This article argues that illegalized migrants carry the potential for social change not only through their acts of resistance but also in their everyday practices. This is the case despite illegalized migrants being the most disenfranchised subjects produced by the European border regime. In line with Jacques Rancière (1999) these practices can be understood as ‘politics’. For Rancière, becoming a political subject requires visibility, while other scholars (Papadopoulos & Tsianos, 2007; Rygiel, 2011) stress that this is not necessarily the case. They argue that political subjectivity can also be achieved via invisible means; important in this discussion as invisibility is an essential strategy of illegalized migrants. The aim of this articl...
Through an ethnography of undocumented migrants from Latin America to London, I explore the temporal...
This article argues for an urban citizenship perspective which explores the struggle for rights and ...
Citizenship is often viewed as a great equaliser, but is this always the case? Eleanor Knott examine...
This article argues that illegalized migrants carry the potential for social change not only through...
Existing scholarship on the active citizenship of undocumented migrants is inconclusive on its peril...
Existing scholarship on the active citizenship of undocumented migrants is inconclusive on its peril...
This article introduces the notion of ‘illegality regimes’ and argues that the creation, enhancement...
Migration Management, a regime of radical differentiation and exclusion, renders many people illegal...
This article seeks to explain how and why groups and networks of undocumented migrants mobilizing in...
Migrant activists with precarious legal status mobilize against border regimes in Berlin under the l...
Reducing the number of foreigners residing unlawfully within the borders of a state requires either ...
Focusing on the treatment irregular migrants have received in Greece since the early 1990s, this art...
This article focuses on the use of mobility as a technology ofgovernment for regaining control over...
Despite restrictive policy frameworks, cities sometimes provide support to irregular migrants. Schol...
The rich world’s borders increasingly seem like a battleground where a new kind of ‘threat’ is fough...
Through an ethnography of undocumented migrants from Latin America to London, I explore the temporal...
This article argues for an urban citizenship perspective which explores the struggle for rights and ...
Citizenship is often viewed as a great equaliser, but is this always the case? Eleanor Knott examine...
This article argues that illegalized migrants carry the potential for social change not only through...
Existing scholarship on the active citizenship of undocumented migrants is inconclusive on its peril...
Existing scholarship on the active citizenship of undocumented migrants is inconclusive on its peril...
This article introduces the notion of ‘illegality regimes’ and argues that the creation, enhancement...
Migration Management, a regime of radical differentiation and exclusion, renders many people illegal...
This article seeks to explain how and why groups and networks of undocumented migrants mobilizing in...
Migrant activists with precarious legal status mobilize against border regimes in Berlin under the l...
Reducing the number of foreigners residing unlawfully within the borders of a state requires either ...
Focusing on the treatment irregular migrants have received in Greece since the early 1990s, this art...
This article focuses on the use of mobility as a technology ofgovernment for regaining control over...
Despite restrictive policy frameworks, cities sometimes provide support to irregular migrants. Schol...
The rich world’s borders increasingly seem like a battleground where a new kind of ‘threat’ is fough...
Through an ethnography of undocumented migrants from Latin America to London, I explore the temporal...
This article argues for an urban citizenship perspective which explores the struggle for rights and ...
Citizenship is often viewed as a great equaliser, but is this always the case? Eleanor Knott examine...