Columbia University Press
Contesting Citizenship
About this book
McNevin casts irregular migrants as more than mere victims of sovereign power, shuttled from one location to the next. Incorporating examples from the United States, Australia, and France, she shows how migrants reject their position as "illegal" outsiders and make claims on the communities in which they live and work. For these migrants, outsider status operates as both a mode of subjectification and as a site of active resistance, forcing observers to rethink the enactment of citizenship. McNevin connects irregular migrant activism to the complex rescaling of the neoliberal state. States increasingly prioritize transnational market relations that disrupt the spatial context for citizenship. At the same time, states police their borders in ways that reinvigorate territorial identities. Mapping the broad dynamics of political belonging in a neoliberal era, McNevin provides invaluable insight into the social and spatial transformation of citizenship, sovereignty, and power.
Author / Editor information
Reviews
Stephanie J. Silverman:
...refreshing and particularly important...
An innovative addition to the scholarship on citizenship.... Recommended.
John Agnew, University of California, Los Angeles, and author of Globalization and Sovereignty:
In a cosmopolitan age, the movement of displaced people, arguably an inherent part of the human condition from time immemorial, inspires much fear among the settled. Rich in empirical detail from the United States, Australia, and France, Anne McNevin's book views 'irregular immigrants' as more than victims. Instead, she argues they are agents of changing notions of political belonging and novel understandings of citizenship. In challenging the presumed stability of 'regular' sovereign power, they are defining a new 'frontier of the political' that has massive implications for the meaning of citizenship in the contemporary world.
Engin Isin, The Open University:
Contesting Citizenship carefully treads a new path, inviting readers to think differently about citizenship by 'hearing' and 'seeing' the acts of those who have been rendered as outsiders and strangers to citizenship.
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
v -
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Preface and Acknowledgments
vii -
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Introduction
1 -
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1. Irregular Migrants and New Frontiers of the Political
11 -
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2. The Globalizing State: Remaking Sovereignty and Citizenship
40 -
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3. Policing Australia’s Borders: New Terrains of Sovereign Practice
68 -
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4. Acts of Contestation: The Sans-Papiers of France
93 -
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5. From City to Citizen: Modes of Belonging in the United States
118 -
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Conclusion: Contentious Spaces of Political Belonging
146 -
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Notes
157 -
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Bibliography
193 -
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Index
219