Bodies as territories of exception: the coloniality and gendered necropolitics of state and intimate border violence against migrant women in England

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Abstract

Based on research with Latin American women in England, this paper explores how coloniality and gendered necropower is structurally embedded into the UK immigration regime, enabling multi-scalar (re)configurations of border violence. I build on the everyday bordering literature to uncover the under-theorised intimate and embodied dimensions of border violence. Intimate border violence is coined to refer to specific forms of state-sponsored interpersonal violence stemming from immigration policies and practices. Abusive men exploit the hostile environment's logic of deputisation to perform bordering against their migrant partners through threats of deportation, destitution, criminalization and homelessness. The embodied politics of coloniality reproduces hierarchies of (in)humanity and informs the state's necropolitical management of its territory. From within the national space, border violence re-territorializes migrant women's bodies as annexed territories of exception reduced to bare-life. Legal abandonment enables sovereign power to be exerted not only by the state but also by abusive partners.

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Lopes Heimer, R. dos V. (2023). Bodies as territories of exception: the coloniality and gendered necropolitics of state and intimate border violence against migrant women in England. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 46(7), 1378–1406. https://doi.org/10.1080/01419870.2022.2144750

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