‘How did you get in?’ Research access and sovereign power during the ‘migration crisis’ in Greece

in Social Anthropology/Anthropologie sociale
Author:
Katerina Rozakou University of Amsterdam krozakou@yahoo.com

Search for other papers by Katerina Rozakou in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4742-1710
Restricted access

The ‘migration crisis’ has turned migration governance in Greece into a popular research field. At the same time, it has triggered the reconfiguration of sovereign powers with an assemblage of disparate actors engaging in addressing the ‘crisis’. This excess of sovereign power has contributed to a migration maze. In this article I use access to the migration field and in particular the Moria camp in Lesbos, as the lens for an exploration of these fragmented and emergent sovereign powers. In particular, I reflect on the materiality of my research permit and the figure of the humanitarian gatekeeper. As I show, any research access attempt encounters different spheres and agents of jurisdiction and responsibility. This fragmentation provides opportunities for research access, but it also poses methodological and epistemological questions. I finally interrogate the question of research access and knowledge production itself. In particular, I argue that the abundance of accounts does not necessarily produce a more thorough and in‐depth picture, but only a limited one, like the access that enables it. As researchers of a blossoming crisis scholarship, we are often complicit in epistemologically reproducing the very border we seek to scrutinise through our critical work.

  • Collapse
  • Expand

Metrics

All Time Past Year Past 30 Days
Abstract Views 1676 839 49
Full Text Views 45 11 6
PDF Downloads 56 12 5