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Asylum‐Seeking Work, Precariousness, and the Making of Claimant‐Workers
Author(s) -
Shrestha Tina
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
anthropology of work review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.151
H-Index - 15
eISSN - 1548-1417
pISSN - 0883-024X
DOI - 10.1111/awr.12168
Subject(s) - precarity , refugee , sociology , subjectivity , ethnography , temporality , plaintiff , gender studies , calais , criminology , political science , law , philosophy , epistemology , world wide web , anthropology , computer science
This article contributes to the anthropological discussion on precariousness and labor precarity, with regard to temporality, potentiality, and subjectivity, by examining how asylum‐seeking accounts intersect with, interrupt, and, above all, inform people's everyday labor activities outside the asylum process. Drawing on my ethnographic research among Nepali migrants and asylum seekers in the United States, I document people's adoption of a familiar sociocultural understanding of “the work of making paper” and retrospective logic to describe their subjective entanglement with the asylum documentation process and their impending labor subordination. I argue that it is through asylum‐seeking work that people participate in and inhabit the precarization process, sustaining and exacerbating, in some cases, their precarious working lives. In this sense, asylum‐seeking work involves a subjective transformation of asylum seekers into precarious “claimant‐workers,” providing the condition of possibility for labor precariousness.

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