000 01497nam a2200193Ia 4500
008 181130s2018 xx 000 0 und d
100 _aMaillet, Pauline
245 _aExclusion through imperio:
_bentanglements of law and geography in the waiting zone, excised territory and search and rescue region
260 _c2018
300 _ap.142-163.
504 _dApr
520 _aThis article explores and unpacks the entanglements between law and geography that enable and advance the exclusion of non-citizens from entry into sovereign territory. We suggest that states manipulate jurisdiction within and beyond sovereign territory to extend enforcement. This jurisdiction applies primarily to the bodies of migrants themselves as opposed to fixed spaces. Like Elden�s (2009, 2013)�imperio, or imperial power, this extension is spatially boundless, limitless in internal checks and administrative.�Imperio�places migrant bodies into new legal regimes with subjectivities that overlap and override existing protections, such as international refugee law. We develop our argument by considering enforcement practices in three areas: the waiting zone at Paris Charles de Gaulle airport, search and rescue areas on the Central Mediterranean Sea and Australian excision zones. - Reproduced.
650 _aAsylum, Right of
650 _aCitizenship
650 _aMigration
700 _aMountz, Alison and Williams, Kira
773 _aSocial and Legal Studies
906 _aCitizenship
999 _c506512
_d506512