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Time and Power in Azraq Refugee Camp
A Nine-to-Five Emergency
Series edited by Dawn Chatty, Stacy D. Fahrenthold and Annika Rabo
Series: Refugees and Migrants within the Middle East
200 Pages, 6.00 x 9.00 in, 16 b&w illus.
- Hardback
- 9781617970979
- March 2023
- Region: Worldwide
$64.95
LE1100.00
£50.00
- EPUB
- 9781617970986
- March 2023
- Region: Worldwide
$63.99
- 9781617971044
- March 2023
- Region: Worldwide
$63.99
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WINNER OF THE 2023 ALIXA NAFF PRIZE IN MIGRATION STUDIES
The politics and governance of Jordan’s Azraq camp for Syrian refugees
Azraq refugee camp, built in 2014 and host to forty thousand refugees, is one of two official humanitarian refugee camps for Syrian refugees in Jordan. Time and Power in Azraq Refugee Camp investigates the relationship between time and power in Azraq, asking how a politics of time shapes, limits, or enables everyday life for the displaced and for aid workers.
Based on ethnographic fieldwork, carried out during 2017–2018, the book challenges the perceptions of Azraq as the ‘ideal’ refugee camp. Melissa Gatter argues that the camp operates as a ‘nine-to-five emergency’ where mundane bureaucratic procedures serve to sustain a power system in which refugees are socialized to endure a cynical wait—both for everyday services and for their return—without expectations for a better outcome.
Time and Power in Azraq Refugee Camp also explores how refugees navigate this system, both in the day-to-day and over years, by evaluating various layers of waiting as they affect refugee perceptions of time in the camp—not only in the present, but the past, near future, and far future.
Far from an ‘ideal’ camp, Azraq and its politics of time constitute a cruel reality in which a power system meant to aid refugees is one that suppresses, foreclosing futures that it is supposed to preserve.
Preface
Introduction: Why Time?
1. Azraq’s Emergency
2. A Humanitarian Bureaucracy
3. Preserving Order
4. Waiting for What?
5. Ordinary Futures
Conclusion: Azraq in the Past Tense
Bibliography
Index
Melissa Gatter is a lecturer in International Development at the University of Sussex, researching forced migration, aid, and time in the Middle East, and she received her PhD from the University of Cambridge in 2020. She has also worked for leading aid agencies in Jordan, including Save the Children. She lives in the UK.
"Students of humanitarianism, refugee studies, the Middle East, and cultural anthropology will benefit from the ethnography’s eclectic but focused examination of refugee temporality in the encamped borderlands of Jordan . . . . Through her deft interplay between anthropological concepts of temporality and bureaucracy, Melissa Gatter offers readers a nuanced, creative, and widely adaptable approach to thinking about experiences of time within totalizing institutions."—Malay Firoz, Middle East Journal
"How does time pass in a refugee camp? This seemingly straightforward question is at the heart of Melissa Gatter’s wonderful ethnography of refugee lives and aid regimes in Azraq camp in Jordan. Her focus on tempo, pace, and time opens up the multi-faceted world of street-level-humanitarian bureaucracy, hope and despair in ongoing displacement, and people’s desires for ordinary futures."—Ilana Feldman, George Washington University
"Encompasses wide-ranging ethnographic material with excellent, equally outstanding theoretical analysis. I have rarely been so immediately and deeply taken by a book as this one."—Sophia Hoffmann, University of Erfurt
"In this detailed ethnography of temporal bordering practices in the Azraq Refugee Camp, Melissa Gatter offers valuable insights into the everyday bureaucracy, affects, future imaginaries, and resilience among exiled Syrians. Time and Power in Azraq Refugee Camp is a notable contribution to contemporary studies on forced displacement, camps, and temporality. Gatter’s book is also a contribution to the growing literature on forced migration in Western Asia."—Shahram Khosravi, Stockholm University