The Institute of Development Studies and Partner Organisations
Browse

Rewriting Citizenship in Displacement: Displaced People’s Struggles for Rights

Download (495.03 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-09-05, 23:29 authored by Lyla Mehta, R. Napier-Moore
For displaced people , citizenship(or the lack of it) is a crucial issue . Displaced people are denied formal citizenship and rights but are now claiming them , subjectively seeing their de facto experience as live d citizenship. Protests, claim assertions and transnational alliances are ways in which their struggle for rights is manifested. Much of the existing literature tends to focus on a top- down understanding of displaced people as citizens/non- citizens and the formal processes available (or not available ) to them, ignoring the importance of informal processes as well as local agency and practice, which this article explores through case study examples. The article also examines displacement in the light of differing theoretical meanings of citizenship, and asks to what extent the forced migrant is a global or transnational citizen.

History

Publisher

Institute for Human Development

Citation

(L. Mehta and R. Napier-Moore) ‘Rewriting Citizenship in Displacement: Displaced People’s Struggles for Rights’, Indian Journal of Human Development 5.2

IDS Item Types

Article

Copyright holder

Indian Journal of Human Development

Language

en

IDS team

Resource Politics

Usage metrics

    @ IDS Research

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC