Liminality in incorporation: regularisation of undocumented Zimbabweans in South Africa

IF 0.9 3区 社会学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Anthropology Southern Africa Pub Date : 2021-01-02 DOI:10.1080/23323256.2021.1878381
Shingirai Nyakabawu
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Since 2000, large numbers of undocumented Zimbabweans have settled in South Africa in search of better living opportunities. In 2010, the South African government approved an immigration amnesty known as the Dispensation Zimbabwe Permit (DZP). This article argues that DZP applicants were liminal beings who were unclassifiable, situated between legal and illegal, legitimate and illegitimate status. As people with yet undefinable political belongingness, they repeatedly travelled to queues at Home Affairs offices where they experienced direct and indirect violence as well as harassment and victimisation by criminals and security officials alike. Based on data gathered through interviews in Cape Town, this article concludes that DZP applicants endured waiting because of the desire to end the legal and juridical ambiguity of an undocumented status that inhibits access to rights and protections encoded in domestic and international law.
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公司的限制:南非无证津巴布韦人的正规化
自2000年以来,大量无证件的津巴布韦人在南非定居,以寻求更好的生活机会。2010年,南非政府批准了一项移民大赦,称为津巴布韦豁免许可证(DZP)。本文认为,DZP申请人是处于合法与非法、合法与非法之间的不可分类的边缘性人。作为一群政治归属不明的人,他们多次前往内政部办公室排队,在那里他们经历了直接和间接的暴力,以及罪犯和安全官员的骚扰和伤害。根据在开普敦采访收集的数据,本文得出结论,DZP申请人之所以忍受等待,是因为他们希望结束无证身份在法律和司法上的模糊性,这种模糊性阻碍了他们获得国内法和国际法规定的权利和保护。
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CiteScore
1.50
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0.00%
发文量
13
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