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@kloftsdottir.bsky.social

Anthropologist focusing on mobility, racism, whiteness, Europe as concept, crisis and many other things...

25 Followers  |  34 Following  |  1 Posts  |  Joined: 16.11.2024
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Título y abstract del artículo:
Mobility cause lawyering:
Contesting regimes of (im)
mobility in the Canary Islands
migration route to Europe
Ignacio Fradejas-Garc´ıa
University of Oviedo, Spain
Krist´ın Loftsdóttir
University of Iceland, Iceland
Abstract
This article analyses cause lawyering as a critical form of resistance to uneven European
Union (EU) mobility regimes. Grounded in the proclamation of a migration crisis during
2020–21 in the Canary Islands, Spain, when newly arrived racialized migrants in irregular
situations faced different types of (im)mobilization during their transits to continental
Europe, the article shows that cause lawyering is a significant strategy for disputing
exclusionary dimensions of law and policy, and/or (im)mobility regulations when rules are
arbitrarily applied or violated. The case is illustrated ethnographically and follows various
expert lawyers in migration working within formal or informal structures, as well as nonlawyer
allies such as ombudsmen, activists, friends, or migrant families, who facilitate the
navigation of migrant mobilities using human rights and national and international laws and
regulations. The analysis focuses on their actions in practice and shows how they
challenge specific mobility rules within the EU’s mobility regimes, create procedures to
deal with bureaucracies and problems regarding access to legal services, and strategically
litigate individual cases in local, national and supranational jurisdictions. By drawing attention
to the plurality of actors performing mobility-related cause lawyering to challenge
uneven regimes of (im)mobility, the article contributes to the critical work that analyses
practices of migrant resistance by going beyond the portrayals of unauthorized migrants
battling alone against the odds as victims or heroes.

Título y abstract del artículo: Mobility cause lawyering: Contesting regimes of (im) mobility in the Canary Islands migration route to Europe Ignacio Fradejas-Garc´ıa University of Oviedo, Spain Krist´ın Loftsdóttir University of Iceland, Iceland Abstract This article analyses cause lawyering as a critical form of resistance to uneven European Union (EU) mobility regimes. Grounded in the proclamation of a migration crisis during 2020–21 in the Canary Islands, Spain, when newly arrived racialized migrants in irregular situations faced different types of (im)mobilization during their transits to continental Europe, the article shows that cause lawyering is a significant strategy for disputing exclusionary dimensions of law and policy, and/or (im)mobility regulations when rules are arbitrarily applied or violated. The case is illustrated ethnographically and follows various expert lawyers in migration working within formal or informal structures, as well as nonlawyer allies such as ombudsmen, activists, friends, or migrant families, who facilitate the navigation of migrant mobilities using human rights and national and international laws and regulations. The analysis focuses on their actions in practice and shows how they challenge specific mobility rules within the EU’s mobility regimes, create procedures to deal with bureaucracies and problems regarding access to legal services, and strategically litigate individual cases in local, national and supranational jurisdictions. By drawing attention to the plurality of actors performing mobility-related cause lawyering to challenge uneven regimes of (im)mobility, the article contributes to the critical work that analyses practices of migrant resistance by going beyond the portrayals of unauthorized migrants battling alone against the odds as victims or heroes.


[Self-promotion] “Mobility cause lawyering: Contesting regimes of (im)mobility in the Canary Islands migration route to Europe” just published with my dear colleague Kristín Loftsdóttir. Please reach out to me if you have no access to the article: journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...

12.12.2024 13:46 — 👍 15    🔁 4    💬 0    📌 1
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Coloniality and Europe at the margins | 41 | The Routledge Internation The chapter examines how analysis of racism can benefit from decolonial theory and especially the concept coloniality. Loftsdóttir pays special attention to

The chapter “Coloniality and Europe at the Margins” is now available as open access. It delves into racism and claims of colonial innocence in countries that have historically perceived themselves as on the margins of Europe www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/oa-...

28.01.2025 12:11 — 👍 3    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0