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Dispossession, social reproduction and the feminization of refugee survival: Ethiopian refugees in Nairobi, Kenya

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  • Bina Fernandez
  • Handun Rasari Athukorala

Abstract

This paper theorizes the gendered consequences of refugee dispossession for social reproduction, focusing on Ethiopian refugees in Nairobi, Kenya. We analyze the Kenyan refugee regime as structured by colonial legacies of racialization and by neo-colonial global political economy strategies of managing ‘surplus’ populations. We demonstrate that refugees’ ongoing experiences of interpersonal and structural violence constitutes an attack on their capacity for social reproduction and argue the ‘feminization of refugee survival’ is an important gendered consequence. We identify two transnational displacements that produce a new form of racialized enclosure and the alienation of refugees from the means of social reproduction. The first transnational displacement occurs due to their dispossession from support infrastructure for social reproduction in their origin country, and in the host country. A second, invisible but racialized transnational displacement is the refusal of global North countries to take on the anticipated welfare costs of refugee social reproduction. Transformative and re-generative approaches to refugee social reproduction would need to address both forms of displacement. The paper thus urges IPE scholarship to recognize that the crisis of refugee social reproduction is not only produced by global capitalist regimes, but also deeply structured by gendered, racialized, and colonial hierarchies of inequality.

Suggested Citation

  • Bina Fernandez & Handun Rasari Athukorala, 2024. "Dispossession, social reproduction and the feminization of refugee survival: Ethiopian refugees in Nairobi, Kenya," Review of International Political Economy, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 31(3), pages 905-929, May.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:rripxx:v:31:y:2024:i:3:p:905-929
    DOI: 10.1080/09692290.2023.2265951
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