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Unsettled Families

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Against the backdrop of the global refugee crisis, Unsettled Families investigates the parameters that Global North governments and international humanitarian organizations use to classify most dis...
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  • 18 February 2025
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Against the backdrop of the global refugee crisis, Unsettled Families investigates the parameters that Global North governments and international humanitarian organizations use to classify most displaced families—more than 99% globally—as ineligible for resettlement, and often as fraudulent. But "fraud" as a category is not as self-evident as it may first appear. Nor is "the family." Based on long-term fieldwork between Nairobi, Kenya and Columbus, Ohio, Sophia Balakian tells stories of Somali and Congolese refugees navigating a complicated global assemblage of humanitarian organizations, immigration bureaucracies, and national security agencies as they seek permanent, new homes. Viewing the concepts of "fraud" and "family" from different vantage points in this context, Balakian shows how the categories begin to blur out of focus, sometimes to evaporate altogether; what seems to be contained within them scatter outside their received boundaries. Practices that resettlement organizations deem fraudulent are often understood by people living as refugees to be moral actions in an unequal world. Such practices allow them to fulfill obligations to kin—kin defined expansively, in ways that at times exceed the boundaries of normative, US frameworks. Bringing questions of kinship into current discussions on humanitarianism, Balakian locates "the family" as a crucial category in processes of producing, policing, and contesting the boundaries of nation-states in the 21st century.

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Price: $28.00
Pages: 244
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Series: Stanford Studies in Human Rights
Publication Date: 18 February 2025
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503641198
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

"Sophia Balakian's important book shows how family ties are tested and sometimes sundered, not by displacement, but by the humanitarian system that is meant to help refugees. Based on extensive ethnographic research with people displaced in Kenya and some resettled in the US, Unsettled Families paints a vivid portrait of how lived relations are rendered suspect by bureaucratic anxieties about fraud and of the 'makeshift' families that nonetheless endure." —Ilana Feldman, George Washington University
Sophia Balakian is an anthropologist and assistant professor in the School of Integrative Studies at George Mason University.
Foreword by Mark Goodale
Acknowledgments
Acronyms
Introduction
1. The Figure of the Fraudulent Refugee
2. Selling Cases and Eating Money
3. Mending Broken Bones
4. Testing DNA and Transforming Kin
5. Resettled Families in an Age of Global Security
Conclusion
Notes
Works Cited
Index