Abstract
ABSTRACT With the intensified flow of refugees seeking asylum across Europe in recent years, scholars have increasingly turned their attention to the encounter between non-citizens and citizens. Drawing on long-term ethnographic fieldwork conducted in Russia (2015–2019) among non-citizens, including Congolese asylum-seekers, this article examines how Congolese women foster affective ties as a means of creating a sense of belonging in a largely unwelcoming place. In considering how asylum-seeking, Congolese women in Moscow invest in ‘affective circuits’ forged through their children as they move through the city, navigating NGOs, citizen-activists, and forms of state power, the article argues that these are political acts. These acts are shaped by racialized citizenship practices, as well as distinctive politics of reproduction in Russia.
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