This book aims to decipher the complex web of structural, institutional and cultural contradictions which shape the inclusion-exclusion dialectic and the multifaceted grid within which the 'us' becomes the 'other' and the 'other' becomes the 'us'. It looks at how international migrants in Europe transform from legal subjects into legal abjects.
Introduction 1. Irregular Migration and Undocumented Migrants The Abjects 2. Documented Migrants: Skilled Migration The Injects 3. From Undocumented to Documented: Migration and Self-Employment 4. Migrant Women: Maids, Nannies and Nurses, and the Ban on the Headscarf 5. Human Trafficking and Smuggling The Production of Ultimate Abjects 6. The Securitization of Migration 7. Migration Regime/s, the Multiculturalism Question and Regularization Policies in Europe 8. The Challenges of Migration for EU Citizenship: From Abjects and Éjectés to Subjects?
Gabriella Lazaridis is Senior Lecturer in Politics at the University of Leicester, UK. She has extensively researched and written widely on southern European societies and politics for twenty years with a focus on migration, ethnic minorities, gender issues and citizenship. She is the leading coordinator of the project RAGE, 'Hate Speech and Anti-Populist Othering in Europe through the Racism, Age, Gender Looking Glass', funded by the European Commission. Gabriella is also directing the British case in another multi-country EU funded project on E-engagement and violence, as well as the Greek case in yet another project, 'Pathways to Power: The Political Representation of Citizens of Immigrant Origin in Seven European Democracies', funded by the EU and ESRC.