Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5073737 Geoforum 2015 10 Pages PDF
Abstract
Drawing on ethnography in the enclaves in India and Bangladesh, this paper explores a multifaceted yet enduring relationship between citizenship, abandonment and resistance. Following the partition in 1947, the enclave residents' citizenry was enacted like other Indian or Bangladeshi citizens' disregarding these enclaves' trans-territorial reality. This paper will demonstrate that enclave dwellers did not live in the 'citizenship gap', the difference between rights and benefits of citizenship, rather they lived without any citizenship rights. Life in these enclaves was highly complex and experiences in the enclaves challenge the usefulness of citizenship as a universal framework of analysis for the people who are ranked as citizen but never have it. In this context, a combination of the reverse conceptualisation such as citizenship and Agamben's conceptualisation of abandonment not only allows for these dimensions of lived experiences to be addressed and explored, it also focuses on the temporal aspect of citizenship implicated in politics. Finally, the paper calls for widening the consideration of the empirical study on everyday citizenship practices and experiences around the globe to extend and intensify the citizenship literatures.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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