Disease, contamination, dehumanization, and immigration control 2
Type: Virtual Paper
Day: 3/1/2022
Start Time: 5:20 PM
End Time: 6:40 PM
Theme: Ethnonationalism and Exclusion Around the World
Sponsor Group(s):
Feminist Geographies Specialty Group
, Political Geography Specialty Group
, Legal Geography Specialty Group
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Organizer(s):
Deirdre Conlon
, Nancy Hiemstra
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Chairs(s):
Deirdre Conlon, Leeds University
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Description:
In the contemporary era of unprecedented human mobility, migrants are often discursively cast as carriers and spreaders of disease, as ‘contaminants’ to nationalist imaginaries and as an ‘infection’ to society and social (dis)order. The productivity of metaphors in geography and across the social sciences is well-established (Cresswell 1997; Brown 2000; Ahmed 2004;). Scholars recognize the power of metaphor to shape approaches to immigrants and immigration control (e.g. Ellis and Wright 1998; Santa Ana 2002; Ahmed 2004; Chavez 2013; Gorman 2021). With the onset of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, metaphors of illness and contagion have again been weaponized to further migrant exclusion, containment, precarity, and hostility.
In addition to being characterized by intensified restrictions on migrant mobility, the current moment has also brought into relief other ailments of immigration enforcement systems (e.g. Longazel and Hallett 2021). For instance, the siting of immigrant detention facilities often heightens exposure to environmental toxins, and in detention gender, race, ethnicity, and health inequalities are amplified. Policies such as the Migrant Protection Protocol, a.k.a. ‘Remain in Mexico’, in the U.S. or ‘housing dispersal’ for asylum seekers in the UK effectively produce conditions that render migrants more prone to precarity and ill-health.
This session includes contributions that consider how metaphors of disease, contamination, sickness, ill/health and dehumanizing constructions are reflected in and influence immigration control. Papers explore questions such as: How do discursive tools play out in policy making and in practice? What are the material effects of such discourse on the ground and in migrants’ lived experiences? How do they impact migrant spatialities? To what ends can engagement with and analyses of metaphors of disease and contamination be put to use to disrupt metanarratives that are pervasive in connection with migrants and immigration controls? Papers may focus on the discussion of metaphor, or they may touch upon it obliquely.
References
Ahmed, S. (2004). The cultural politics of emotion. New York: Routledge.
Brown, M. (2000). Closet Space: Geographies of Metaphor from the Body to the Globe. New York: Routledge.
Cresswell, T. (1997). Weeds, Plagues, and Bodily Secretions: A Geographical Interpretation of Metaphors of Displacement. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 87(2), 330-345. Retrieved August 17, 2021, from http://www.jstor.org/stable/2564373
Chavez, L. R. (2013). The Latino Threat: Constructing Immigrants, Citizens, and the Nation. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
Ellis, M., & Wright, R. (1998). The Balkanization Metaphor in the Analysis of U.S. Immigration. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 88(4), 686-698.
Gorman, C.S. (2021). Defined by the Flood: Alarmism and the Legal Thresholds of US Political Asylum. Geopolitics, 26 (1): 215-235.
Longazel, J. and Hallet, M.C. (2021) Migration and Mortality: Social Death, Dispossession and Survival in the Americas. Philadelphia: Temple UP.
Santa Ana, O. (2002). Brown tide rising: Metaphors of Latinos in contemporary American public discourse.
Presentation(s), if applicable
Sarah Blue, Texas State University - San Marcos; Expelled: The Politics of Exclusion and Spaces of Exception at the US-Mexico Border |
Amrita Kumar-Ratta, University of Toronto; Mapping the (Trans)national Politics of Reproductive Control in ‘Punjabi Canada’ |
Malene H Jacobsen, Newcastle University; What is a flow? Unpacking fluid metaphors and the work they do in migration research |
Deirdre Conlon, University of Leeds; Sickening food: Contracting, competition, and chronic hunger in detention |
Non-Presenting Participants Agenda
Role | Participant |
Discussant | Alison Mountz |
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Disease, contamination, dehumanization, and immigration control 2
Description
Virtual Paper
Contact the Primary Organizer
Nancy Hiemstra - nancy.hiemstra@stonybrook.edu