Inducing return to Pakistan

Germany welcomed over a million refugees following the so-called “long summer of migration” in 2015. Today, however, seeking asylum in Germany has become ever more difficult. Amongst other “undeserving” economic refugees, the Afghans and Pakistanis are suffering from a shift in the German asylum reg...

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Main Author: Usman Mahar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh Library 2020-05-01
Series:The South Asianist
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.southasianist.ed.ac.uk/article/view/4393
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spelling doaj-8ffe301d470744d4808de52096fc7bf22021-09-13T09:04:33ZengUniversity of Edinburgh LibraryThe South Asianist2050-487X2020-05-01757704393Inducing return to PakistanUsman Mahar0Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, MünchenGermany welcomed over a million refugees following the so-called “long summer of migration” in 2015. Today, however, seeking asylum in Germany has become ever more difficult. Amongst other “undeserving” economic refugees, the Afghans and Pakistanis are suffering from a shift in the German asylum regime that aims to restrict migration from “safe countries.” As elsewhere in Europe, asylum in Germany is increasingly being defined by narrow ideas of deservingness and humanitarianism to seek out “deserving” political refugees. Simultaneously, two methods for the removal of rejected asylum seekers are being practised to deter “undeserving” refugees: namely, deportations and “voluntary” returns. Focusing on the latter form of removal, I scrutinize the voluntariness and sustainability of “voluntary” returns to Pakistan in this essay. I start by questioning contemporary ideas of deservingness when it comes to the right to be mobile, and provocatively try to blur the alleged humanitarian division between two categories of mobile bodies: the “deserving” political refugee vis-à-vis the “underserving” economic refugee. Then, with the help of ethnographic material from my ongoing research and three measures or scales of assessment (choice, information and assistance), I take a critical look at “voluntary” returns from Germany. In doing so, I discuss the sustainability and ethics of inducing return through such modes of repatriation to Pakistan.http://www.southasianist.ed.ac.uk/article/view/4393migrationremigrationasylumvoluntary returneconomic refugeepolitical refugeegermanypakistan
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Usman Mahar
spellingShingle Usman Mahar
Inducing return to Pakistan
The South Asianist
migration
remigration
asylum
voluntary return
economic refugee
political refugee
germany
pakistan
author_facet Usman Mahar
author_sort Usman Mahar
title Inducing return to Pakistan
title_short Inducing return to Pakistan
title_full Inducing return to Pakistan
title_fullStr Inducing return to Pakistan
title_full_unstemmed Inducing return to Pakistan
title_sort inducing return to pakistan
publisher University of Edinburgh Library
series The South Asianist
issn 2050-487X
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Germany welcomed over a million refugees following the so-called “long summer of migration” in 2015. Today, however, seeking asylum in Germany has become ever more difficult. Amongst other “undeserving” economic refugees, the Afghans and Pakistanis are suffering from a shift in the German asylum regime that aims to restrict migration from “safe countries.” As elsewhere in Europe, asylum in Germany is increasingly being defined by narrow ideas of deservingness and humanitarianism to seek out “deserving” political refugees. Simultaneously, two methods for the removal of rejected asylum seekers are being practised to deter “undeserving” refugees: namely, deportations and “voluntary” returns. Focusing on the latter form of removal, I scrutinize the voluntariness and sustainability of “voluntary” returns to Pakistan in this essay. I start by questioning contemporary ideas of deservingness when it comes to the right to be mobile, and provocatively try to blur the alleged humanitarian division between two categories of mobile bodies: the “deserving” political refugee vis-à-vis the “underserving” economic refugee. Then, with the help of ethnographic material from my ongoing research and three measures or scales of assessment (choice, information and assistance), I take a critical look at “voluntary” returns from Germany. In doing so, I discuss the sustainability and ethics of inducing return through such modes of repatriation to Pakistan.
topic migration
remigration
asylum
voluntary return
economic refugee
political refugee
germany
pakistan
url http://www.southasianist.ed.ac.uk/article/view/4393
work_keys_str_mv AT usmanmahar inducingreturntopakistan
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