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New article by Georgia Cole on rethinking role and value of refugee ‘label’

A new article by Joyce Pearce Junior Research Fellow Georgia Cole puts forward a new approach, based on semiotics, for making sense of the refugee 'label'.

For decades, academics have written on the need to interrogate the labels upon which the field of Refugee and Forced Migration Studies has been founded. At the centre of these discussions are certain foundational texts, which expound the need to take nothing about the meaning and purpose of the refugee label for granted.

Though these accounts have proven incredibly rich and formative, this article suggests that much of the discussion on labelling to date has lacked a clear theoretical framework around which to structure their otherwise critical observations about the performative and malleable characteristics of language.

It therefore introduces semiotics as an approach for making sense of these manifold interpretations and their relationships to each other, and for exploring what impacts this has on negotiations over refugees’ futures. To showcase its analytical potential, this heuristic framework is applied to the history of durable solutions. This is used to suggest a number of key ways in which this approach necessitates a rethinking of the role and value of the refugee ‘label’ itself.

Georgia Cole (2017) 'Beyond Labelling: Rethinking the Role and Value of the Refugee "Label" through Semiotics' in Journal of Refugee Studies, DOI: 10.1093/jrs/fex021