Abstract
Building on embodied and de‐colonial approaches to geopolitics, this paper examines the relationship between forms of governance in municipal cemetery and crematorium provision and the needs of established minorities, arguing that inadequate infrastructure and services can constitute harm. Crucially, it is contended that forms of governance impact not only on the living, but also on perceptions of the wellbeing of the dead. Grounded in a study of four towns in England and Wales, the paper identifies firstly how intersectional identity fundamentally shapes people’s experiences of deathscape governance; secondly, the possibilities of infrastructural benefits of inclusive services; and thirdly, the harms done by non‐inclusive forms of governance, implicit territoriality and inadequate infrastructure. This is evidenced in the negative impact of poor municipal cemetery organisation and management on specific minority groups, such as inadequate burial space, high burial costs, hindrances to timely rituals, and reduced access to services as a result of government austerity measures; as well as protracted local planning processes. The conclusion calls for a wider conceptualisation of necropolitics, based on a critical‐feminist‐decolonial geopolitics of deathscapes in multicultural societies, and offers insights for the practical governance of inclusive cemeteries and crematoria.
Highlights
CEMETERIES AND CREMATORIA AND THESIGNIFICANCE OF MINORITY PROVISIONWhen the dead [are] at peace, the living get peace as well. (Muslim focus group participant)Cemeteries and crematoria are key components of everyday urban fabric and public–private infrastructure, part of wider urban spaces that are known to be characterised by various “fluid and fortified boundaries” (Secor, 2004, p. 357)
Cemeteries and their governance are as much about the living as the dead; they are evolving spaces that can change in character, organisational form, and the ways in which they are used
The history of migration to and from England and Wales underscores the links between minorities and migrants and the international geopolitics of colonial, post‐colonial, and intra‐European mobilities
Summary
Intersections of (infra)structural violence and cultural inclusion: The geopolitics of minority cemeteries and crematoria provision. Grounded in a study of four towns in England and Wales, the paper identifies firstly how intersectional identity fundamentally shapes people’s experiences of deathscape governance; secondly, the possibilities of infrastructural benefits of inclusive services; and thirdly, the harms done by non‐inclusive forms of governance, implicit territoriality and inadequate infrastructure. This is evidenced in the negative impact of poor municipal cemetery organisation and management on specific minority groups, such as inadequate burial space, high burial costs, hindrances to timely rituals, and reduced access to services as a result of government austerity measures; as well as protracted local planning processes.
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More From: Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers
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