Facing the current growing global archipelago of encampments – including concentration, detention, transit, identification, refugee, military and training camps, this article is a geographical reflection on ‘the camp’, as a modern institution and as a spatial bio-political technology. In particular, it is about the past and present camp geographies and the apparatus of dispositifs that make them an ever-present spatial formation in the management of custody and care characterizing many authoritarian regimes as well as many contemporary democracies. I especially focus on the works of Paul Gilroy, Giorgio Agamben and Reviel Netz to discuss camp spatialities, the normalization of camp geographies, and related biopolitics. In doing so, I advanc...
Camps have long constituted a central element of the governance of migration. This chapter offers an...
This dissertation is a genealogy of the geographical and technological practices that shaped the spa...
From their emergence in the 19th century to their current global proliferation, camps have been crea...
Facing the current growing global archipelago of encampments – including concentration, detention, t...
none3siFacing the current growing global archipelago of encampments, Camps Revisited develops a geog...
In light of the recent proliferation and co-presence of institutional and makeshift camps and encamp...
Abstract The essay focuses on the particular spatiality and the political significance assumed by c...
Critical scholarship on the camp tends to focus on the institution’s historical role in producing fo...
In light of the recent proliferation and co-presence of institutional and makeshift camps and encamp...
This paper examines the geographical underpinnings of Giorgio Agamben's theory of sovereign power. R...
none2noThis paper, largely inspired by Giorgio Agamben's conceptualization of the camp, reflects on ...
This paper, largely inspired by Giorgio Agamben’s conceptualization of the camp, reflects on the rel...
This paper examines the geographical underpinnings of Giorgio Agamben's theory of sovereign power. R...
La forme-camp. Pour une g\ue9n\ue9alogie des lieux de transit et d\u2019internement du pr\ue9sent Fe...
This article addresses the relationship between the concepts of national identity and biopolitics by...
Camps have long constituted a central element of the governance of migration. This chapter offers an...
This dissertation is a genealogy of the geographical and technological practices that shaped the spa...
From their emergence in the 19th century to their current global proliferation, camps have been crea...
Facing the current growing global archipelago of encampments – including concentration, detention, t...
none3siFacing the current growing global archipelago of encampments, Camps Revisited develops a geog...
In light of the recent proliferation and co-presence of institutional and makeshift camps and encamp...
Abstract The essay focuses on the particular spatiality and the political significance assumed by c...
Critical scholarship on the camp tends to focus on the institution’s historical role in producing fo...
In light of the recent proliferation and co-presence of institutional and makeshift camps and encamp...
This paper examines the geographical underpinnings of Giorgio Agamben's theory of sovereign power. R...
none2noThis paper, largely inspired by Giorgio Agamben's conceptualization of the camp, reflects on ...
This paper, largely inspired by Giorgio Agamben’s conceptualization of the camp, reflects on the rel...
This paper examines the geographical underpinnings of Giorgio Agamben's theory of sovereign power. R...
La forme-camp. Pour une g\ue9n\ue9alogie des lieux de transit et d\u2019internement du pr\ue9sent Fe...
This article addresses the relationship between the concepts of national identity and biopolitics by...
Camps have long constituted a central element of the governance of migration. This chapter offers an...
This dissertation is a genealogy of the geographical and technological practices that shaped the spa...
From their emergence in the 19th century to their current global proliferation, camps have been crea...