Movement lawyering and the violence of the laws of borders
For decades, legal interventions have attempted to resist and contest borders by seeking to (re)claim law as a tool of protection, or at least harm reduction, in the struggle against the racist state violence of borders. Yet, justice struggles—in particular those situated within the ‘non-profit justice complex’—have often contributed to the invisibilisation and irresponsibilisation of the structural and historical conditions at the root of intersecting forms of violence.
Given the limits of legal pathways for justice and accountability—and as part of our commitment to movement law/yering as a praxis of uplifting the visions of justice of migrant communities and no-borders social movements—we aim to co-create space for collective reflection, inquiry, and cocreation of strategies, tactics, and experiments of resistance and contestation (Akbar, Ashar & Simonson) to resist deadly bordering regimes.
Centring no-borders imaginaries of transformative and decolonial justice, we seek to collaboratively design and explore new trajectories to further social and political struggles against (violent) borders that centre a systemic critique of the laws that constitute and entrench the global im/mobility regime, and to promote transformative migration justice for the invisibility and erasure of the violences of borders and their laws.
RESEARCH
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‘Strategic litigation’ against border violence as resistance: The im/possibilities of reclaiming the law
By reflexively engaging with the im/possibilities and violences of laws and legal systems through a community-based inquiry, the project hopes to offer a register and prefigure new ways and approaches of resisting the violence of law in the here and now by developing and nurturing everyday debordering praxes.
UPDATES
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Contribution to the Feminist Autonomous Centre for research’s community course on ‘Resisting the criminalisation of facilitation’
Between 29 March and 17 May 2023, the Feminist Autonomous Centre for research facilitated an online community course on ‘Resisting the criminalisation of facilitation’. The current co-leads of de:border // migration justice collective, Valentina Azarova and Noemi Magugliani, contributed to a session on ‘Legal and political struggles in court’.