Hyndman, Jennifer M.Weima, Yolanda Melody2023-03-282023-03-282022-11-292023-03-28http://hdl.handle.net/10315/40996“Return home” was the joint message by the Burundian and Tanzanian presidents in 2017, just two years after hundreds of thousands Burundians were recognized as refugees in neighbouring countries, and as more continued to seek refuge or asylum each month. In Tanzania, where refugees are subject to strict encampment, the vast majority of Burundian refugees had previously been refugees at least once before. Many returned to Tanzania less than three years after their prior return to Burundi, which, as camps were closed, had been framed as a “durable solution” to their displacement. This thesis explores the interrelated dynamics of enduring displacement, encampment, and closure, by drawing on life history research with Burundian refugees in two camps in Tanzania (2017-8), as well as semi-structured interviews with government and humanitarian staff, and ethnographic methods. Empirically, this dissertation contributes to knowledge by tracing the diverse prior trajectories of current Burundian refugees, both within and beyond camp boundaries, challenging there-and-back-again geographical imaginary of refuge management. It highlights an understudied but constitutive aspect of camps—their ultimate closures—by recounting refugees’ memories of the violent closure of Mtabila camp, as well as its fearful afterlives and present-presence. The violence of past camp closure is part of the violence of current encampment due to its evocation as a a disciplinary dispositif to “encourage” return, threatening and anticipating future violence. State and humanitarian practices “close” and harden space for those deemed “undesirable,” through forced encampment, camp closures, and coerced or forced return. In so doing, they produce and prolong displacement, in which varied spatio-temporalities of violence endure. Burundian refugees’ life histories thus trace the ways displacement endures, and is endured.Author owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests.GeographyAfrican studiesEnduring Displacement, Enduring Violence: Camps, Closure, and Exile In/After Return (Experiences of Burundian Refugees in Tanzania)Electronic Thesis or Dissertation2023-03-28RefugeesForced migrationCampsCamp closuresBurundiTanzaniaDisplacementViolencePolitical violenceRefugee campsRecurrent refugeDurable solutionsProtracted refugee situationsBiopoliticsTemporalityTemporality of violenceTemporality of displacementBurundian refugeesPRSRefugee returnRefugee repatriationSovereign powerAfrican displacementGreat Lakes regionAfrican GreatLlakesEnduringEnduranceEndureEnduring displacementExtended exileExileEnduring exileTheories of violenceTheories of displacement1972 genocideBurundian genocideFearEmotional geographiesCamp governancePetty sovereignsTransnational displacementLife historyRefugee narrativesCamp researchCamp methodologiesCamp afterlivesColonial durabilitiesFeminist research ethicsFeminist political geographyRefugee geopoliticsFeminist geopoliticsRefugee-centric research