Contested Statelessness in Sabah,Malaysia: Irregularity and the Politics of Recognition |
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Authors: | Catherine Allerton |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Anthropology, London School of Economics and Political Science, London, United Kingdomc.l.allerton@lse.ac.uk |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACTUNHCR's current #IBelong campaign presents stateless people as uniquely excluded, emphasizing the need for legal solutions to their situation. Such approaches to statelessness sidestep both the complexities of lived experience and the wider politics of state recognition. In response, this article utilizes ethnographic data from Sabah, Malaysia, and theorizations of the gray areas between citizenship and statelessness to argue for the fundamental connection between statelessness and irregularity. Such a connection is central to understanding both the everyday lives of potentially stateless people and Sabah's public discourse on statelessness as a mirage obscuring the problems of “illegals” and “street children.” |
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Keywords: | Sabah Malaysia statelessness irregularity recognition children UNHCR |
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