02916 a2200517 4500001001100000005001700011008004100028020001800069037003600087040000700123041000800130072001500138072001600153072001500169072001500184072001700199072001400216072001600230072001600246072001500262072001600277072001400293072001300307072001400320072001300334072001300347072001500360072001200375072001400387072001300401072001300414072001400427072001400441072002100455072002100476072002100497072001500518100001900533245006300552250000600615260003200621300001000653520169700663700002302360999001502383135168974620250317111559.0250312042018GB 24 eng  a9781351689748 bTaylor & FranciscGBP 21.99fBB a01 aeng7 aGTP2thema7 aJBFH2thema7 aRGC2thema7 aRGL2thema7 aLNDA32thema7 aJW2thema7 aJPSN2thema7 aJBCC2thema7 aJHB2thema7 aJBSL2thema7 a1D2bisac7 aGTF2bic7 aJFFN2bic7 aRGC2bic7 aRGL2bic7 aLNDA32bic7 aJW2bic7 aJPSN2bic7 aJFC2bic7 aJHB2bic7 aJFSL2bic7 a1D2bisac7 aPOL0580002bisac7 aSOC0070002bisac7 aSOC0420002bisac7 a0552bisac1 aYasmin Ibrahim10aCalais and its Border PoliticsbFrom Control to Demolition a1 aOxfordbRoutledgec20180320 a130 p bCalais has a long history of transient refugee settlements and is often narrated through the endeavour to ‘sanitize’ it by both the English and the French in their policy and media discourses. Calais and its Border Politics encapsulates the border politics of Calais as an entry port through the refugee settlements known as the ‘Jungle’. By deconstructing how the jungle is a constant threat to the civilisation and sanity of Calais, the book traces the story of the jungle, both its revival and destruction as a recurrent narrative through the context of border politics. The book approaches Calais historically and through the key concept of the camp or the ‘jungle’ - a metaphor that becomes crucial to the inhuman approach to the settlement and in the justifications to destroy it continuously. The demolition and rebuilding of Calais also emphasises the denigration of humanity in the border sites. The authors offer a comprehensive insight into the making and unmaking of one of Europe’s long-standing refugee camps. The book explores the history of refugee camps in Calais and provides an insight into its representation and governance over time. The book provides an interdisciplinary perspective, employing concepts of space making, human form and corporeality, as well as modes of representation of the ‘Other’ to narrate the story of Calais as a border space through time, up to its recent representations in the media. This book’s exploration of the representation and governance of the contentious Calais camps will be an invaluable resource to students and scholars of forced migration, border politics, displacement, refugee crisis, camps and human trauma.1 aAnita Howarth4A01 c3889d3889