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Endorsements
Unruly subjects offers an intimate account of everyday solidarity and resistance against state-sanctioned violence and abandonment at Europe's borders. Set in Greece, it traces the struggles of 'illegalised' migrants confined in EU-funded camps, alongside the thousands of grassroots volunteers who have created self-organised infrastructures of care and support for people on the move. At the heart of Unruly subjects lie the encounters and creative solidarities between two central figures - refugees and volunteers, undesirable non-citizens and citizen-humanitarians - as they navigate, contest and bear witness to daily indignities and injustices. Grounded in long-term ethnographic research in the Aegean archipelago, it interrogates the ambivalent politics of these solidarities: how they transgress racialised logics of control enforced by camps, and how they are increasingly criminalised and silenced by the state. Rather than romanticising these struggles, Unruly Subjects composes a mosaic of resistance, marked by inevitable contradictions and compromises. Told through the testimonies, dilemmas, hopes and frustrations of those on the frontlines, the book makes a compelling case for recognising these lived experiments in solidarity - however fragile or fraught - as vital political interventions. With urgency and clarity, Unruly subjects reveals what is at stake - not only in Greece, but for all who seek to carve out more just and humane futures against Europe's increasingly hostile border regime.
Reviews
Unruly subjects offers an intimate account of everyday solidarity and resistance against state-sanctioned violence and abandonment at Europe's borders. Set in Greece, it traces the struggles of 'illegalised' migrants confined in EU-funded camps, alongside the thousands of grassroots volunteers who have created self-organised infrastructures of care and support for people on the move. At the heart of Unruly subjects lie the encounters and creative solidarities between two central figures - refugees and volunteers, undesirable non-citizens and citizen-humanitarians - as they navigate, contest and bear witness to daily indignities and injustices. Grounded in long-term ethnographic research in the Aegean archipelago, it interrogates the ambivalent politics of these solidarities: how they transgress racialised logics of control enforced by camps, and how they are increasingly criminalised and silenced by the state. Rather than romanticising these struggles, Unruly Subjects composes a mosaic of resistance, marked by inevitable contradictions and compromises. Told through the testimonies, dilemmas, hopes and frustrations of those on the frontlines, the book makes a compelling case for recognising these lived experiments in solidarity - however fragile or fraught - as vital political interventions. With urgency and clarity, Unruly subjects reveals what is at stake - not only in Greece, but for all who seek to carve out more just and humane futures against Europe's increasingly hostile border regime.
Author Biography
Dr Ludek Stavinoha is Associate Professor in Media and Global Development at the University of East Anglia
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press is a leading UK publisher known for excellent research in the humanities and social sciences.
View all titlesBibliographic Information
- Publisher Manchester University Press
- Publication Date July 2026
- Orginal LanguageEnglish
- ISBN/Identifier 9781526183088 / 1526183080
- Publication Country or regionUnited Kingdom
- FormatPrint PDF
- Pages224
- ReadershipCollege/higher education; Professional and scholarly
- Publish StatusPublished
- Dimensions234 X 156 mm
- Biblio NotesDerived from Proprietary 6332
- Reference Code16878
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