Life in Limbo: Asylum Detention and the Environmental Conditions of Hope

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Authors

Trautmann, Micah

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Abstract

Within the recent glut of philosophical work on hope, relatively little attention has been devoted to the circumstantial conditions that frustrate or accommodate hoping. In this article, I show how an individual’s spatial environment can constrain their capacity to sustain determinate hopes for the future via an extended case study: long-term refugee detention. Taking seriously refugees’ claims that a central cause of widespread hopelessness is the feeling of being in limbo, and drawing on recent work on the role of the imagination in hoping, I demonstrate how an individual’s spatial environment can limit imaginative access to the interim steps between their present circumstances and a desired future, making it difficult to see any way their hope could be realized.

Description

This article is published under a Creative Commons CC-BY license.

Keywords

Hope, Despair, Refugees, Asylum, Detention

Citation

TRAUTMANN M. Life in Limbo: Asylum Detention and the Environmental Conditions of Hope. Journal of the American Philosophical Association. 2026;12(2):182-200. doi:10.1017/apa.2026.10024