(In)coherent subjects? The politics of conceptualising resistance in the UK asylum system

Hughes, Sarah (2022) (In)coherent subjects? The politics of conceptualising resistance in the UK asylum system. Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space, 40 (2). pp. 541-560. ISSN 2399-6544

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1177/23996544211033872

Abstract

Many accounts of resistance within systems of migration control pivot upon a coherent migrant subject, one that is imbued with political agency and posited as oppositional to particular forms of sovereign power. Drawing upon ethnographic research into the role of creativity within the UK asylum system, I argue that grounding resistance with a stable, coherent and agentic subject, aligns with oppositional narratives (of power vs resistance), and thereby risks negating the entangled politics of the (in)coherence of subject formation, and how this can contain the potential to disrupt, disturb or interrupt the practices and premise of the UK asylum system. I suggest that charity groups and subjects should not be written out of narratives of resistance apriori because they engage with ‘the state’: firstly, because to argue that there is a particular form that resistance should take is to place limits around what counts as the political; and secondly, because to ‘remain oppositional’ is at odds with an (in)coherent subject. I show how accounts which highlight a messy and ambiguous subjectivity, could be bought into understandings of resistance. This is important because as academics, we too participate in the delineation of the political and what counts as resistance. In predetermining what subjects, and forms of political action count as resistance we risk denying recognition to those within this system.

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: Funding information: The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This article was supported by an ESRC studentship [ESRC Ref: 1332625] and postdoctoral fellowship [ESRC ES/S010262/1].
Uncontrolled Keywords: Resistance, subjectivity, intentionality, asylum seeker
Subjects: L200 Politics
L700 Human and Social Geography
L900 Others in Social studies
Department: Faculties > Engineering and Environment > Geography and Environmental Sciences
Depositing User: John Coen
Date Deposited: 06 Jul 2021 07:57
Last Modified: 27 May 2022 16:00
URI: http://nrl.northumbria.ac.uk/id/eprint/46612

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