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Refugee Coloniality : An Afrocentric analysis of prolonged encampment in Kenya

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This book presents a decolonial and Afrocentric critique of prolonged encampment of refugees, centred on the case study of refugee camps in Kenya, introduced through the author’s decades-long experience of forced displacement.

His positionality as a former refugee contributes to a wider discussion on representation, voice, and power within the refugee studies literature.

Likewise, the revisiting of the refugee camp as site and tool of power from a colonial perspective, is an important and timely contribution to the literature.

This book examines the camp as a colonial innovation and the enduring colonial logics of supposedly ‘humanitarian’ extended encampment.

Drawing on the anti-colonial theorists such as Fanon, Mbembe, and Nyerere, etc, it argues for an Africa without borders or encampment.

The study is interdisciplinary, encompassing forced migration/refugee studies, camp studies, decolonial studies, and African studies.

More broadly, it seeks to contribute to the literature on the politics of asylum in Africa through a critical examination of the colonial origins and the practice of encampment in Kenya. 

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£109.99
Product Details
Palgrave Macmillan
3031545001 / 9783031545009
Hardback
28/04/2024
Switzerland
English
227 pages
21 cm