Counter-Mapping and Migrant Infrastructures: Some Critical Reflections from the "Campscape" of Shatila, Beirut

Authors

  • Francesca Ceola Technische Universität Berlin

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24847/v10i12023.364

Keywords:

counter mapping, campscape, migrant infrastructures, overlapping displacements

Abstract

This article questions the notions of refugee and migrant spaces’ formulations and representations by considering the complex of elements which constitute the refugee camp of Shatila, Lebanon, as articulated by the camp residents themselves. Counter-mapping as methodology and analytical lens serves to reveal, convey, and decodify the proliferating meaning-makings of social, political, and economic relations that uphold the everyday life of the “camp,” determine the shapes of its spaces, and signify its materiality. A reticulated structure of care emerges, described by the notion of migrant infrastructures, from which emanates an invitation to reconsider “informality” of places such as refugee camps as rather extremely developed forms of being and asserting presence.

Author Biography

Francesca Ceola, Technische Universität Berlin

Francesca Ceola is a research assistant at the CRC1265 “Re-Figuration of Spaces” sub-project C08 Architectures of Asylum and a PhD candidate at Technische Universität Berlin. Her research focuses on mapping the intersections between forced displacement, makeshift urbanisms, migrant infrastructures, and socio-ecological urban landscapes. She is also involved in transdisciplinary collective projects in Lisbon and Hamburg that combine counter mapping with migrations and performative and audio-visual arts. She co-produced and co-realized with director Camilo Bravo Molano and the support of HFBK and MOIN Filmförederung the documentary short film “Liquid Homes” (2022).

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Published

2023-07-11