ABSTRACT

The chapter seeks critically to analyse the multifarious forms of solidarity that are arising as a response to the migration crisis in postcolonial Europe, vis-à-vis fluid border arrangements and discursive regimes curtailing migrants’ autonomy and agency. Mobilising intersectional theoretical approaches and examples, like migrant self-organisation in the Calais Jungle, we propose to override human rights and citizenship as the overarching conceptual grids of migrant solidarity – thus seeking to contribute to and elaborate upon a radical theory capable of unearthing an autonomous mobile commons that fosters mobility and settlement in everyday life.