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Title

Death and salvation of refugee women on European borders: Race, gender and class of bodies and power.

Authors

PINELLI, BARBARA

Abstract

Black Lives Matter, along with the local movements it has generated around the world, has foregrounded how the differential value of bodies and human lives is deeply rooted in the colour line. However, the movement's claims also push us to consider the analytical legacy of past struggles against racial and gender hierarchies. In this article, I will refer to the intersectional perspective – which black feminism systematized in the 1980s – to analyze certain aspects of the 'salvation' policies that target refugee women, showing how Mediterranean border regimes are regulated by ethnic‐racial and gender norms. In particular, the article discusses how the sexuality of the racialized body has been constantly recoded by border regimes in order to establish gradations of inclusion and exclusion for migrants arriving in Italy through the Central Mediterranean route. These dynamics are reinforced by a humanitarian discourse depicting refugee women as subjects to be emancipated by the saving arms of the West.

Subjects

EUROPE; BLACK Lives Matter movement; PROTEST movements; CRIMERS against women refugees; SOCIAL conditions of refugees; REFUGEES

Publication

Anthropology Today, 2021, Vol 37, Issue 1, p17

ISSN

0268-540X

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1111/1467-8322.12630

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