| Faculty of Economics, Law and Social Sciences, Research

New publication: Making Refugees' Political Agency Visible

A book by Amelie Harbisch entitled "Making Refugees' Political Agency Visible" has just been published by Routledge. It examines the political agency of refugees and asylum seekers based on field research in Berlin and Vienna.

Amelie Harbisch
Making Refugees' Political Agency Visible
Practices of the Subject
Routledge, 2025
ISBN 9781032891583
196 Pages
Hardback £108.00
eBook £34.39

This book centres refugees and asylum seekers as agents of global politics, broadening our thinking about political agency beyond statism, citizenship, and organized political protest. Arguing that to understand forced migration, we must understand the construction of refugees as individual human subjects and how subconscious ideas about refugees influence daily practices and policies, the author studies how refugees make meaning about themselves. Forced migration is a key formative phenomenon of international politics but debates habitually discuss displacement only as an abstract number, economic challenge, or security issue. This volume shifts attention to the individual human subjects as overlooked agents of international relations. To this end, the book rethinks individual subjects altogether and develops a comprehensive practice-theoretical framework of subject construction. Through extensive ethnographic data generated with refugees in Germany and Austria, the author reveals how refugees are depoliticized, and how they combat this using creativity, humor, and intercultural resources. This volume highlights people’s agency despite being subjected to powerful ideas and mechanisms. It will appeal to scholars and students of International Relations, Sociology, Political Science, and Migration Studies.

The author
Dr Amelie Harbisch is a PostDoc at the University of Erfurt. As part of the BMBF-funded project "KNOWPRO", she is researching knowledge production in German peace and security policy. She focuses on ethnographic work, migration, and international political sociology (practice theory, performance/performativity, discourse).