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PRE-ORDER NOW Rethinking Freedom from the Perspective of Refugees : Lived Experiences in Europe's Border Zones by Shahin Nasiri

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PRE-ORDER NOW Rethinking Freedom from the Perspective of Refugees : Lived Experiences in Europe's Border Zones by Shahin Nasiri

PRE-ORDER NOW - Published: 26/11/2026

Over the last decades, the experience of mass flight has come to constitute the normalised mode of existence for a growing number of people who do not fit within the boundaries of nation-states. In mainstream political discourse, refugees are viewed either as voiceless victims who should be offered protection and assistance on humanitarian grounds, or as enemy-like strangers who pose a threat to the borders, stability, citizens of nation states. Both views however fundamentally disregard the political subjectivity of refugees, as well as the emancipatory phenomena and practices of freedom that are embedded and expressed in their migratory movements. A philosophical examination of freedom and refugeehood, this book aims to make up for this under-theorisation of the emancipatory dimensions of refugeehood and fugitivity - exploring the political significance of (un)freedom through lived experiences, cultural narratives, and epistemic resources of contemporary refugees. Including chapters exploring racial-colonial structures of abandonment and violence, and autonomous relations and arrangements by which refugees enact freedom in receiving states, Rethinking Freedom from the Perspective of Refugees offers a novel theoretical and methodological approach for reconceptualizing (un)freedom. In doing so, it contributes to emerging discussions in the field of political philosophy, critical migration theory, critical race theory, and abolitionist perspectives in border studies.

Binding: Hardback

PRE-ORDER NOW - Published: 26/11/2026

Over the last decades, the experience of mass flight has come to constitute the normalised mode of existence for a growing number of people who do not fit within the boundaries of nation-states. In mainstream political discourse, refugees are viewed either as voiceless victims who should be offered protection and assistance on humanitarian grounds, or as enemy-like strangers who pose a threat to the borders, stability, citizens of nation states. Both views however fundamentally disregard the political subjectivity of refugees, as well as the emancipatory phenomena and practices of freedom that are embedded and expressed in their migratory movements. A philosophical examination of freedom and refugeehood, this book aims to make up for this under-theorisation of the emancipatory dimensions of refugeehood and fugitivity - exploring the political significance of (un)freedom through lived experiences, cultural narratives, and epistemic resources of contemporary refugees. Including chapters exploring racial-colonial structures of abandonment and violence, and autonomous relations and arrangements by which refugees enact freedom in receiving states, Rethinking Freedom from the Perspective of Refugees offers a novel theoretical and methodological approach for reconceptualizing (un)freedom. In doing so, it contributes to emerging discussions in the field of political philosophy, critical migration theory, critical race theory, and abolitionist perspectives in border studies.

Binding: Hardback
$115.66
PRE-ORDER NOW Rethinking Freedom from the Perspective of Refugees : Lived Experiences in Europe's Border Zones by Shahin Nasiri—
$115.66

Description

PRE-ORDER NOW - Published: 26/11/2026

Over the last decades, the experience of mass flight has come to constitute the normalised mode of existence for a growing number of people who do not fit within the boundaries of nation-states. In mainstream political discourse, refugees are viewed either as voiceless victims who should be offered protection and assistance on humanitarian grounds, or as enemy-like strangers who pose a threat to the borders, stability, citizens of nation states. Both views however fundamentally disregard the political subjectivity of refugees, as well as the emancipatory phenomena and practices of freedom that are embedded and expressed in their migratory movements. A philosophical examination of freedom and refugeehood, this book aims to make up for this under-theorisation of the emancipatory dimensions of refugeehood and fugitivity - exploring the political significance of (un)freedom through lived experiences, cultural narratives, and epistemic resources of contemporary refugees. Including chapters exploring racial-colonial structures of abandonment and violence, and autonomous relations and arrangements by which refugees enact freedom in receiving states, Rethinking Freedom from the Perspective of Refugees offers a novel theoretical and methodological approach for reconceptualizing (un)freedom. In doing so, it contributes to emerging discussions in the field of political philosophy, critical migration theory, critical race theory, and abolitionist perspectives in border studies.

Binding: Hardback