2014
DOI: 10.1068/d13067p
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Another Letter from the Home Office: Reading the Material Politics of Asylum

Abstract: Abstract. In an era of technologically mediated modes of border enforcement, this paper focuses upon a seemingly more anachronistic mode of governmental intervention: that of the letter. Exploring the use of letters by the UK Border Agency to communicate decisions on asylum claims I argue that taking the materiality of the letter seriously demands a reworking of the politics of asylum. Drawing on ethnographic research within a UK asylum drop-in centre, the paper opens by offering a governmental reading of lett… Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(34 citation statements)
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References 75 publications
(66 reference statements)
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“…; DeVerteuil ; DeVerteuil and Wilton ). Favouring a critical approach both to the effects of homelessness and migrant policies (Darling ; Desjarlais ; Evans ; Hall ) and to the analysis of practices of ‘care’ (Green and Lawson ; Mol ), the paper shows how organisational practices and settings not only contribute to the constitution of specific homeless subjects, but also intervene in the ways difference is perceived, negotiated and performed among homeless people themselves. Lastly, the scholarship fostering processual, post‐human and affective understandings of life at the margins (Amin ; Desai et al .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…; DeVerteuil ; DeVerteuil and Wilton ). Favouring a critical approach both to the effects of homelessness and migrant policies (Darling ; Desjarlais ; Evans ; Hall ) and to the analysis of practices of ‘care’ (Green and Lawson ; Mol ), the paper shows how organisational practices and settings not only contribute to the constitution of specific homeless subjects, but also intervene in the ways difference is perceived, negotiated and performed among homeless people themselves. Lastly, the scholarship fostering processual, post‐human and affective understandings of life at the margins (Amin ; Desai et al .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fourth, alongside geography's embrace of tracing objects around networks (Darling ), this paper argues for paying similar methodological attention to the circulation of linguistic conventions and words across spaces and discursive fields. Kearnes states that the methodological distinction between ‘textual’ and ‘material’ approaches persists due to the lingering ‘palpable distrust of contemporary semiotic, textual and deconstructive methodologies’ (2003, 144).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Uncertainty is also important in producing precarity. From the point of initial dispersal to housing across the UK and the instability of such accommodation (Darling ; Gill ; Phillips ; Stewart ), the ongoing risk of detention (Gibney ), to the opaque nature of the British asylum and appeals legal system (Thomas ; Webber ), uncertainty saturates asylum seekers' lives. As Griffiths notes in her exploration of time and waiting for those situated as “deportable migrants”, “uncertainty and instability are key characteristics of the asylum and immigration systems” (:2001).…”
Section: Luck Uncertainty and Dislocation: Creating A Landscape Of Pmentioning
confidence: 99%