2016
DOI: 10.1080/13629387.2016.1185942
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‘Returnees’ and political poetry in Western Sahara: defamation, deterrence and mobilisation on the web and mobile phones

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Cited by 3 publications
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“…However, most of those currently in refugee camps have never been in the part of Western Sahara that is occupied by Morocco. There is pressure to return because of Moroccan efforts to attract those who leave the camps (Boulay 2016). In this context, the practice of full prayer, which implies permanence, can be seen as a form of resistance, a way of maintaining liminality.…”
Section: Taqsīr After 1991mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, most of those currently in refugee camps have never been in the part of Western Sahara that is occupied by Morocco. There is pressure to return because of Moroccan efforts to attract those who leave the camps (Boulay 2016). In this context, the practice of full prayer, which implies permanence, can be seen as a form of resistance, a way of maintaining liminality.…”
Section: Taqsīr After 1991mentioning
confidence: 99%