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The state of the immigrant body and the body of the State: negotiations at the interface 1 1 A previous version entitled “The student mothers from Cape Verde, Portugal: a look at politicization of individual and community bodies” was presented at “11 “Public policy, risk and vulnerabilities: citizenship and social inclusion technologies in contemporary societies” international conference, 19th October 2011, ISCTE, Lisbon. Research financed by the FCT – Foundation for Science and Technology, Portugal. Thanks to Pedro Pereira for his insightful comments.

Using an ethnographic analysis of the social interfaces between state agents and Cape Verdean students in Portugal, observed through participant observation in medical appointments, social work, immigration services and legal support to immigrants, this article aims to examine disciplinary state practices and the negotiations and power struggles that take place. The ethnographic cases discussed demonstrate how the idea of a fair and neutral state is simultaneously reproduced and denied in practice, thus elucidating the state as a symbol of union of an effective disunity. The ethnographic examples also indicate other dimensions of state practice, besides micro-disciplinary powers, which create room for flexibility and adaptation. And it is in this sense that ethnographies of interfaces between state and citizen offer a more relative perspective of excessively systematic interpretations of governmentality, illustrating how the effects of contradictory state practices are as unpredictable as human action itself.

The State; Immigration; Cape Verde; Governmentality


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