New article from Shift Mag: Immigration Rights and No Border Struggles in Europe
Shift Magazine | 26.11.2010 15:47 | Analysis | Migration | Social Struggles
New article from Shift Mag: Immigration Rights and No Border Struggles in Europe.
Read it here http://shiftmag.co.uk/?p=391.
Read it here http://shiftmag.co.uk/?p=391.
Immigration rights and no-border movements in Europe are protesting and resisting an emerging border regime characterised, first, by a shift from traditional borderlines to extensive and intensive borderlands and zones and, second, by a public discourse that distorts representations of migrants in specific ways, as both criminals and victims. Protests and campaigns against the (old and) new strategies of control and exclusion have become a major field of action for many grassroots groups in Europe.
However, until today we can hardly speak of a coherent European immigration rights movement. Activists are evidently well connected across the European Union, and camps and demos often draw several thousand people from different countries. But overall, protests and interventions remain dispersed and uncoordinated. It is difficult to piece together an even rudimentary overview of the immense quantity and variety of creative actions across the continent. With few exceptions, such as the French “Sans Papiers” movement of the 1990s or the Spanish legalisation campaign of the early 2000s, immigration rights campaigns hardly ever make it into mainstream media news coverage.
Why has a strong and coherent European immigration rights movement failed to develop from the new forms of struggle and protest?
Read more at http://shiftmag.co.uk/?p=391
However, until today we can hardly speak of a coherent European immigration rights movement. Activists are evidently well connected across the European Union, and camps and demos often draw several thousand people from different countries. But overall, protests and interventions remain dispersed and uncoordinated. It is difficult to piece together an even rudimentary overview of the immense quantity and variety of creative actions across the continent. With few exceptions, such as the French “Sans Papiers” movement of the 1990s or the Spanish legalisation campaign of the early 2000s, immigration rights campaigns hardly ever make it into mainstream media news coverage.
Why has a strong and coherent European immigration rights movement failed to develop from the new forms of struggle and protest?
Read more at http://shiftmag.co.uk/?p=391
Shift Magazine
e-mail:
shiftmagazine[at]hotmail.co.uk
Homepage:
http://www.shiftmag.co.uk