9 research outputs found

    The 'silent dilemma' of transitional justice:silencing and coming to terms with the past in Serbia

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    This article explores the intersections of silence and transitional justice in Serbia, where, it is often suggested, the general public is silent and indifferent about human rights abuses that took place during the former Yugoslav conflicts. It considers both the 'silent' public and the ways in which transitional justice may be complicit in silencing it. Based on scholarship that suggests silences are not absences but rather sites of silent knowledge or a result of silencing, the article explores some of the dynamics hidden within the public's silence: shared knowledge, secret practices and inability to discuss violence. It also considers the ways in which audiences subvert and resist organized transitional justice initiatives or are caught up in a 'silent dilemma' in which they are unable to speak about the past under the discursive conditions created by transitional justice practitioners

    The everyday at the border: Examining visual, material and spatial intersections of international politics along the ā€˜Balkan Routeā€™

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    This article examines the intersections between the visual, spatial and material and considers how these interactions capture the border politics of everyday ā€˜banalā€™ objects. We do this by looking at some of the objects and things that constitute the ā€˜Balkan Routeā€™ through Europe: posters, signs, directions, notices, flyers and maps produced by state authorities and volunteer-led aid networks. We use objects to reflect more broadly on how seemingly banal and everyday things become incorporated into the political work of states and become constitutive of fluid borders. We argue that everyday objects become visualisations of states and authorities, and help to make and regulate physical spaces. We show how each visual object encountered along the route gives us a broader insight into the macropolitics of European border regimes, specifically the effects of ā€˜closed bordersā€™ and the criminalisation of aid networks. The article pushes forward the ā€˜aesthetic turnā€™ debate in international relations by bringing in insights from political geography and materialism, and suggests that a walking methodology can be a productive way of encountering the visual and understanding how its physical location creates political effects

    Liberal Violence and the Racial Borders of the European Union

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    This paper examines how racial violence underpins the European Unionā€™s border regime. Drawing on two case studies, in northern France and the Balkans, we explore how border violence manifests in divergent ways: from the direct physical violence which is routine in Croatia, to more subtle forms of violence evident in the governance of migrants and refugees living informally in Calais, closer to Europeā€™s geopolitical centre. The use of violence against people on the move sits uncomfortably with the liberal, postā€racial selfā€image of the European Union. Drawing upon the work of postcolonial scholars and theories of violence, we argue that the various violent technologies used by EU states against migrants embodies the inherent logics of liberal governance, whilst also reproducing liberalismā€™s tendency to overlook its racial limitations. By interrogating how and why border violence manifests we draw critical attention to the racialised ideologies within which it is predicated. This paper characterises the EU border regime as a form of ā€œliberal violenceā€ that seeks to elide both its violent nature and its racial underpinnings

    Rethinking refugee support: Responding to the crisis in South Eastern Europe

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    The migration crisis that began in 2015 has had a major impact on countries in South Eastern Europe. Outlining findings and recommendations from a new project, Amanda Russell Beattie, Gemma Bird, Jelena Obradovic-Wochnik and Patrycja Rozbicka explain that the EUā€™s response to the crisis has resulted in the outsourcing of refugee settlement and care to states such as Serbia, Greece and Bosnia which were previously described as ā€˜transitā€™ countries. This is leading to overcrowding in refugee camps and reception centres, as well as difficulty in ensuring adequate standards of care and accommodation

    Becoming a Smuggler: Migration and Violence at EU External Borders

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    Migrantsā€™ involvement in smuggling increases alongside restricted cross-border movement and violent borders, yet this dynamic is usually examined from migrantsā€™ position as clients. In this article, we move away from migrants and smugglers as two separate roles and question migrantsā€™ aspirations to and experiences of resorting to smuggling networks as workers in the context of EU land borders, where direct violence is used daily to fight cross-border crime. By doing so, we move further the examination of fluid relations in smuggling provisions and the way they are intertwined with care and exploitation, as shaped and circumscribed by violent borders. The article illustrates the intersections between border violence and migrantsā€™ active involvement in smuggling by drawing on the case study of an anonymised Border Town and multi-site, multi-author fieldwork from Serbia and Bosnia. By questioning migrantsā€™ experiences of shifting roles from clients to service providers, and by taking into account their work in smuggling provision, we show that, in a situation of protracted vulnerability orchestrated by border violence, state and law enforcement, the categoriesā€“ā€œmigrantā€ and ā€œsmugglersā€ā€“can blur

    Archives of border crossing: Crafting emotional proximity and distance on the walls of Athens

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    This article explores the political messaging present on the walls and street furniture of the city of Athens in the context of displacement, border crossing and asylum seeking. It engages with photographs of graffiti, posters, and stencils, taken by the authors between 2017 and 2022, to demonstrate how ā€˜banalā€™ artefacts tell stories of the changing relationship between the city and seekers of sanctuary. We examine what roles graffiti might play in creating and supporting emotional proximity between groups of city dwellers, whose paths might not necessarily cross. Taking inspiration from Tazzioliā€™s notion of the ā€˜ethnography of vanishing spacesā€™ (2020: 150) the article maps the memories and histories of transient lives in Athens and how changing political responses and narratives can be read on its walls
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