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5 - How Hybrid Bureaucracy and Permit Regimes Made Citizenship

from Part III - Administrative Memory and the Legacies of Emergency

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 November 2022

Yael Berda
Affiliation:
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
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Summary

“How Hybrid Bureaucracy and Permit Regimes Made Citizenship” tracks the bureaucratic response to the violence of partition, war, and independence in each of the states, focusing on the mobility regimes established to prevent return in Israel and India, where the documents and evidentiary demands of the mobility regimes enabled claims to citizenship. Focusing on the adoption of the colonial bureaucratic toolkit of emergency by the governments of independent India and Israel to restrict the mobility of returning Muslim and Palestinian refugees, the chapter show how mobility restrictions became obstacles to claims to citizenship. Demonstrating how the transfer of bureaucratic practices governing mobility depended on the continuity of emergency laws, this chapter shows the divergent outcome in Cyprus, which relinquished emergency laws at independence.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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