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Bordering through othering: On strategic ambiguity in the making of the EU-Turkey refugee deal
Institution:1. Department of Political Economy and Institute of Middle Eastern Studies, King''s College London, Bush House North East Wing, 30 Aldwych, London, WC2B 4BG, UK;2. Department of Political Science, Aarhus University, Bartholins Allé 7, DK-8000 Aarhus C, Denmark;3. LSE Middle East Centre, London School of Economics and Political Science, Pankhurst House, Clement''s Inn, WC2A 2AZ London, UK;4. American University of Beirut, Department of Political Studies and Public Administration (PSPA), Bliss Street, Hamra, Beirut, Lebanon;1. Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Tel Aviv University, Gordon Faculty of Social Sciences, Tel Aviv University, P.O.B. 39040, Tel Aviv, 69978, Israel;2. Sociology of Education, The Seymour Fox School of Education the Hebrew University of Jerusalem Mt. Scopus, Jerusalem, 9190501, Israel
Abstract:This article scrutinises the identity-constitutive role of bordering practices by taking EU-Turkey cooperation on border control and refugee governance as a case. Using Foucault's notion of dispositif, this empirically oriented contribution critically reflects on the link between bordering, othering, and the reification of identities. More specifically, it undertakes a Critical Discourse Analysis of the EU border dispositif to elucidate how material structures and socio-spatial practices and discourses are mobilised in the processes of bordering. Throughout this article, special attention is paid to the strategic uses of ambiguity in refugee governance. Examining strategic ambiguity operative at the level of discourse, in institutional and legal structures, and routine daily practices, the multifaceted approach adopted in this study extends the analysis beyond the impact of strategic ambiguity on refugee's living experiences. The analysis demonstrates that strategic ambiguity relates to multiple domains of refugee governance and becomes a practical ideological tool, a normalising procedure for norm-breaking practices. Providing multiple layers of distinct but mutually reinforcing critical exploration, this study demonstrates how accumulated layers of knowledge, imageries, and historical narratives support institutional, legal and administrative practices in the ambiguous time/space of the EU-Turkey refugee deal. The analysis also exposes how the EU border dispositif translates difference into otherness, and contributes to the construction of European identity through the othering of refugees.
Keywords:Bordering  European identity  EU-Turkey refugee deal  Othering  Strategic ambiguity
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