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Dive into the research topics where Victoria Redclift is active.

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Featured researches published by Victoria Redclift.


Citizenship Studies | 2013

Abjects or agents? Camps, contests and the creation of ‘political space’

Victoria Redclift

The ‘Urdu-speaking population’ in Bangladesh, displaced by the Partition in 1947 and made ‘stateless’ by the Liberation War of 1971, exemplifies some of the key problems facing uprooted populations. Exploring differences of ‘camp’ and ‘non-camp’ based displacement, this article represents a critical evaluation of the way ‘political space’ is contested at the local level and what this reveals about the nature and boundaries of citizenship. Semi-structured and narrative interviews conducted among ‘camp’ and ‘non-camp’ based ‘Urdu-speakers’ found that citizenship status has been profoundly affected by the spatial dynamics of settlement. However, it also revealed the ways in which ‘formal’ status is subverted – the moments of negotiation in which claims to political being are made. In asking how and when a ‘stateless’ population is able to ‘access’ citizenship, through which processes and by which means, it reveals the tension, ambiguity and conceptual limitations of ‘statelessness’ and citizenship, unearthing a reality of partial, shifting and deceptively permeable terrain. In doing so, it also reveals the dissonance and discord (constitutive of an ‘us’ and ‘them’ divide) upon which the creation of ‘political space’ may rely. Citizenship functions to exclude and, therefore, it is very often born of contestation.


Identities-global Studies in Culture and Power | 2016

Displacement, integration and identity in the postcolonial world

Victoria Redclift

Defining the relationship between displaced populations and the nation state is a fraught historical process. The Partition of India in 1947 provides a compelling example, yet markedly little attention has been paid to the refugee communities produced. Using the case of the displaced ‘Urdu-speaking minority’ in Bangladesh, this article considers what contemporary discourses of identity and integration reveal about the nature and boundaries of the nation state. It reveals that the language of ‘integration’ is embedded in colonial narratives of ‘population’ versus ‘people-nation’ which structure exclusion not only through language and ethnicity, but poverty and social space. It also shows how colonial and postcolonial registers transect and overlap as colonial constructions of ‘modernity’ and ‘progress’ fold into religious discourses of ‘pollution’ and ‘purity’. The voices of minorities navigating claims to belonging through these discourses shed light on a ‘nation-in-formation’: the shifting landscape of national belonging and the complicated accommodations required.


Ethnic and Racial Studies | 2017

Rethinking Muslim migration: frameworks, flux and fragmentation

Victoria Redclift; Fatima Rajina

ABSTRACT In the wake of the San Bernardino and Orlando shootings, as well as the Paris and Brussels attacks, and in the midst of the right wing populism of US. presidential campaigns and UK referendum debates, the political rhetoric around Muslim migration has sunk to an all-time low. The Bengal Diaspora provides a much needed antidote. By studying Muslim migration across continents the book provides insights into a global climate of Islamophobia, and it challenges us to think critically about migration theory’s universalizing logic. In this review essay, we will focus on the three areas of study in which the book makes the most striking intervention, as well as three questions left unanswered or posed for future work.


Archive | 2013

Statelessness and citizenship : camps and the creation of political space

Victoria Redclift


Archive | 2013

The New Muslims

Claire Alexander; Victoria Redclift; Ajmal Hussain


Global Networks-a Journal of Transnational Affairs | 2017

The demobilization of diaspora: history, memory and ‘latent identity’

Victoria Redclift


Archive | 2016

New Racial Landscapes: Contemporary Britain and the Neoliberal Conjuncture

Malcolm James; Helen Kim; Victoria Redclift


Archive | 2013

Introduction: The New Muslims.

Claire Alexander; Victoria Redclift; A Hussain


Archive | 2016

Re-bordering Camp and City: ‘Race’, space and citizenship in Dhaka.

Victoria Redclift


Ethnic and Racial Studies | 2013

Introduction: New racisims, new racial subjects?

Victoria Redclift

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Claire Alexander

London School of Economics and Political Science

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