This paper examines how historical and geographical relations of injustice are ‘made present’ through the activities of the City of Sanctuary network in Sheffield, the UK. In so doing, it exposes the limitations of conceptualising and enacting sanctuary through the frame of hospitality, and proposes an analytics of ‘rightful presence’ as an alternative frame by which to address contemporary sanctuary practices. In contrast to a body of scholarship and activism that has focused on hospitably as potentially extending the bounds of citizenship to ‘include’ those seeking refuge, we consider how the ‘minor’ politics of City of Sanctuary potentially trouble the assumptions on which such claims to inclusion rest. Specifically, we claim that an ana...
Recent discursive research has shown that constructions of place may function to regulate social rel...
In urban theory our knowledge of actually existing justice practices in the city are limited. In con...
This Article argues that legal restraints against homeless persons are resolved by applying certain ...
The chapter proceeds in four parts. First, we examine the activities of City of Sanctuary by providi...
This thesis draws upon ethnographic work in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, to interrogate asylum as a s...
Over the last decade, sanctuary has been evoked as an alternative to the problems associated with an...
This article addresses the tense relationship between national and municipal approaches to the inclu...
Over the last decade, sanctuary has been evoked as an alternative to the problems associated with an...
Since the early 1980s, the idea of sanctuary has been critical to the work of immigration activists ...
This article contributes to criminological understanding of immigration detention by highlighting th...
The City of Sanctuary (CoS) in the United Kingdom aims to create a culture of welcome for asylum see...
It is often argued that in the UK the dispersal of asylum seekershas led to increased social tension...
In the 1980s, in support of the Sanctuary Movement for Central American refugees, cities across the ...
This chapter is written with women asylum seekers as a lens of critical situated knowledge. These c...
This article draws attention to the limitations of the UK's integration and cohesion agenda and intr...
Recent discursive research has shown that constructions of place may function to regulate social rel...
In urban theory our knowledge of actually existing justice practices in the city are limited. In con...
This Article argues that legal restraints against homeless persons are resolved by applying certain ...
The chapter proceeds in four parts. First, we examine the activities of City of Sanctuary by providi...
This thesis draws upon ethnographic work in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, to interrogate asylum as a s...
Over the last decade, sanctuary has been evoked as an alternative to the problems associated with an...
This article addresses the tense relationship between national and municipal approaches to the inclu...
Over the last decade, sanctuary has been evoked as an alternative to the problems associated with an...
Since the early 1980s, the idea of sanctuary has been critical to the work of immigration activists ...
This article contributes to criminological understanding of immigration detention by highlighting th...
The City of Sanctuary (CoS) in the United Kingdom aims to create a culture of welcome for asylum see...
It is often argued that in the UK the dispersal of asylum seekershas led to increased social tension...
In the 1980s, in support of the Sanctuary Movement for Central American refugees, cities across the ...
This chapter is written with women asylum seekers as a lens of critical situated knowledge. These c...
This article draws attention to the limitations of the UK's integration and cohesion agenda and intr...
Recent discursive research has shown that constructions of place may function to regulate social rel...
In urban theory our knowledge of actually existing justice practices in the city are limited. In con...
This Article argues that legal restraints against homeless persons are resolved by applying certain ...