This article aims to problematize the well-rehearsed argument that the rise of the neoliberal tide has submerged alternative values and moral codes. In al-Wihdat, a Palestinian refugee camp in Jordan, neoliberal understandings of prosperity do not fully encompass vernacular notions of prosperity. Palestinian refugees value well-being not only on the basis of income but also in terms of the ethical and political qualities often entailed in “being poor.” However, if neoliberal desires tarnish the moral environment by bringing excessive individualism and anomy, poverty, too, can be detrimental to refugees’ well-being. Rather than simply being an unconditioned source of dignity and a superior moral stance, refugees recognize poverty as being a ...
This article considers the nationalizing practices of everyday life among Palestinian refugees in Jo...
In Jordan, Palestine refugee camps have turned by time into socioeconomic centers of gravity and cor...
For people living in violent and insecure contexts, “ordinariness” and “crisis” take on new meanings...
Published 01 December 2018This article aims to problematize the well-rehearsed argument that the ris...
Refugees and displaced have been, by and large, absent from recent analyses of the Arab uprisings, ...
This article examines the implications of long-term encampment and exile for the meaning of Palestin...
This article briefly examines the historical causes that led to the uprooting of the Palestinians in...
In this article I use the refugee crisis in Syria to open up broader questions of political responsi...
Numbering over 5 million people, Palestinians comprise one of the longest-standing refugee populatio...
A discourse that portrays the Palestinian refugee as a suffering but struggling stateless person who...
Palestinian refugee youth living both within and outside of United Nations Relief and Works Agency f...
Beginning in 1948, the Arab-Israeli conflict caused the emergence of a large number of Palestinian r...
Migration is one way individuals and families cope with economic uncertainty and political turbulenc...
Hospitality provides a lens for understanding spatial relations of power and ethics. It seeks to unp...
With respect to Palestinian refugees in the Arabic countries it helps to make a distinction between ...
This article considers the nationalizing practices of everyday life among Palestinian refugees in Jo...
In Jordan, Palestine refugee camps have turned by time into socioeconomic centers of gravity and cor...
For people living in violent and insecure contexts, “ordinariness” and “crisis” take on new meanings...
Published 01 December 2018This article aims to problematize the well-rehearsed argument that the ris...
Refugees and displaced have been, by and large, absent from recent analyses of the Arab uprisings, ...
This article examines the implications of long-term encampment and exile for the meaning of Palestin...
This article briefly examines the historical causes that led to the uprooting of the Palestinians in...
In this article I use the refugee crisis in Syria to open up broader questions of political responsi...
Numbering over 5 million people, Palestinians comprise one of the longest-standing refugee populatio...
A discourse that portrays the Palestinian refugee as a suffering but struggling stateless person who...
Palestinian refugee youth living both within and outside of United Nations Relief and Works Agency f...
Beginning in 1948, the Arab-Israeli conflict caused the emergence of a large number of Palestinian r...
Migration is one way individuals and families cope with economic uncertainty and political turbulenc...
Hospitality provides a lens for understanding spatial relations of power and ethics. It seeks to unp...
With respect to Palestinian refugees in the Arabic countries it helps to make a distinction between ...
This article considers the nationalizing practices of everyday life among Palestinian refugees in Jo...
In Jordan, Palestine refugee camps have turned by time into socioeconomic centers of gravity and cor...
For people living in violent and insecure contexts, “ordinariness” and “crisis” take on new meanings...