ABSTRACT

The confrontation between asylum seeking and sovereignty has mainly focused on ways in which the movement and possibilities of refugees and migrants are limited. In this volume, instead of departing from the practices of governance and surveillance, Puumala begins with the moving body, its engagements and relations and examines different ways of seeing and sensing the struggle between asylum seekers and sovereign practices.

Puumala asserts that our political imagination is being challenged in its ways of ordering, practicing and thinking about the international and those relations we call international. The issues relating to asylum seekers are one example of the deficiencies in the spatiotemporal logic upon which these relations were originally built; words such as ‘nation’, ‘people’, ‘sovereignty’ and ‘community’ are challenged. Conventional methods of governing, regulating and administering increased forms of mobility are in trouble, which gives rise to the invention of new technologies at borders and introduces regulations and spaces of exception.

Based on extensive fieldwork that sheds light on a range of Europe-wide practices in the field of asylum and migration policies, this book will be of interest to scholars of IR theory, biopolitics and migration, as well as critical security more broadly.

part |4 pages

EVENT 1 Ethnographic experiences

chapter 1|24 pages

Exposure

part |4 pages

EVENT 2 Political lives, professional ethics, and sovereign practices

chapter 2|22 pages

Sovereignty, mobility, the body

part |4 pages

EVENT 3 Asylum, a monologist narrative of the state?

chapter 3|38 pages

A struggle over the body

part |4 pages

EVENT 4 Passages and dislocations

chapter 4|32 pages

Moving (in) space

part |4 pages

EVENT 5 The feltness of sovereignty

chapter 5|28 pages

Sensuous politics, political sentiments