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100 _aNisar, Muhammad Azfar.
_921354
245 _aPhenomenology of the stop: street-level bureaucracy and everyday citizenship of marginalized groups
260 _aInternational Review of Administrative Sciences
300 _a86(2), Jun, 2020: p.315-332
520 _aLimited access to public space for marginalized groups remains an understudied theme in citizenship research in public administration. To address this important research gap, using ethnographic research methods, this article investigates the influence of street-level policing on the everyday citizenship of the Khawaja Sira – a marginalized genderqueer group in Pakistan. Everyday citizenship is conceptualized as the inalienable, equal right of every citizen to be present, visible, and mobile in the public space of a polity. The discussion highlights that through selective implementation of law, hyper-surveillance and moral policing, frontline workers can contribute to curtailing the citizenship of marginalized social groups. Theoretical and practical implications that underscore the intersections of mobility, everyday spaces and administrator–citizen interactions are also discussed. – Reproduced
650 _aLGBT, Policing, Public space, Street-level bureaucracy
_919436
773 _aInternational Review of Administrative Sciences
906 _aPOLICING - PAKISTAN
942 _cAR