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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Birgit BräuchlerPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.453kg ISBN: 9781032057033ISBN 10: 1032057033 Pages: 118 Publication Date: 25 September 2023 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() 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 Contents1. Patterns of im/mobility, conflict and the re/making of identity narratives 2. ‘Hunger has brought us into this jungle’: understanding mobility and immobility of Bengali immigrants in the Chittagong Hills of Bangladesh 3. Interpreting conflict and integration through the reciprocity lens: mobility and settlement in a historical perspective on the Sierra Leonean coast 4. The complementarity of divergent historical imaginations: narratives of mobility and alterity in contemporary Liberia 5. Changing patterns of mobility, citizenship and conflict in Indonesia 6. Im/mobile subjects: identity, conflict and emotion work among East Timorese Meto diaspora 7. In ‘no man’s land’: the im/mobility of Serb NGO workers in KosovoReviews""How the entanglement of mobility and immobility affects the peaceful or conflictual inclusion or exclusion of different groups has not been sufficiently studied. This book offers an important corrective. It presents a comparative view across regions of how the encounter between different groups and the unequal power dynamics that ensue give rise to identities and relations that encourage co-existence or struggle. The chapters shed new light on issues of representation, belonging, indigeneity, and the role of the state in negotiating conflict. An important resource for scholars of migration, area-studies, political science, human rights and development."" - Peggy Levitt; Chair, Department of Sociology, Wellesley College; Co-Founder, Global (De)Centre; Associate, Weatherhead Center for International Affairs, Harvard University. ""In order to investigate the impacts of conflicts on collective patterns of mobility and immobility, this collection brings together a rich assembly of case studies from Kosovo, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Bangladesh, East Timor and Indonesia. In a refreshing way, the contributors to this formidable volume not only explicate old and new concepts utilised for the study of forced and voluntary migration, but also offer new insights on models such as conviviality, reciprocity, marginalization and stigmatization gained from long-term encounters in the field. Concentrating on close-up views of everyday life and reaching far beyond formal politics, the contributors challenge more traditional understandings of stranger/host relationships, strategic alliance-building and competitive behaviours, as well as the politics of belonging. This collection makes for stimulating reading and is highly recommended to academics and practitioners alike, particularly those engaged in peace-building, citizenship and mobility rights."" - Antje Missbach, Bielefeld University ""Patterns of Im/mobility, Conflict and Identity is a welcome addition to migration and mobility studies. It builds on and interrogates the mobility turn and transnational migration studies by focusing in particular on internal mobility and its connection to immobility. The ethnographically-rich case studies from Asia, Africa and Europe carefully describe the tensions arising from different patterns of im/mobility, how these impact imaginations of and relations between groups and shape processes of marginalization, reterritorialization and identity formation. The volume is a great read to anyone interested in thinking about the ambiguities of migration and how and why im/mobility may trigger or change the politics of inclusion and exclusion."" - Annuska Derks, Co-director, Department of Social Anthropology and Cultural Studies, University of Zurich """How the entanglement of mobility and immobility affects the peaceful or conflictual inclusion or exclusion of different groups has not been sufficiently studied. This book offers an important corrective. It presents a comparative view across regions of how the encounter between different groups and the unequal power dynamics that ensue give rise to identities and relations that encourage co-existence or struggle. The chapters shed new light on issues of representation, belonging, indigeneity, and the role of the state in negotiating conflict. An important resource for scholars of migration, area-studies, political science, human rights and development."" - Peggy Levitt; Chair, Department of Sociology, Wellesley College; Co-Founder, Global (De)Centre; Associate, Weatherhead Center for International Affairs, Harvard University. ""In order to investigate the impacts of conflicts on collective patterns of mobility and immobility, this collection brings together a rich assembly of case studies from Kosovo, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Bangladesh, East Timor and Indonesia. In a refreshing way, the contributors to this formidable volume not only explicate old and new concepts utilised for the study of forced and voluntary migration, but also offer new insights on models such as conviviality, reciprocity, marginalization and stigmatization gained from long-term encounters in the field. Concentrating on close-up views of everyday life and reaching far beyond formal politics, the contributors challenge more traditional understandings of stranger/host relationships, strategic alliance-building and competitive behaviours, as well as the politics of belonging. This collection makes for stimulating reading and is highly recommended to academics and practitioners alike, particularly those engaged in peace-building, citizenship and mobility rights."" - Antje Missbach, Bielefeld University ""Patterns of Im/mobility, Conflict and Identity is a welcome addition to migration and mobility studies. It builds on and interrogates the mobility turn and transnational migration studies by focusing in particular on internal mobility and its connection to immobility. The ethnographically-rich case studies from Asia, Africa and Europe carefully describe the tensions arising from different patterns of im/mobility, how these impact imaginations of and relations between groups and shape processes of marginalization, reterritorialization and identity formation. The volume is a great read to anyone interested in thinking about the ambiguities of migration and how and why im/mobility may trigger or change the politics of inclusion and exclusion."" - Annuska Derks, Co-director, Department of Social Anthropology and Cultural Studies, University of Zurich" Author InformationBirgit Bräuchler is Associate Professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Copenhagen and an Adjunct Senior Research Fellow at Monash University, Melbourne. She is author of Cyberidentities at War (2013, Berghahn), The Cultural Dimension of Peace (2015, Palgrave), editor of Reconciling Indonesia (2009, Routledge), co-editor of Theorising Media and Practice (2010, Berghahn) and Theorising Media and Conflict (2020, Berghahn) and has published widely in peer-reviewed journals. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |