Abstract
This paper explores the geographies of migrant schooling in Athens following the 2015-2016 crisis, which left thousands of migrants stranded. Drawing on a multi-sited ethnography of everyday bordering (2017-2018), I look at the school as an ordinary bureaucratic institution and as a physical space in relation to the border. I discuss the processes that rendered the schooling of racialised children a problem to be managed and solved. These migrant schooling timescapes, I argue, were marked by contradictory state logics, and temporalities, and were shaped by context-specific colonial and racialisation discourses. These tensions shaped the encounters between families on the move and the state throughout the academic year. The paper argues that the school became an everyday space of bordering, controlling membership and reproducing the families’ marginalisation. In this way, it contributes to the literature that highlights the role of ordinary institutions and temporal forms of governance conditioning migrant lives.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Journal | Antipode |
| Early online date | 7 Nov 2024 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 7 Nov 2024 |
Keywords
- Everyday bordering
- migrant schooling timescapes
- crisis
- Athens
- temporalities
- spatialities
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- 1 Finished
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Border time: everyday temporal practices in Athens, Berlin and Liverpool
Papoutsi, A. (Principal Investigator)
1/01/22 → 31/12/24
Project: Research
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