Welcome to our book review site go-pdf.online!

You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.

Sign up

Offshore Citizens
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 305

Offshore Citizens

  • Categories: Law

This study of citizenship and migration policies in the Gulf shows how temporary residency can become a permanent citizenship status.

The Oxford Handbook of Citizenship
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 897

The Oxford Handbook of Citizenship

This Handbook sets a new agenda for theoretical and practical explorations of citizenship, analysing the main challenges and prospects informing today's world of increased migration and globalization. It will also explore new forms of membership and democratic participation beyond borders, and the rise of European and multilevel citizenship

The Shifting Border - Legal Cartographies of Migration and Mobility
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 224

The Shifting Border - Legal Cartographies of Migration and Mobility

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2020-02
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

A critical assessment from the perspective of political and legal theory of how shifting borders impact on migration, mobility and the protection of displaced persons

Impossible Citizens
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 259

Impossible Citizens

Indian communities have existed in the Gulf emirate of Dubai for more than a century. Since the 1970s, workers from South Asia have flooded into the emirate, enabling Dubai's huge construction boom. They now compose its largest noncitizen population. Though many migrant families are middle-class and second-, third-, or even fourth-generation residents, Indians cannot become legal citizens of the United Arab Emirates. Instead, they are all classified as temporary guest workers. In Impossible Citizens, Neha Vora draws on her ethnographic research in Dubai's Indian-dominated downtown to explore how Indians live suspended in a state of permanent temporariness. While their legal status defines th...

The Political Value of Time
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 195

The Political Value of Time

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2018-03
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

Analyses of why precise dates and quantities of time become critical to transactions over citizenship rights in liberal democracies.

Islands of Sovereignty
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 373

Islands of Sovereignty

  • Categories: Law

In Islands of Sovereignty, anthropologist and legal scholar Jeffrey S. Kahn offers a new interpretation of the transformation of US borders during the late twentieth century and its implications for our understanding of the nation-state as a legal and political form. Kahn takes us on a voyage into the immigration tribunals of South Florida, the Coast Guard vessels patrolling the northern Caribbean, and the camps of Guantánamo Bay—once the world’s largest US-operated migrant detention facility—to explore how litigation concerning the fate of Haitian asylum seekers gave birth to a novel paradigm of offshore oceanic migration policing. Combining ethnography—in Haiti, at Guantánamo, and alongside US migration patrols in the Caribbean—with in-depth archival research, Kahn expounds a nuanced theory of liberal empire’s dynamic tensions and its racialized geographies of securitization. An innovative historical anthropology of the modern legal imagination, Islands of Sovereignty forces us to reconsider the significance of the rise of the current US immigration border and its relation to broader shifts in the legal infrastructure of contemporary nation-states across the globe.

Anchor Babies and the Challenge of Birthright Citizenship
  • Language: en

Anchor Babies and the Challenge of Birthright Citizenship

Undeserving citizens? -- A history of birthright citizenship -- Diminished citizenship

Immigrant Incorporation in East Asian Democracies
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 279

Immigrant Incorporation in East Asian Democracies

Comparing three Northeast Asian countries, this book examines how past struggles for democracy shape current movements for immigrant rights.

Zanzibar Was a Country
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 357

Zanzibar Was a Country

Zanzibar Was a Country traces the history of a Swahili-speaking Arab diaspora from East Africa to Oman. In Oman today, whole communities in Muscat speak Swahili, have recent East African roots, and practice forms of sociality associated with the urban culture of the Swahili coast. These "Omani Zanzibaris" offer the most significant contemporary example in the Gulf, as well as in the wider Indian Ocean region, of an Afro-Arab community that maintains a living connection to Africa in a diasporic setting. While they come from all over East Africa, a large number are postrevolution exiles and emigrés from Zanzibar. Their stories provide a framework for the broader transregional entanglements of decolonization in Africa and the Arabian Gulf. Using both vernacular historiography and life histories of men and women from the community, Nathaniel Mathews argues that the traumatic memories of the Zanzibar Revolution of 1964 are important to nation-building on both sides of the Indian Ocean.

Incarcerated Stories
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 177

Incarcerated Stories

Indigenous women migrants from Central America and Mexico face harrowing experiences of violence before, during, and after their migration to the United States, like all asylum seekers. But as Shannon Speed argues, the circumstances for Indigenous women are especially devastating, given their disproportionate vulnerability to neoliberal economic and political policies and practices in Latin America and the United States, including policing, detention, and human trafficking. Speed dubs this vulnerability "neoliberal multicriminalism" and identifies its relation to settler structures of Indigenous dispossession and elimination. Using innovative ethnographic practices to record and recount stor...