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Collective Amnesia: The de-Historization and Normalization of Closed Borders

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Collective Amnesia: The de-Historization and Normalization of Closed Borders. / Wodak, Ruth.
Forced Migration Studies: Current Interventions. ed. / Leonardo Schiocchet; Christine Nölle-Karimi. Vienna: Austrian Academy of Sciences Press, 2022. p. 19-28 ( Selected Contributions - ROR-n Blog (2020-2022); Vol. 1, No. 3).

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Wodak, R 2022, Collective Amnesia: The de-Historization and Normalization of Closed Borders. in L Schiocchet & C Nölle-Karimi (eds), Forced Migration Studies: Current Interventions. Selected Contributions - ROR-n Blog (2020-2022), no. 3, vol. 1, Austrian Academy of Sciences Press, Vienna, pp. 19-28. https://doi.org/10.1553/RoR-n Plattform Vol 1(3)

APA

Wodak, R. (2022). Collective Amnesia: The de-Historization and Normalization of Closed Borders. In L. Schiocchet, & C. Nölle-Karimi (Eds.), Forced Migration Studies: Current Interventions (pp. 19-28). ( Selected Contributions - ROR-n Blog (2020-2022); Vol. 1, No. 3). Austrian Academy of Sciences Press. https://doi.org/10.1553/RoR-n Plattform Vol 1(3)

Vancouver

Wodak R. Collective Amnesia: The de-Historization and Normalization of Closed Borders. In Schiocchet L, Nölle-Karimi C, editors, Forced Migration Studies: Current Interventions. Vienna: Austrian Academy of Sciences Press. 2022. p. 19-28. ( Selected Contributions - ROR-n Blog (2020-2022); 3). doi: 10.1553/RoR-n Plattform Vol 1(3)

Author

Wodak, Ruth. / Collective Amnesia : The de-Historization and Normalization of Closed Borders. Forced Migration Studies: Current Interventions. editor / Leonardo Schiocchet ; Christine Nölle-Karimi. Vienna : Austrian Academy of Sciences Press, 2022. pp. 19-28 ( Selected Contributions - ROR-n Blog (2020-2022); 3).

Bibtex

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title = "Collective Amnesia: The de-Historization and Normalization of Closed Borders",
abstract = "On 21 April 2021, The Guardian reported that “[N]early 17 child migrants a day vanished in Europe since 2018”. Of course, this fact as well as many other numbers and statistics are not new and not surprising. National governments, the European Union, politicians of all parties know that unaccompanied refugee children belong to the most vulnerable groups in our globalized societies as recent reports of the United Nations Global Study on Children Deprived of Liberty and of the Austrian Kindeswohlkommission (established in the spring of 2021) illustrate. Frequently under way for months or even years, they finally arrive – if they survive such highly dangerous and traumatizing journeys at all – at the borders of countries which do not want to host them and which either imprison them in camps, lock them into cages and separate them from their parents (like at the US-Mexican border), threaten to send them back immediately or – rarely – after many months or even years of waiting because of difficult bureaucratic procedures allow them to stay legally with foster families who receive monies from the respective state for their food, education, clothing, and so forth. NGOs, journalists, scholars, and international organizations have written a vast number of reports, proposals, articles, and books, documenting the plight of child and adult refugees; petitions are launched daily, asking for help; and symposia continue to discuss options for humanitarian policies. ",
keywords = "asylum seekers, migration policies, media discourse, European Union, racism",
author = "Ruth Wodak",
year = "2022",
month = oct,
day = "13",
doi = "10.1553/RoR-n Plattform Vol 1(3)",
language = "English",
series = " Selected Contributions - ROR-n Blog (2020-2022)",
publisher = "Austrian Academy of Sciences Press",
number = "3",
pages = "19--28",
editor = "Leonardo Schiocchet and Christine N{\"o}lle-Karimi",
booktitle = "Forced Migration Studies",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Collective Amnesia

T2 - The de-Historization and Normalization of Closed Borders

AU - Wodak, Ruth

PY - 2022/10/13

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N2 - On 21 April 2021, The Guardian reported that “[N]early 17 child migrants a day vanished in Europe since 2018”. Of course, this fact as well as many other numbers and statistics are not new and not surprising. National governments, the European Union, politicians of all parties know that unaccompanied refugee children belong to the most vulnerable groups in our globalized societies as recent reports of the United Nations Global Study on Children Deprived of Liberty and of the Austrian Kindeswohlkommission (established in the spring of 2021) illustrate. Frequently under way for months or even years, they finally arrive – if they survive such highly dangerous and traumatizing journeys at all – at the borders of countries which do not want to host them and which either imprison them in camps, lock them into cages and separate them from their parents (like at the US-Mexican border), threaten to send them back immediately or – rarely – after many months or even years of waiting because of difficult bureaucratic procedures allow them to stay legally with foster families who receive monies from the respective state for their food, education, clothing, and so forth. NGOs, journalists, scholars, and international organizations have written a vast number of reports, proposals, articles, and books, documenting the plight of child and adult refugees; petitions are launched daily, asking for help; and symposia continue to discuss options for humanitarian policies.

AB - On 21 April 2021, The Guardian reported that “[N]early 17 child migrants a day vanished in Europe since 2018”. Of course, this fact as well as many other numbers and statistics are not new and not surprising. National governments, the European Union, politicians of all parties know that unaccompanied refugee children belong to the most vulnerable groups in our globalized societies as recent reports of the United Nations Global Study on Children Deprived of Liberty and of the Austrian Kindeswohlkommission (established in the spring of 2021) illustrate. Frequently under way for months or even years, they finally arrive – if they survive such highly dangerous and traumatizing journeys at all – at the borders of countries which do not want to host them and which either imprison them in camps, lock them into cages and separate them from their parents (like at the US-Mexican border), threaten to send them back immediately or – rarely – after many months or even years of waiting because of difficult bureaucratic procedures allow them to stay legally with foster families who receive monies from the respective state for their food, education, clothing, and so forth. NGOs, journalists, scholars, and international organizations have written a vast number of reports, proposals, articles, and books, documenting the plight of child and adult refugees; petitions are launched daily, asking for help; and symposia continue to discuss options for humanitarian policies.

KW - asylum seekers

KW - migration policies

KW - media discourse

KW - European Union

KW - racism

U2 - 10.1553/RoR-n Plattform Vol 1(3)

DO - 10.1553/RoR-n Plattform Vol 1(3)

M3 - Chapter

T3 - Selected Contributions - ROR-n Blog (2020-2022)

SP - 19

EP - 28

BT - Forced Migration Studies

A2 - Schiocchet, Leonardo

A2 - Nölle-Karimi, Christine

PB - Austrian Academy of Sciences Press

CY - Vienna

ER -