Journal article
Zombies, miracles, and memory: towards a research agenda on mobility, temporality, and political possibility
- Abstract:
- This article introduces a research agenda for reimagining political possibilities by placing multiple temporalities at the centre of analyses of human mobility. While recent scholarship in migration studies has taken a ‘temporal turn’ by exploring how states use time to regulate movement – through delay, stoppage, or acceleration – we call for a broader conceptual shift: from understanding time as a tool of control to recognising temporality as a terrain of friction, fragmentation, and political imagination. In so doing, we unsettle metanarratives of justice rooted in teleological conceptions of citizenship and incorporation. We illustrate the geopolitical stakes of this move with three examples from diverse geographies, summarised with reference to three key ideas: zombie citizenship, miracles, and memory. Zombie citizenship refers to a legal status that suspends people in fragmented temporalities, effectively excluding them from any national historiography or membership rights. Miracles refer to attempts to respond to ‘stuckedness’ by abandoning linear notions of progress and embracing the miraculous claims of preachers and profits. Memory signals a terrain in which historical contestations of human mobilities open space for reimagining sovereignty. In each case, we explain how temporal infrastructures both constrain and enable forms of solidarity, division, and political claim-making. These sketches are not typologies but heuristics that provoke fresh inquiry into how time and mobility interact to shape political life. We call for a normative and analytical recalibration that centres on temporal multiplicity as a constitutive force in contemporary geopolitics and migration.
- Publication status:
- Published
- Peer review status:
- Peer reviewed
Actions
Access Document
- Files:
-
-
(Preview, Accepted manuscript, pdf, 325.3KB, Terms of use)
-
- Publisher copy:
- 10.1080/14650045.2025.2535671
Authors
- Publisher:
- Taylor & Francis
- Journal:
- Geopolitics More from this journal
- Pages:
- 1-24
- Publication date:
- 2025-08-04
- DOI:
- EISSN:
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1557-3028
- ISSN:
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1465-0045
- Language:
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English
- Pubs id:
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2279657
- Local pid:
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pubs:2279657
- Deposit date:
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2025-12-12
- ARK identifier:
Terms of use
- Copyright holder:
- Taylor & Francis
- Copyright date:
- 2025
- Rights statement:
- © 2025 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC
- Notes:
- The author accepted manuscript (AAM) of this paper has been made available under the University of Oxford's Open Access Publications Policy, and a CC BY public copyright licence has been applied.
- Licence:
- CC Attribution (CC BY)
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