
The Rohingya are known as the most persecuted minority population in the world. They do not belong to any state as Myanmar striped of the citizenship rendering them stateless and Bangladesh does not recognise them even as refugees. With the case of Rohingya people, the book offers a comprehensive portrait of the hidden transcript of statelessness, non-citizenship, transborder movements and refugee-hood in the legal structure of modern nation-state. It illuminates pains, sufferings, and struggle of carrying out the state of statelessness and refugee-hood at home-state and host-state across the world in general and the Rohingya people in the borderland of Bangladesh and Myanmar in particular. The book with ethnographically informed analysis critically engages with the existing scholarship on migration and refugee studies, asylum seekers and camp-people, and citizenship and human-rights issue with proposing a new theoretical perspective called "subhuman" life. It could be used for a better understanding of an extreme vulnerability and deep uncertainty of human life apart from the broad spectrum of genocide, ethnocide, ethnic cleansing, homicide and domicide. The idea of "subhuman life" offers a new frame of thought towards an understanding of the life in the struggle for existence and the process of extinction. The book thus offers both an appealing theoretical potential and a solid piece of ethnography regarding refugee situation, stateless people, asylum seekers, transborder movements, and camp people with the case of Rohingya.
This book investigates the existential and legal condition of the Rohingya people, proposing the theoretical framework of 'subhuman' life to explain the extreme vulnerability of stateless populations. Professor Nasir Uddin utilizes extensive ethnographic fieldwork conducted in the borderlands of Myanmar and Bangladesh to analyze the intersection of state power, citizenship, and human rights. By documenting the lived experiences of those stripped of legal status, the author argues that the Rohingya experience a unique form of existence defined by systemic exclusion and the constant threat of extinction.
What You Will Find
Scholars in the fields of migration and human rights recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of stateless populations. Readers frequently note the academic rigor and the depth of the ethnographic data provided by the author.
Page Count:
259
Publication Date:
2020-10-22
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199489351
ISBN-13:
9780199489350
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