TY - JOUR
T1 - Childbearing against the state? Asylum seeker women in the Irish republic
AU - Luibhéid, Eithne
N1 - Funding Information: Funding for this research was generously provided by the Wenner Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research. Many thanks to Ronit Lentin and two anonymous reviewers for Women's Studies International Forum, as well as members of the ICS Faculty Writing Group at Bowling Green State University in Ohio, USA, for critical feedback on earlier drafts.
PY - 2004
Y1 - 2004
N2 - Challenging standard accounts of globalization that ignore sexuality, race and gender as structuring variables, this article examines how childbearing discourses and practices have provided a means to redraw racial and national boundaries that have become destabilized in the contemporary era. Focusing on the Irish Republic, I show that, historically, women were annexed to postcolonial nationalism through their role as child bearers, understood in racial and national terms, and institutionalized in social policy and law. Today, in the context of accelerated globalization, the Irish government has required new strategies to construct the nation as a sovereign space. Discourses and practices targeting childbearing asylum seeker women have provided the government with a means to reconstitute the Republic as a sovereign space with a legitimate national government-while also generating new modes of racialization and racial hierarchies within Ireland.
AB - Challenging standard accounts of globalization that ignore sexuality, race and gender as structuring variables, this article examines how childbearing discourses and practices have provided a means to redraw racial and national boundaries that have become destabilized in the contemporary era. Focusing on the Irish Republic, I show that, historically, women were annexed to postcolonial nationalism through their role as child bearers, understood in racial and national terms, and institutionalized in social policy and law. Today, in the context of accelerated globalization, the Irish government has required new strategies to construct the nation as a sovereign space. Discourses and practices targeting childbearing asylum seeker women have provided the government with a means to reconstitute the Republic as a sovereign space with a legitimate national government-while also generating new modes of racialization and racial hierarchies within Ireland.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.wsif.2004.10.004
DO - 10.1016/j.wsif.2004.10.004
M3 - Article
SN - 0277-5395
VL - 27
SP - 335
EP - 349
JO - Women's Studies International Forum
JF - Women's Studies International Forum
IS - 4
ER -