« No finger print! » : Les mobilisations des migrants à Lampedusa, ou quand l’espace compte

This article focuses on mobilizations put into motion by asylum seekers who are confined in a detention center for undocumented migrants in the little Italian island of Lampedusa. Our analytical perspective focuses on the importance of spatial context regarding where these mobilizations took place:...

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Main Author: Annalisa Lendaro
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université de Reims Champagne-Ardennes 2015-04-01
Series:L'Espace Politique
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/espacepolitique/3348
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spelling doaj-2ef29778cef6447a822b9e2a277af9cb2020-11-25T00:44:25ZengUniversité de Reims Champagne-ArdennesL'Espace Politique1958-55002015-04-012510.4000/espacepolitique.3348« No finger print! » : Les mobilisations des migrants à Lampedusa, ou quand l’espace compteAnnalisa LendaroThis article focuses on mobilizations put into motion by asylum seekers who are confined in a detention center for undocumented migrants in the little Italian island of Lampedusa. Our analytical perspective focuses on the importance of spatial context regarding where these mobilizations took place: an island, representing one of the European Union borders. On July 2013, 200 people, mostly Eritreans, marched through the streets of Lampedusa and occupied the church square to claim the right to leave this "open-air prison” without having their fingerprints registered by the police. The data collected over the summer of 2013 in the context of a first qualitative field survey discusses the form and the reception of this episode of migrants’ mobilization, undertaken by protagonists who are officially confined in a detention center and who are destined, by definition, to be deported rapidly to another detention center or to their country of origin. This research contributes to the debate on the political and emancipating scope of undocumented peoples’ mobilizations, especially in frontier territories.http://journals.openedition.org/espacepolitique/3348mobilizations of undocumented peopleimmigrationLampedusamobility rightsborders
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Annalisa Lendaro
spellingShingle Annalisa Lendaro
« No finger print! » : Les mobilisations des migrants à Lampedusa, ou quand l’espace compte
L'Espace Politique
mobilizations of undocumented people
immigration
Lampedusa
mobility rights
borders
author_facet Annalisa Lendaro
author_sort Annalisa Lendaro
title « No finger print! » : Les mobilisations des migrants à Lampedusa, ou quand l’espace compte
title_short « No finger print! » : Les mobilisations des migrants à Lampedusa, ou quand l’espace compte
title_full « No finger print! » : Les mobilisations des migrants à Lampedusa, ou quand l’espace compte
title_fullStr « No finger print! » : Les mobilisations des migrants à Lampedusa, ou quand l’espace compte
title_full_unstemmed « No finger print! » : Les mobilisations des migrants à Lampedusa, ou quand l’espace compte
title_sort « no finger print! » : les mobilisations des migrants à lampedusa, ou quand l’espace compte
publisher Université de Reims Champagne-Ardennes
series L'Espace Politique
issn 1958-5500
publishDate 2015-04-01
description This article focuses on mobilizations put into motion by asylum seekers who are confined in a detention center for undocumented migrants in the little Italian island of Lampedusa. Our analytical perspective focuses on the importance of spatial context regarding where these mobilizations took place: an island, representing one of the European Union borders. On July 2013, 200 people, mostly Eritreans, marched through the streets of Lampedusa and occupied the church square to claim the right to leave this "open-air prison” without having their fingerprints registered by the police. The data collected over the summer of 2013 in the context of a first qualitative field survey discusses the form and the reception of this episode of migrants’ mobilization, undertaken by protagonists who are officially confined in a detention center and who are destined, by definition, to be deported rapidly to another detention center or to their country of origin. This research contributes to the debate on the political and emancipating scope of undocumented peoples’ mobilizations, especially in frontier territories.
topic mobilizations of undocumented people
immigration
Lampedusa
mobility rights
borders
url http://journals.openedition.org/espacepolitique/3348
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