Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / Rowman & Littlefield International
Pages: 224
Trim: 6½ x 9⅜
978-1-78348-103-3 • Hardback • December 2014 • $168.00 • (£131.00)
978-1-78348-104-0 • Paperback • November 2014 • $57.00 • (£44.00)
978-1-78348-105-7 • eBook • November 2014 • $54.00 • (£42.00)
Martina Tazzioli is a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Oulu, Finland. She holds a PhD in Politics from Goldsmiths University of London, UK. She is co-editor of ‘Spaces in Migration’ (2012) and ‘Foucault and the History of our Present’ (2014).
Introduction / 1. Governmentality and Migration Studies / 2. Autonomy of Migration and Migrant Struggles / 3. Arab Revolutions and the European Space: Three Analytic Snapshots / 4. Spatial Economy after the Revolution / 5. Politics of Migration Controls and the Politics of Invisibility / 6. Countermapping and Migration Governmentality Mechanisms / Conclusions
Tazzioli offers a refreshing analysis of the contradictions of the mainstream narrative of the Arab uprisings as a delayed march toward freedom. Her original insights reveal that European applause of the Tunisian democratic revolution was soon replaced with a profound anxiety about people leaving Tunisia for Europe in order to exercise their newly found freedoms. She provides different snapshots of movements from and into Tunisia in the aftermath of the uprising: Tunisians wanting to travel in Europe without hindrance, Eritreans protesting their treatment in an isolated Italian island, Syrians stopped in the French city of Calais, and third-country nationals escaping from Libya only to be stranded in a desert camp in Tunisia. She builds on Michel Foucault’s notion of governmentality to offer a critique of the European migration regime characterized by illiberal practices of detention and deportation. Her criticism of using the country of origin to distinguish between ‘legitimate’ asylum seekers and ‘illegitimate’ economic migrants is especially compelling. . . .Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate and research collections.
— Choice Reviews
This is a unique work. I know of few other books in the booming field of migration studies that are as deeply philosophical in their outlook, as politically astute in their criticism, and as carefully situated in a given conjuncture - in this case the Arab uprisings and their reverberations within the field of human mobility - as Spaces of Governmentality. When it comes to the politics of migration today the threshold of the intolerable remains too high. Tazzioli's impressive book will be an ally to those struggling to lower it.
— William Walters, Professor at the Department of Political Science and the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Carleton University
Spaces of Governmentality is an exciting and important critical intervention into the study of borders and migration, positively overflowing with a vibrant new repertoire of concepts, images, and imaginations.Tazzioli’s refreshing analysis is strategically aligned with the unsettling disruptions and turbulence generated by the volatile and sometimes subversive force of the Tunisian revolution, particularly as manifested in the indisciplined aspirations and incorrigible desires of Tunisians whose mobility defied the European border regime and all of its governmental categories for “managing” migration and asylum-seeking. By means of a close and sensitive tracking of this counter-power of the autonomous movements and struggles of Tunisian migrants, Tazzioli provides us with a counter-mapping that is as politically daring as it is intellectually subtle.
— Nicholas de Genova, Professor and Chair of Comparative Cultural Studies, University of Houston
Investigating practices of migration in the Mediterranean in the wake of the Arab uprisings, this book destabilizes governmental cartography of migration and unsettles our mental and geographical maps. It speaks of migration, borders, and the Mediterranean, but it also compels us to rethink the politics of autonomy.
— Sandro Mezzadra, Department of Political and Social Sciences, University of Bologna and co-author of co-author of Border as Method, or, the Multiplication of Labor
“Adopting the most accomplished theoretical framework, Tazzioli’s militant research embarks innovatively in a process of counter-mapping used to identify cartographic practices that challenge governmental maps on migration.”
— Mediterranean Politics
The book eschews the traditional frameworks for speaking about migration … Spaces of Governmentality is an excellent example of how governmentality does not have to be studied in the grey world of repetitive acts of governance, with its propensity to highlight the power dynamics coming from state, institutional or otherwise dominant power networks. In this book, freedom and control exist in an immanent field of encounter, interrelation and struggle.
— Radical Philosophy