
Contents
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“It’s Time to Be My Own Person”: Kinship as Intersubjective Participation “It’s Time to Be My Own Person”: Kinship as Intersubjective Participation
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Identity Loan in a Comparative Perspective Identity Loan in a Comparative Perspective
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“As Brothers We Love One Another”: Kinship and the Risks of Identity Loan “As Brothers We Love One Another”: Kinship and the Risks of Identity Loan
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Three Personae, Two Identity Documents, One Laborer: The Case of Afua Three Personae, Two Identity Documents, One Laborer: The Case of Afua
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Witchcraft as the Other Side of Kinship Witchcraft as the Other Side of Kinship
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Between Fiction and Reality Between Fiction and Reality
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Conclusion Conclusion
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3 “Working with My Sister’s Papers”
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Published:May 2023
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Abstract
This chapter examines the practices of unauthorized migrants in finding employment and earning their living in the Netherlands. Unauthorized migrants borrow the identity documents of other “look-alike” migrants and find employment under in their name. This practice entails substantial risks and often has unexpected consequences for document lenders and borrowers. To those involved in the practice kinship seems to provide some stability and safety while dealing with possible dangers. Thus document lenders and borrowers forge relations they call kinship, expressed in a language of siblinghood (“brother,” “sister”), in hopes that these relations comply with the kinship norms of solidarity and reciprocity. Not surprisingly, the appeal to kinship does not always have the anticipated outcomes and exposes migrants to new problems and risks.
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