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Books editor鈥檚 blog: should anthropology play a role in advocating for displaced people?

Matthew Reisz on the ideals archaeology and anthropology need to live up to

Published on
May 9, 2019
Last updated
May 9, 2019
Razor wire guarding ferry terminal in Calais, France
Razor wire guarding ferry terminal in Calais, France

鈥淐ontemporary Archaeology begins with the commitment that the more carefully we attend to objects, buildings and landscapes, the more human our account of the world may become.鈥

That bold ideal for their discipline is at the heart of a new book titled Lande: The Calais 鈥淛ungle鈥 and Beyond, by Dan Hicks, professor of contemporary聽archaeology at the University of Oxford, and postdoctoral researcher Sarah Mallet. It accompanies and is with all royalties going to L鈥橝uberge des Migrants, which has aided displaced people in Calais since 2008.

The book notes the terrible story of 鈥渢he transformation of [a] large open site of sandy wasteland on the industrial eastern edge of town, a state-owned former rubbish dump lying between the road and the sea, into an ultra-militarised landscape of encampments, barriers, violent conflict and the regime of 鈥榙eterrence鈥欌, where 鈥渁t its peak more than 10,000 displaced people lived鈥. It considers the significance of Calais as 鈥渢he largest European passenger port, carrying 30聽million passengers via Eurostar and ferries in 2017鈥, and which 鈥渟till handles 17 per cent of all UK trade with the world鈥.

But it also puts what happened in the Jungle into a number of wider contexts. Until an agreement made in the 1560s, Calais was essentially 鈥淓ngland鈥檚 last overseas possession on the European mainland鈥 and 鈥渋ts last pre-colonial overseas possession, the withdrawal from which was a key moment in the emergence of the new oceanic geographies of empire鈥. While believing that 鈥淏ritain鈥檚 fantasies about its imperial past are increasingly wild and self-delusional鈥, the authors seek to 鈥渂ear witness to the border as an ongoing (post)colonial technology鈥. Most asylum seekers in Britain, they remind us, 鈥渃ome from regions that were formerly part of the British empire鈥, with those displaced at Calais coming 鈥渙verwhelmingly鈥 from 鈥渏ust four states: Afghanistan, Sudan, South Sudan, and Eritrea (with some smaller but significant numbers of Somalians)鈥.

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Even more disturbingly, Hicks and Mallet argue that the Jungle may be a sign of a more general trend, citing a researcher called Cyrille Hanappe to the effect that 鈥渢he most rapidly developing urban model is that of the precarious city鈥early a third of the world鈥檚 population will live in such neighbourhoods by 2030鈥.

And what of the responsibility of academics? Although anthropology (exemplified not least by museums such as the Pitt Rivers) is 鈥渢he discipline that has been closest to the ongoing colonial project鈥, Lande sees scope for it to reinvent itself 鈥渁s an anti-racist discipline鈥 that聽鈥渃an not only relativise and historicise borderwork, but can also resist it and Fascist nativism too internationally鈥. Along with this goes 鈥渁 responsibility to continue to make visible the inhuman treatment of displaced people on European soil and at its walls鈥.

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For their fellow archaeologists, meanwhile, Hicks and Mallet claim 鈥渢here can be no more urgent task鈥han to excavate and advocate for the undocumented present鈥.

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline:聽A new social mission for anthropology

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