Contesting citizenship : irregular migrants and new frontiers of the political /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:McNevin, Anne.
Imprint:New York : Columbia University Press, ©2011.
Description:1 online resource (x, 223 pages)
Language:English
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11257932
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:9780231522243
023152224X
9780231151283
0231151284
Notes:Includes bibliographical references (pages 193-218) and index.
Print version record.
Summary:Irregular migrants complicate the boundaries of citizenship and stretch the parameters of political belonging. Comprised of refugees, asylum seekers, ""illegal"" labor migrants, and stateless persons, this group of migrants occupies new sovereign spaces that generate new subjectivities. Investigating the role of irregular migrants in the transformation of citizenship, Anne McNevin argues that irregular status is an immanent (rather than aberrant) condition of global capitalism, formed by the fast-tracked processes of globalization. McNevin casts irregular migrants as more than mere.
Other form:Print version: McNevin, Anne. Contesting citizenship. New York : Columbia University Press, ©2011 9780231151283
Review by Choice Review

McNevin's Contesting Citizenship is an innovative addition to the scholarship on citizenship. McNevin's main contribution is to use a geographer's vision to decouple citizenship from its traditional attachment to political territorial physical state boundaries and to reconceive it within the neoliberal globalized capitalist system. By so doing, she releases citizenship discourse from the citizen-noncitizen dyad to a reimagination of citizenship behaviors, thus presenting irregular migrants as full-bodied actors with agency within the state, demanding rights and opportunities rather than hugging the periphery as victims and subjects of state policy. Drawing on examples from classic immigration states, the US and Australia, and France, a civic state, she gives insight into how noncitizens are reshaping their own citizenship destiny. McNevin (RMIT Univ., Australia) contends that as irregular migrants make demands, the state responds by reifying state borders, enacting security measures, and reasserting the legal connection between citizenship and state. It would have been especially helpful to include a case from either a new immigration state or a state that considered itself ethnically homogenous and had little experience with immigration to see if her thesis holds for such cases as well. Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate and research collections. R. A. Harper York College

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Choice Review