Climate Changed: Refugee Border Stories and the Business of Misery

Author:   Daniel Briggs
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780367436728


Pages:   204
Publication Date:   30 November 2020
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Climate Changed: Refugee Border Stories and the Business of Misery


Overview

Climate Changed is an honest, humane account about the rapid downsizing of the world’s natural resources and the consequences this has for millions of people who, year after year, are displaced from their home countries because of politically-instigated and economically-justified war and conflict. Based on interviews with 110 refugees who arrived into Europe from 2015 to 2018 and observations of refugee camps, border crossings, inner-city slums, social housing projects, NGO and related refugee associations, this book offers a moving insight into the refugee experience of leaving home, crossing borders and settling in Europe. Briggs sets this against the geopolitical and commercial enterprise that dismantled refugees’ countries in the international chase for wilting quantities of the world’s natural resources. At every point of their journey to their new lives and in the resettlement process, the refugees are victimised and exploited, as there is always money to be made from them. Even if refugees’ labour is in demand, there is a European social climate of intolerance and stigma which jeopardises integration and counters their well-being and safety. The climate has changed. This book will appeal to students and scholars in core areas of sociology, environmental and sustainability studies, human geography, and politics. Policymakers, practitioners and voluntary workers within the sector of frontline immigration, as well as aid workers, town planners and welfare support staff, will also find this book of interest.

Full Product Details

Author:   Daniel Briggs
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.453kg
ISBN:  

9780367436728


ISBN 10:   0367436728
Pages:   204
Publication Date:   30 November 2020
Audience:   College/higher education ,  General/trade ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

1. Exodus 2. Some Notes on the Methodology 3. Global Capitalism: Profit at Whatever Cost 4. Let’s Be Honest, What Is There to Debate about Climate Change? 5. The Business of Misery and the Refugee ‘Crisis’ 6. The Business of Misery: War Commerce and its Human Debris 7. The Business of Misery: Refugee Border Stories 8. A Formula for Failure: Welcome to Europe and the Realities of the ‘New Life’ 9. Climate Changed: The Future is Already Here 10. The Beginning of the End 11. Revelations

Reviews

The business of misery is a powerful report from the near future of massive climate driven migrations. In this riveting book, complex causes and consequences are historically untangled while abstractions like structure and agency are rendered as granular human experience. The massive climate migration now underway cross the planet are one of the most important issues facing society and politics across the Globe North. Dr Christian Parenti, Investigative Journalist, Academic, and Author, New York, USA This book is vitally important. Briggs utilises his experience and skill as an ethnographer to shine a light on the displaced and dispossessed, to tell their stories and share their experiences, with empathy and understanding. Crucially, their lives are placed within the wider context of political economy and climate change, to contextualise both the micro-level decisions to leave and seek new lives overseas, and the institutional responses to their arrival. As capitalism's blind cycle continues to take a fundamental toll on the climate, on cultures, on individual lives, and on political responses, we need books like this to connect the dots and ask the important questions often overlooked by politicians and mainstream media. Dr Anthony Lloyd, Lecturer in Criminology, Teesside University, Middlesbrough, UK Daniel writes with passion, precision and purpose: graphic illustrations from the front line tempered by powerful reflective academic commentary and analysis. Dr Howard Williamson, Professor of European Youth Policy, University of South Wales, Wales, UK In this book, Dan Briggs provides an original and thought-provoking discussion of the recent refugee crisis and more long-standing process of climate change. Not only a change in environmental conditions, but an increasingly hostile human climate in the so-called developed world, significantly cooling the reception many vulnerable people receive on arrival. Added to this concern is the moral ambiguity of European institutions, civil society agencies and the media, who decry an unfolding catastrophe without ever seeming to alleviate tensions. While not providing any solutions, the author nevertheless invites us to question some of the key assumptions underlying the current situation that may lead us to question our own role in contributing to this humanitarian impasse. Dr David Cairns, Head Researcher, University Institute of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal Dan Briggs' unparalleled work on refugees and Europe's border zones has offered startling insights for some years now. His latest project, Climate Changed, seems likely to offer another frontline assessment that will be of interests to concerned citizens, policymakers and academics. There is a pressing need for such work and Briggs' brings a human but critical perspective that will be widely read. Dr Rowland Atkinson, Research Chair in Inclusive Societies, Sheffield University, Sheffield, UK I have followed Dan Briggs work now for a number of years, and I have always been struck by his ability to apply academic rigour to the study of some of the most challenging areas of contemporary life. However, his most distinctive characteristic is sensitivity, and the ability to bring to the fore the essential humanity that exists within some of the most desperate and often reviled communities. All this and more is apparent in his study of the human cost of climate change. This is the second time that Dan Briggs has brought me close to tears with his careful and sensitive work. The importance of this study is matched by its quality. Dr Dick Hobbs, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, Essex University, Essex, UK This book proposal couldn't be more timely. In an increasingly divided Europe where the powerful and the powerless live isolated in their respective worlds and realities, a book that bridges them is much needed for policy, research and practice. I very much look forward to reading it . Prof Gavrielides, Founder and Director of Restorative Justice for All (RJ4All). the IARS International Institute While offering individual narratives and insights of the refugee's everyday lives, he manages to link these to the processes of global capitalism, the rise of the right-wing parties in Europe and the spread of corporative economy to the countries of Global South. With his sharp and gripping pen, he has written down an ethnographic account about the problems refugees face and how they become victims of the excessive consuming society time and time again, while at the same time trying desperately to make their own living on it. He reveals the paradoxes of liberal capitalism, its ignorance to issues, which are at the core of the refugee crises and the points to the system's blind ways to solve them. Raili Nugin, PhD, Research Fellow, Centre for Landscape and Culture, Tallinn University, Tallinn, Estonia Daniel Briggs's work makes an inspiring and passionate call to ditch empiricism and head out into the social world to unveil neoliberal capitalism's harsh realities. In Climate Changed, he ethnographically documents the refugees' border stories and life inside the camps: dangerous traveling journeys, absence of hope, rejection of asylum applications and the extreme measures some undertake to get into Europe and survive. Importantly, he places their displacement within global warming, geographical conflict, and socioeconomic instability. Without question, Dan Briggs's analyses will continue to play an important role in aiding our understanding of a world defined by perpetual and myriad crises. Luke Telford, Northern Ireland and North East Doctoral Training Partnership (NINE DTP) funded PhD student, Teesside University, Middlesbrough, UK Intrepid and unflinching in his analysis of contemporary social problems, Daniel Briggs is quite simply one of the best ethnographers the social sciences currently possesses. His latest book is a tour de force: a powerful and thoroughly absorbing account of those caught up in the refugee crisis and the forces that lie behind it. Dr Anthony Ellis, Salford University, Salford, UK Dan Briggs is an award-winning ethnographer and author. His research into economically abandoned residential areas in Spain was lauded as the cutting edge of modern ethnography. Nobody is better qualified to bring these fragments of a climate-ravaged future to your readers . Steve Hall, Emeritus Professor Briggs' book Climate changed: Refugee border stories and the business of misery promises to be neither, on the one hand, that kind of academic work which fails to hold on to real lives of people, nor, on the other, a journalistic account missing to provide a coherent frame to analyse in some depth the myriad of cases of refugees stories that are discussed in relation to environmental issues. Instead, this is going to be a compelling reading, combining a brave approach, an insightful ethnographic eye, and a capturing writing, which will fascinate those interested in the politics of climate and the management of the borders alike beyond specialisms. Dr Valentina Cuzzocrea, Senior Assistant Professor, University of Cagliari, Sardinia, Italy


The business of misery is a powerful report from the near future of massive climate driven migrations. In this riveting book, complex causes and consequences are historically untangled while abstractions like structure and agency are rendered as granular human experience. The massive climate migration now underway cross the planet are one of the most important issues facing society and politics across the Globe North. Dr Christian Parenti, Investigative journalist, academic, and author, New York, US This book is vitally important. Briggs utilises his experience and skill as an ethnographer to shine a light on the displaced and dispossessed, to tell their stories and share their experiences, with empathy and understanding. Crucially, their lives are placed within the wider context of political economy and climate change, to contextualise both the micro-level decisions to leave and seek new lives overseas, and the institutional responses to their arrival. As capitalism's blind cycle continues to take a fundamental toll on the climate, on cultures, on individual lives, and on political responses, we need books like this to connect the dots and ask the important questions often overlooked by politicians and mainstream media. Dr Anthony Lloyd, Lecturer in Criminology, Teesside University, UK Daniel writes with passion, precision and purpose: graphic illustrations from the front line tempered by powerful reflective academic commentary and analysis. Dr Howard Williamson, Professor in European Youth Policy, University of South Wales, UK In this book, Dan Briggs provides an original and thought-provoking discussion of the recent refugee crisis and more long-standing process of climate change. Not only a change in environmental conditions, but an increasingly hostile human climate in the so-called developed world, significantly cooling the reception many vulnerable people receive on arrival. Added to this concern is the moral ambiguity of European institutions, civil society agencies and the media, who decry an unfolding catastrophe without ever seeming to alleviate tensions. While not providing any solutions, the author nevertheless invites us to question some of the key assumptions underlying the current situation that may lead us to question our own role in contributing to this humanitarian impasse. Dr David Cairns, Head Researcher, University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal Dan Briggs' unparalleled work on refugees and Europe's border zones has offered startling insights for some years now. His latest project, Climate Changed, seems likely to offer another frontline assessment that will be of interests to concerned citizens, policymakers and academics. There is a pressing need for such work and Briggs' brings a human but critical perspective that will be widely read. Dr Rowland Atkinson, Research Chair in Inclusive Societies, Sheffield University, UK I have followed Dan Briggs work now for a number of years, and I have always been struck by his ability to apply academic rigour to the study of some of the most challenging areas of contemporary life. However, his most distinctive characteristic is sensitivity, and the ability to bring to the fore the essential humanity that exists within some of the most desperate and often reviled communities. All this and more is apparent in his study of the human cost of climate change. This is the second time that Dan Briggs has brought me close to tears with his careful and sensitive work. The importance of this study is matched by its quality. Dr Dick Hobbs, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, Essex University, UK This book proposal couldn't be more timely. In an increasingly divided Europe where the powerful and the powerless live isolated in their respective worlds and realities, a book that bridges them is much needed for policy, research and practice. I very much look forward to reading it . Prof Gavrielides is the Founder and Director of Restorative Justice for All (RJ4All) . He has also founded and directs the IARS International Institute. While offering individual narratives and insights of the refugee's everyday lives, he manages to link these to the processes of global capitalism, the rise of the right-wing parties in Europe and the spread of corporative economy to the countries of Global South. With his sharp and gripping pen, he has written down an ethnographic account about the problems refugees face and how they become victims of the excessive consuming society time and time again, while at the same time trying desperately to make their own living on it. He reveals the paradoxes of liberal capitalism, its ignorance to issues, which are at the core of the refugee crises and the points to the system's blind ways to solve them. Raili Nugin, PhD, Research Fellow, Centre for Landscape and Culture, Tallinn University, Estonia Daniel Briggs's work makes an inspiring and passionate call to ditch empiricism and head out into the social world to unveil neoliberal capitalism's harsh realities. In 'climate changed', he ethnographically documents the refugees' border stories and life inside the camps: dangerous traveling journeys, absence of hope, rejection of asylum applications and the extreme measures some undertake to get into Europe and survive. Importantly, he places their displacement within global warming, geographical conflict, and socioeconomic instability. Without question, Dan Briggs's analyses will continue to play an important role in aiding our understanding of a world defined by perpetual and myriad crises. Luke Telford, NINE DTP funded PhD student at Teesside University, UK Intrepid and unflinching in his analysis of contemporary social problems, Daniel Briggs is quite simply one of the best ethnographers the social sciences currently possesses. His latest book is a tour de force: a powerful and thoroughly absorbing account of those caught up in the refugee crisis and the forces that lie behind it. Dr Anthony Ellis, Salford University, UK Dan Briggs is an award-winning ethnographer and author. His research into economically abandoned residential areas in Spain was lauded as the cutting edge of modern ethnography. Nobody is better qualified to bring these fragments of a climate-ravaged future to your readers . Emeritus Professor Steve Hall Briggs' book 'Climate changed: Refugee border stories and the business of misery' promises to be neither, on the one hand, that kind of academic work which fails to hold on to real lives of people, nor, on the other, a journalistic account missing to provide a coherent frame to analyse in some depth the myriad of cases of refugees stories that are discussed in relation to environmental issues. Instead, this is going to be a compelling reading, combining a brave approach, an insightful ethnographic eye, and a capturing writing, which will fascinate those interested in the politics of climate and the management of the borders alike beyond specialisms. Dr Valentina Cuzzocrea, Senior Assistant Professor, University of Cagliari


Author Information

Daniel Briggs is an experienced ethnographer and social researcher who has studied some of the most disturbing and challenging social realities of the 21st century. He is currently a part-time lecturer in criminology at the Universidad Europea. His previous book, Dead End Lives: Drugs and Violence in the City Shadows, won the Outstanding Book Award 2018 at the Division of International Criminology, awarded by the American Society of Criminology.

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