Abstract

"This project explores how the humanitarian imaginary produces spatiotemporal (im)mobility through the notion of ruination. By ethnographically engaging with Syrian refugees in Jordan it attends at once to how it produces specific subjects, spaces and temporalities, and to the everyday lives of those entangled to it. Asking how people holding the legal refugee status become entangled to processes that produce their "refugeeness"this project makes visible human presence beyond the refugee."

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