Abstract

AbstractRefugee spaces are emerging as quintessential geographies of the modern, yet their intimate and everyday spatialities remain under‐explored. Rendered largely through geopolitical discourses, they are seen as biopolitical spaces where the sovereign can reduce the subject to bare life. In conceptualizing refugee spaces some scholars have argued that, although many camps grow and develop over time, they evolve their own unique form of urbanism that is still un‐urban. This article challenges this idea of the camp as space of pure biopolitics and explores the politics of space in the refugee camp using urban debates. Using case studies from the Middle East and South Asia, it looks at how the refugee spaces developed and became informalized, and how people recovered their agency through ‘producing spaces’ both physically and politically. In doing so, it draws connections between refugee camps and other spaces of urban marginality, and suggests that refugee spaces can be seen as important sites for articulating new politics.

Highlights

  • Refugees, and other ‘persons of concern’ to the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), number over 30 million — the population of a sizeable country

  • Discussions on refugees are largely confined to humanitarian relief, living conditions in camps and the role of UNHCR, the United Nations organization responsible for the welfare of the world’s displaced/refugees

  • Policy and legality of contemporary refugee protection continue to legitimate the violence of nation-states and the marginalization of refugees in wider geopolitics

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Summary

Romola Sanyal

Original citation: Sanyal, Romola (2014) Urbanizing refuge: interrogating spaces of displacement. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 38 (2). LSE has developed LSE Research Online so that users may access research output of the School. Copyright © and Moral Rights for the papers on this site are retained by the individual authors and/or other copyright owners. Users may download and/or print one copy of any article(s) in LSE Research Online to facilitate their private study or for non-commercial research. You may not engage in further distribution of the material or use it for any profit-making activities or any commercial gain. You may freely distribute the URL (http://eprints.lse.ac.uk) of the LSE Research Online website. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research DOI:10.1111/1468-2427.12020

Theorizing refuge
Urban camps
Building refugee spaces
Organizing for spatial rights
On the spaces of displacement
Full Text
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