krabbe, J. (Project participant), Ross, S. (Project participant) & Arce, J. (Project participant)
01/07/2015 → 01/07/2019
Project: Research
Activities
- 1 Lecture and oral contribution
-
Human Rights, Development, and the Death Project
Suárez-Krabbe, J. (Speaker)
1 Jul 2022Activity: Talk or presentation › Lecture and oral contribution