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Fast and slow violence and the survival work of the stateless: the case of the Vietnamese in Cambodia

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-01-24, 08:54 authored by Charlie RumsbyCharlie Rumsby

Drawing on qualitative research this article argues that a feminist lens on violence offers a framework to advance scholarship on statelessness. Conceptually, it analyses the fast and slow violence of statelessness, the conditions that enable it, and the ‘survival work’ it produces. Such conceptualisations have not yet entered the vernacular of statelessness scholarship. In treating fast and slow violence as a ‘single complex’ we can see how the causes and consequences of violence that result in statelessness are often decoupled from one another through the passage of time. Using the case study of the statelessness Vietnamese in Cambodia, the research presented here makes visible how statelessness is politically produced and the ways it infiltrates the everyday and private spaces of the home and the family.

History

Publication status

  • Published

File Version

  • Published version

Journal

Political Geography

ISSN

0962-6298

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Volume

117

Article number

103274

Department affiliated with

  • Social Work and Social Care Publications

Institution

University of Sussex

Full text available

  • Yes

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes