Ethnographies of Waiting 2020
DOI: 10.4324/9781003085317-4
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Time and the Other: Waiting and Hope among Irregular Migrants

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Cited by 25 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…At the same time, due to the closure of all the public institutions, immigration paperwork was on hold, which meant some of the new foreign workers became even more 'stuck.' Indeed, there is often nothing more detrimental than the duree of hopeful waiting for documents to be done and escaping the legal limbo of an in-between space (Bendixsen and Eriksen 2018).…”
Section: It's Political: the Indefinite Everydaymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At the same time, due to the closure of all the public institutions, immigration paperwork was on hold, which meant some of the new foreign workers became even more 'stuck.' Indeed, there is often nothing more detrimental than the duree of hopeful waiting for documents to be done and escaping the legal limbo of an in-between space (Bendixsen and Eriksen 2018).…”
Section: It's Political: the Indefinite Everydaymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is a making an object of oneself (Sartre's “bad faith”), but, as Kwon shows, this object‐ness is itself an active positioning. Elsewhere, migrants waiting for refugee status fill their time with projects aimed at self‐improvement—hardly a passive time (Bendixsen and Eriksen 2018). Here, “waiting” is filled with productive activity aimed at the realization of a future moment, a future becoming.…”
Section: Anticipation and Becomingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The 'incitement to wait, to be patient' (Povinelli, 2011: 190) is central to how power is organized in such processes of bordering (see also Hage, 2009). Several scholars have highlighted migrants' experiences and negotiations of waiting (Bendixen and Eriksen, 2018;Griffiths, 2014;Rotter, 2016) and explored the production of suspended futures through border controls, regularization schemes and labour regulations (Andersson, 2014;Barber and Lem, 2018;Bryan, 2018;Saetermo, 2018). Yet, while migration scholars have explored how migrants relate to uncertain future promises and how these articulate with neoliberal economic and demographic imperatives (Barber and Lem, 2018), there has been less research on the topic that interests me here.…”
Section: Bordering Waiting and Temporalitymentioning
confidence: 99%