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The politics of undocumented migrant childhoods: Agency, rights, vulnerability
Malmö University, Faculty of Culture and Society (KS), Department of Global Political Studies (GPS). Malmö University, Malmö Institute for Studies of Migration, Diversity and Welfare (MIM).ORCID iD: 0000-0002-3811-0892
2020 (English)Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

In this thesis, I investigate the paradoxical characteristics of political struggles that take place in relation to undocumented migrant childhoods. Drawing on ethnographic research in Birmingham, UK and Malmö, Sweden between 2014 and 2017, I take as my starting point the everyday life experiences of children and families who have experienced living under an immanent risk of deportation. Through a critical engagement with issues of agency, rights and vulnerability, I contrast the experiences of the children and their families with the development of policies and political debates in both countries. By analysing the contexts of Birmingham, UK and Malmö, Sweden in parallel as sites of irregular migration, I contribute with a clearer understanding of the specific characteristics of how each context constructs and governs irregular migration and how this is experienced by migrants themselves.

In this thesis, I argue that a discussion about the political agency of children positioned as undocumented migrants is crucial for an informed and contextualised understanding of the political conflicts that characterise the issue of undocumented migrant childhoods. Through an analysis of the children and families’ everyday struggles, I highlight the role played by children’s rights as being perhaps the most important resource for enabling limited forms of support for these families from the host societies. However, I also show how the arguments and practices surrounding rights can be mobilised for migration control. In this sense,rights are “dangerous”.

I suggest that if the intergenerational context of undocumented children’s rights is neglected, there is a risk that the human rights of children as well as adults will be marginalised. State actors arguing for the rights of undocumented migrant children often attempt to strengthen children’s deservingness by portraying their parents as “bad parents”who put their children at risk of increased vulnerability. While the state views the parents as putting their children at risk by “hiding” them, the parents view the state as putting their children at risk by trying to deport them. Parents are then forced to act as “humanitarian agents” responsible for caring for the children when state support to the rights-bearing migrant child is limited by the notion of the migrant child at risk of deportation.

This “child migrant paradox” is an overall entrance point from which many of the political issues discussed in the thesis can be traced. The politics of rights in the context of undocumented migration is closely related to processes of vulnerability. Rights are mostly perceived as a matter of implementation while vulnerabilities, which rights are supposed to ameliorate, are mainly understood as descriptively self-evident. In this thesis, I problematise such commonplace understandings of rights and vulnerabilities and theorises them as fundamentally political concepts that need to be understood as enacted and reproduced through different political processes at different scales.

I introduce the concept of “vulnerabilisation” to capture how states first create vulnerability through hostile policies towards undocumented migrants, then label the targeted groups as vulnerable and finally utilise this vulnerability to rationalise the governing of undocumented migrant children and families’ mobility and territorial presence. To enable children’s rights to be a productive tool for challenging the repressive governing of migrant families and children, I argue in this thesis that both the children’s rights paradigm and the vulnerabilisation of migrant childhoods need to be problematised and contextualised. Rights struggles by and on behalf of undocumented migrant children and families thus need to be aware of the fundamentally political character of rights and vulnerability.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Malmö: Malmö universitet, 2020. , p. 300
Series
Dissertation Series in Migration, Urbanisation, and Societal Change ; 12
Keywords [en]
Childhood, Undocumented migrants, Agency, Rights, Vulnerability
National Category
Social Sciences International Migration and Ethnic Relations
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-18177DOI: 10.24834/isbn.9789178770830ISBN: 978-91-7877-082-3 (print)ISBN: 978-91-7877-083-0 (electronic)OAI: oai:DiVA.org:mau-18177DiVA, id: diva2:1463771
Public defence
2020-09-24, Orkanen, hörsal D138, Nordenskiöldsg. 10, Lund, 10:02 (English)
Opponent
Supervisors
Available from: 2020-09-03 Created: 2020-09-03 Last updated: 2022-04-26Bibliographically approved
List of papers
1. The duality of children's political agency in deportability
Open this publication in new window or tab >>The duality of children's political agency in deportability
2017 (English)In: Politics, ISSN 0263-3957, E-ISSN 1467-9256, Vol. 37, no 3, p. 288-301Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Drawing on in-depth ethnographic observations among irregularised migrant families in Birmingham, UK, this article discusses how children’s political agency manifests in everyday life. It shows how children who become aware of their legal status as ‘deportable’ reject this subject position and offer their own definitions of who they are and where they belong. Simultaneously, it is argued that children with varying degrees of knowledge about their legal status also express political agency through their struggle to sustain the inclusion they experience. Such expressions highlight the duality of children’s political agency in irregular situations.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Sage Publications, 2017
Keywords
children, deportability, the irregular situation, political agency
National Category
Social Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-1749 (URN)10.1177/0263395716665391 (DOI)000405079400004 ()2-s2.0-85029170674 (Scopus ID)21248 (Local ID)21248 (Archive number)21248 (OAI)
Available from: 2020-02-27 Created: 2020-02-27 Last updated: 2026-04-09Bibliographically approved
2. Governing vulnerabilised migrant childhoods through children’s rights
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Governing vulnerabilised migrant childhoods through children’s rights
2019 (English)In: Childhood, ISSN 0907-5682, E-ISSN 1461-7013, Vol. 26, no 3, p. 337-351Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

This article analyses four different contexts in Sweden where children’s rights have been mobilised to govern vulnerabilised migrant childhoods. The concept of ‘vulnerabilisation’ is suggested to capture the political processes creating the conditions for defining and attributing vulnerability. To enable children’s rights to be a productive tool for challenging the repressive governing of migrant families and children, the article argues for the need of a problematisation and contextualisation of both the children’s rights paradigm and the vulnerabilisation of migrant childhoods.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Sage Publications, 2019
Keywords
Children’s rights, deportability, governmentality, humanitarianism, undocumented migration, vulnerability
National Category
Social Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-1365 (URN)10.1177/0907568219847269 (DOI)000477031700005 ()2-s2.0-85068112534 (Scopus ID)29789 (Local ID)29789 (Archive number)29789 (OAI)
Available from: 2020-02-27 Created: 2020-02-27 Last updated: 2024-02-06Bibliographically approved
3. The Continuous Spatial Vulnerability of Undocumented Migrants: connecting Experiences of “Displaceability” at Different Scales and Sites
Open this publication in new window or tab >>The Continuous Spatial Vulnerability of Undocumented Migrants: connecting Experiences of “Displaceability” at Different Scales and Sites
2020 (English)In: ACME: An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies, E-ISSN 1492-9732, Vol. 19, no 1, p. 385-396Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Undocumented migrants often experience how their spatial vulnerability continues across their life trajectories through different forms of displacements in the form of forced migration, being at risk of deportation and being victims of gentrification or policies that make it difficult to find a stable housing situation. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in Sweden and the UK, the paper shows how weak the position of undocumented migrants is on the housing market through recently established policies in the UK which criminalizes the letting of housing to undocumented migrants and the practice of sharing address information between the social services and the border police in Sweden. This intervention argues that these policies that construct spatial vulnerabilities locally are connected to national and transnational policies of displacement globally and suggest that “displaceability”, the potential of being displaced, is a strategy for governing vulnerable groups at every scale where governing takes place. Consequently, this intervention suggests that displaceability can help us capture the universal, interconnected experience of spatial vulnerability shared by many differently positioned groups in the world who are susceptible to forced mobility or removal.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
University of British Columbia Press, 2020
Keywords
Displacement, displaceability, undocumented migration, deportability, evictability
National Category
International Migration and Ethnic Relations
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-17410 (URN)10.14288/acme.v19i1.1814 (DOI)
Available from: 2020-06-03 Created: 2020-06-03 Last updated: 2025-08-21Bibliographically approved
4. Sacrificing parents on the altar of children's rights: Intergenerational struggles and rights in deportability
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Sacrificing parents on the altar of children's rights: Intergenerational struggles and rights in deportability
2019 (English)In: Emotion, Space and Society, ISSN 1755-4586, E-ISSN 1878-0040, Vol. 32, article id 100529Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

State actors arguing for the rights of undocumented children often attempt to strengthen children's deservingness by portraying their parents as bad parents who put their children at risk. Through ethnographic observations in Malmö, Sweden and Birmingham, UK, this article shows how such demonization of the parents by the state is not reflected in the everyday life experiences of undocumented families themselves. While the state views the parents as putting their children at risk by ‘hiding’ them, the parents view the state as putting their children at risk by trying to deport them. The article discusses how parents act as ‘humanitarian agents’ responsible for caring for the children when state support to the deserving, rights-bearing child is limited by the notion of the deportable migrant child. These parental practices of unrecognized emotional labour are analysed as mother- work. The interdependent character of family life in deportability is highlighted through how children take on parental responsibilities as well and how stress and knowledge about their irregular situation is shared across generations. To conclude, the article argues that if one neglects the intergenerational context of undocumented children's rights, one risks marginalising the human rights of both children as well as adults.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Elsevier, 2019
Keywords
Undocumented migrants, Children's rights, Motherwork, Deportability
National Category
Social Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-1782 (URN)10.1016/j.emospa.2018.07.001 (DOI)000485758700002 ()2-s2.0-85050070430 (Scopus ID)26221 (Local ID)26221 (Archive number)26221 (OAI)
Available from: 2020-02-27 Created: 2020-02-27 Last updated: 2024-02-06Bibliographically approved

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