Normalizing the Exception: Prejudice and Discriminations in Detention and Extraordinary Reception Centres in Italy
Author
Other authors
Publication date
2022Abstract
The human security of both migrants and refugees is at risk at several steps in the
process of migration. This work considers that migrants’ human security is not automatically
guaranteed once they reach a safe country in Europe either. This article explores how, with the
evident will to bypass Italian anti-discriminatory law, derogatory legal instruments, such as
law decrees, have been used to increasingly normalize the state of exception with indefinite
detention and further extraordinary measures in the system of reception. The analysis of Italian
laws, legislative decrees and reports in the field of migration proves that, in Italy, the state of
exception has been normalized particularly from 2018 onwards through Salvini’s Security
Decrees, to evidently both create additional insecurities for migrants and self-fulfill the initial
prejudicial assumption that framed migration as a threat to the nation. The normalization of the
exception does not stop at the borders but continues also throughout migrants’ stays, with the
consequent increasing entanglement of citizens’ stereotypes and migrants’ discriminations,
mainly through a self-fulfillment of prejudice, which further endanger the life of refugees,
whose insecurity is left to persist across the entire Italian territory, when instead it should
supposedly be a safe country for those in need of a shelter.
Document Type
Article
Accepted version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
3 - Social Sciences
Keywords
Emigració i immigració
Itàlia
Prejudicis
Discriminació
Pages
25 p.
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan
Is part of
International Politics, vol. 59, núm. 3, 2022
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Rights
© Springer Nature. Tots els drets reservats.