The Slow Violence of Deportability
Horsti, K., & Pirkkalainen, P. (2021). The Slow Violence of Deportability. In M. Husso, S. Karkulehto, T. Saresma, A. Laitila, J. Eilola, & H. Siltala (Eds.), Violence, Gender and Affect : Interpersonal, Institutional and Ideological Practices (pp. 181-200). Palgrave Macmillan. Palgrave Studies in Victims and Victimology. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-56930-3_9
Published in
Palgrave Studies in Victims and VictimologyEditors
Date
2021Copyright
© 2021 the Authors
In 2015, Finland, like other European countries, received an unprecedented number of asylum seekers. Later, in the aftermath of what we prefer to call the ‘refugee reception crisis’, the deportation of those who had received negative asylum decisions began. The Finnish Immigration Service significantly tightened its policies after 2015. Increasingly strict asylum criteria have resulted in deportations at a level never seen before. Furthermore, protests against deportations have increased and become publicly salient. In this chapter we theorize deportation as a form of slow violence that hurts not only its main target but also people nearby. While a forced removal can be seen as a single, potentially violent act, deportability is a slow process. The violence ‘happens’ rather than ‘is done’, and therefore deportability may not be understood as violence. By analyzing thematic interviews with people who have contested deportations, we analyze how citizens who are proximate to deportable migrants ‘withness’ deportability—how they begin to see and feel the invisible, slow violence done to others and decide to act. The chapter concludes that making visible violence that would otherwise remain unrecognized is crucial in current anti-deportation activism.
...
Publisher
Palgrave MacmillanParent publication ISBN
978-3-030-56929-7Is part of publication
Violence, Gender and Affect : Interpersonal, Institutional and Ideological PracticesKeywords
Publication in research information system
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/47532218
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Related funder(s)
Research Council of FinlandFunding program(s)
Academy Programme, AoFLicense
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
The Slow Violence of Deportability
Horsti, Karina; Pirkkalainen, Päivi (University of Oxford. Centre for Criminology, 2021) -
Unjust to everyone? : responses to deportation of asylum seekers in Finland
Horsti, Karina (OpenDemocracy, 2017) -
‘We hugged each other during the cold nights’ : the role of affect in an anti-deportation protest network in Finland
Pirkkalainen, Päivi (Routledge, Taylor & Francis, 2021)This article analyses the role of affect and emotions in Finland’s first large-scale anti-deportation protest, the 2017 Right to Live protest in Helsinki. Despite deportation protests having recently gained scholarly ... -
Social Inclusion and Exclusion in the Life Stories of Deported Asylum Seekers from Finland to Iraqi Kurdistan
Korhonen, Sirpa; Siitonen, Marko (Sciendo; De Gruyter, 2018)This study explores how social inclusion and exclusion manifest as a dynamic continuum in the everyday lived realities of irregular migrants. Based on narratives of Iraqi Kurdish asylum seekers, who were eventually deported ... -
Karkotukset ja hidas väkivalta
Pirkkalainen, Päivi; Horsti, Karina (Westermarck-seura, 2021)Karkotuksiin liittyvä ”hidas väkivalta” on ennen muuta pelkoa ja epävarmuutta tulevaisuudesta, ja se uuvuttaa ja näännyttää kohteensa vähitellen. Hidas väkivalta ravistelee myös karkotuksen tai karkotusuhan kohteena olevien ...