Title of article
Domopolitics, governmentality and the regulation of asylum accommodation
Author/Authors
Jonathan Darling، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
9
From page
263
To page
271
Abstract
Since the 1999 Immigration and Asylum Act, asylum seekers in the UK have been dispersed across the country to zones of accommodation on a no choice basis. This paper examines the political practices and governmental rationalities which accompany the allocation of asylum accommodation in Britain through the National Asylum Support Service (NASS). The paper draws on discussions of the UK border as a site of ‘domopolitics’, the governing of the state as a home, to suggest that domopolitics is productive of particular relations of calculation, regulation and discipline through which the lives of asylum seekers are conditioned. These entangled modes of governance, it is argued, find expression in a logic of accommodation which acts to discipline asylum seekers and to reinsert modes of arbitrary sovereign authority into a regime of governmental regulation. The rationalities of governance that accompany accommodation create an account of housing which is deliberately decoupled from feelings of security, as accommodation becomes a key space through which a relation to the border is lived for asylum seekers. Domopolitics is thus shown to be productive of a politics of discomfort for those at the limits of the nation.
Keywords
Borders , Dispersal accommodation , Domopolitics , Governmentality , Asylum
Journal title
Political Geography
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Political Geography
Record number
1293046
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