Research Article
18 December 2021

Dodgy Paperwork and Theories of Citizenship on the Uganda, Democratic Republic of Congo, and South Sudan Borders

Publication: DIASPORA
Volume 22, Number 1

Abstract

This article reflects on conversations with cross-border residents in the northwest region of Uganda about local ideas of the nature of political authority and questions of identity paperwork. It notes that there is very little that is really ‘national’ or ‘state’ about the identification paperwork and practices that have emerged on these borders from the 1990s onwards. Instead of a conversation about rights and reciprocal relationships with ‘their’ state/s, residents emphasize the significance of class systems, globalized capital, and power relations in how citizenship works in this region; dynamics that are not often centered in academic literature on claim-making and state-subject relationships. The article supports a wider move towards reframing studies of citizenship, the nation-state, diaspora, and ethnic community through local vocabularies and theory.

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Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to Diaspora
DIASPORA
Volume 22Number 1March 2022
Pages: 103 - 122

History

Published online: 18 December 2021
Published in print: March 2022

Key Words:

  1. transnational
  2. migration
  3. documentation
  4. citizenship
  5. regional diaspora
  6. borders

Authors

Affiliations

Nicki Kindersley
Biography: Nicki Kindersley is a contemporary historian and lecturer at Cardiff University. She works on histories of displacement, work, and education in South Sudan and its borderlands, including recent histories of monetized livelihoods, the political economy of resettlement, and intellectual histories within displaced communities.

Notes

Correspondence: Nicki Kindersley, John Percival Building, Cardiff University, Colum Drive, Cardiff, United Kingdom, CF10 3EU. [email protected]

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Diaspora 2022 22:1, 103-122

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