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Conference Announcement

"Deportation and the Development of Citizenship"
International Conference
Refugee Studies Centre (RSC), University of Oxford
Oxford (UK)
11-12 December 2009

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Over the last decade many states across the world have boosted their
legal and institutional capacity to deport noncitizens residing on
their territory, including failed asylum seekers, illegal migrants,
and convicted criminals. Scholars have analysed this development
primarily through the lens of immigration control. Deportation has
been viewed as one amongst a range of measures designed to control
entrance, distinguished primarily by the fact that it is exercised
inside the territory of the state. But deportation also has broader
social and political effects. The practice provides a powerful way
through which the state reminds noncitizens that their presence in
the polity is contingent upon acceptable behaviour. Furthermore,
immunity from deportation is increasingly one of the few privileges
that citizens enjoy that distinguishes them from permanent residents.

The aim of this conference is to encourage interdisciplinary and
comparative scholarship on deportation, broadly conceived as the
lawful expulsion power of states, both as an immigration control and
as a social control mechanism. The conference will serve as a vehicle
for bringing together scholars from a range of disciplines, including
politics, sociology, history, international relations, law,
criminology and anthropology, interested in the study of deportation.

Confirmed guest speakers include Prof. Guy Goodwin Gill, Prof. Daniel
Kanstroom, Prof. Antje Ellermann, Prof. Annemarie Sammartino, Prof.
Catherine Dauvergne, Prof. Deirdre Moloney and Dr. Darshan
Vigneswaran.

Convened by Dr Bridget Anderson (COMPAS), Dr Matthew Gibney and Dr
Emanuela Paoletti (RSC).

Themes

Pre-History
What kinds of historical practices (e.g., banishment, expulsion,
exile) should be seen as the forerunners of contemporary deportation
power? What roles did these practices play in the reproduction of
political community and the maintenance of social and political order?

Subjects
Who are the main subjects of deportation power and how have they
changed over time as a result of political and social concerns? In
what ways does subjection to deportation power map on to patterns of
race, gender, and age?

Contestation
What legal, political and social constraints confront states in their
attempt to deport individuals? How do individuals and social and
community groups go about the task of challenging deportation power?
How do prevalent (and conflicting) conceptions of membership
(official, legal, and popular) influence the state’s ability to use
deportation as a membership defining tool?

Consequences
How does the practice of deportation affect the way non-citizens see
membership in the states in which they live? What are the effects of
deportation upon the families of the deported and the societies to
which deported people are sent? What are the consequences of
deportation for those who return home? How does the threat of
deportation affect the volume and character of unlawful residence in
modern polities? How does deportation influence inter-state relations?


Contact:

Dr Emanuela Paoletti
Refugee Studies Centre
Department of International Development
University of Oxford
3 Mansfield Road
Oxford OX1 3TB
UK
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.rsc.ox.ac.uk/index.html?conf_conferences_111209
 
 
 
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