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What’s so radical about refugee squats? An exploration of urban community-based responses to mass displacement in Athens
Based on ethnographic fieldwork of refugee-led autonomous housing collectives in Athens carried out over the summer of 2016, this chapter investigates whether alternative solidarity initiatives reproduce power dynamics and representations of refugee others inherent in the existing humanitarian architecture or effectively challenge the host-guest relations underpinning hegemonic understandings of refugee protection and assistance. Recently arrived refugees and migrants find themselves at the loci of intersecting social relations that append themselves to an existing infrastructure of less-visible forms of welfare outside state-led social support. To better understand these emergent spaces and socialities, the chapter mobilises the example of autonomous refugee housing collectives, or squats, located largely in and around the Exarcheia district of Athens. This case study reveals the potential and limits of migrant solidarity organising - highlighting the competing, conflicting, and at times contradictory discourses and practices of actors involved. The chapter concludes by questioning whether the transience of refugee populations in Athens adds a further layer of complexity to the possibility of enacting egalitarian modes of solidarity. In so doing, I consider how normative readings of hospitality imbue solidarity initiatives with migrants and refugees. The argument presented here is that refugee squats in Athens are embedded in an almost ineliminable hegemonic humanitarian logic and are thus caught between hospitality and abject space.
History
Publication status
- Published
Publisher
Central European UniversityPublisher URL
Page range
129-162Pages
291.0Book title
Challenging the political across borders: migrants and solidarity strugglesPlace of publication
BudapestISBN
9789633860076Series
CPS BooksDepartment affiliated with
- Geography Publications
Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes
Editors
Ewa Maczynska, Tegiye Birey, Eda Sevinin, Céline CantatLegacy Posted Date
2019-10-24Usage metrics
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