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Hunger strikes,detainee protest,and the relationality of political subjectivization
Authors:Leah Montange
Institution:1. Department of Geography &2. Planning, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
Abstract:This paper attends to the relationships and spatialities through which immigration detention centers, though isolating and constraining spaces, are shaped by detainees. I approach the problematic of detainee resistance and agency through both Critical Citizenship Studies and feminist relational frameworks. I do so through a case study of one particular rupture – the 2014 hunger strikes at the Northwest Detention Center. My analysis of the 2014 hunger strikes at the NWDC directs me to conceptualize detainee activism as a process of political subjectivization, though one that is fraught with physical and political risk to both detainees and the order of sovereignty and citizenship. This process is undergirded by and productive of a series of interpersonal and political relations that mediate detainee actions and statements, and constitute them as a rupture in the order of sovereignty and citizenship.
Keywords:Detention  political agency  hunger strikes  political subjectivity  noncitizen  feminist geography
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