Sevasti Trubeta
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Medicalised borders and racism in the era of humanitarianism
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Perceptions and representations of refugees and migrants as dangerous carriers of infectious diseases have been discussed in the scholarly debate as long-standing racialised prejudices and racist attitudes. This essay explores the operating force of such prejudices in the period during and immediately after the summer of 2015. This was a period in which what was called the ‘welcome culture’ shaped in Europe a framework of political correctness that conformed with humanitarianism and anti-racism. Given this framework and in view of the rescue operations at the European borders, how is racialisation and racism possible and operative? In dealing with these questions the author revisits the scholarly debates on ‘race’, ‘post-racial’ ideology and ‘colour-blind racism’ and makes the following arguments. In the treatment and representations of refugees and immigrants as potential vectors of infectious diseases (including the ritualised visual inspection of rescued border-crossers), there are codified global inequalities and a racial logic that draws on an ambivalence inherent to border regimes: humanitarian aid and securitisation. Both the metaphorical and literal signification of disease as a biological threat emerging from the global South (from ‘elsewhere’) mediates between biological warfare and migration; racism absolutises the biomedical perception of disease. Moreover, the racial logic translates the endemicity of disease in a geographical location into an endemicity of the pathogens in the bodies of the inhabitants. In this way, the risk of disease appears to be ascribed to the collective heredity of those who originate in the global South.

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Medicalising borders

Selection, containment and quarantine since 1800

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