重新思考性别、公民身份和战争:第一次世界大战期间在澳大利亚的女性敌方外国人

IF 0.9 Q3 DEMOGRAPHY Immigrants and Minorities Pub Date : 2021-11-03 DOI:10.1080/02619288.2021.1977126
R. Bright
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引用次数: 2

摘要

摘要第一次世界大战期间,敌国侨民是澳大利亚不受欢迎的移民,对吧?然而,寻求入籍的敌对外星女性在很大程度上取得了成功。利用“欲望”的概念,本文使用了来自女性入籍申请的定量和定性材料来考虑女性为什么申请以及随后的国家决策。申请人和管理者的叙述反映了关于不同类型公民身份的更广泛谈判,在这种谈判中,女性可以挑战自己被贴上的敌方外国人标签,或者使用高度性别化的脆弱性和受人尊敬的观念。特定群体受到了优待,揭示了挑战现有史学关于移民和公民法在整个大英帝国如何运作的做法,特别是关于种族和变性妇女的做法。这是重新评估移民法与实践之间关系的更广泛需要的一部分,特别是性别的作用和行政特权的使用。虽然重要的是要认识到在创建大英帝国内部发展起来的体系时,对“全球肤色线”的重叠推动,但这与其说是一个法律体系,不如说是不同行为者之间基于往往不精确的法律进行的持续谈判。在这种情况下,尽管存在战争政治,他们还是为敌方外籍女性提供了规避入籍立法限制的空间。
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Rethinking Gender, Citizenship, and War: Female Enemy Aliens in Australia during World War I
ABSTRACT Enemy aliens were undesirable migrants in Australia during World War I, right? Yet enemy alien women who sought naturalisation were largely successful. Using the concept of ‘desire’, this article uses quantitative and qualitative material from women’s naturalisation applications to consider why women applied and subsequent state decision-making. The narratives of applicants and administrators reflect wider negotiations over different types of citizenship, where women could challenge their very labelling as enemy aliens, or employ highly gendered notions of vulnerability and respectability. Particular groups were treated favourably, revealing practices which challenge existing historiography about how migration and citizenship laws worked throughout the British empire, especially concerning race and denaturalised women. This is part of a wider need to reassess the relationship between migration law and practice, especially the role of gender and the use of executive privilege. While important to recognise the overlapping push for a ‘global color line’ in creating the system which developed within the British empire, it was less a legal system and more of a constant negotiation between different actors, based on laws that were often imprecise. In this case they gave space for enemy alien women to circumvent the legislative restrictions on their naturalisation, despite the politics of war.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
期刊介绍: Immigrants & Minorities, founded in 1981, provides a major outlet for research into the history of immigration and related studies. It seeks to deal with the complex themes involved in the construction of "race" and with the broad sweep of ethnic and minority relations within a historical setting. Its coverage is international and recent issues have dealt with studies on the USA, Australia, the Middle East and the UK. The journal also supports an extensive review section.
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