Nicos Trimikliniotis
NICOS TRIMIKLINIOTIS is Assοciate Professor of Sociology, at the School of Social Sciences, University of Nicosia. He heads the team of expert of Cyprus team for the Fundamental Rights Agency of the EU. He is also a practicing Barrister. He has researched on integration, citizenship, education, migration, racism, free movement of workers, EU law, discrimination and Labour Law. He is the National Expert for Cyprus for the European Labour Law Network. He is part of the international team on world deviance, which produced Gauging and Engaging Deviance 1600-2000, Tulika press (2014) and its’ sequel Scripts of Defiance (2017). Publications: Mobile Commons, Migrant Digitalities and the Right to the City, Pivot, Palgrave Macmillan, 2015; Beyond a Divided Cyprus: A State and Society in Transformation, Palgrave MacMillan, 2012; The Nation-State Dialectic and the State of Exception, Savalas, Athens, 2010; Rethinking the Free Movement of Workers: The European Challenges Ahead, Wolf Legal Publishers, Nijmegen, 2009. E-mail: nicostrim@gmail.com.cy
less
InterestsView All (26)
Uploads
Papers by Nicos Trimikliniotis
at work. We propose to read precarity as a function of time-dislocation
spatialized and manifested as the logic of fragmentation, which is structurally connected to the logics of a unifying world. This runs contrary to the misguided depiction of globalization as irresistible, inevitable and linear set of processes of a world increasingly unifying and unified, ‘becoming one’. It is difficult to think of a previous era where there have been such gigantic unification drives, which simultaneously contain within the very same processes, so many elements of multiplicity and fragmentation.
at work. We propose to read precarity as a function of time-dislocation
spatialized and manifested as the logic of fragmentation, which is structurally connected to the logics of a unifying world. This runs contrary to the misguided depiction of globalization as irresistible, inevitable and linear set of processes of a world increasingly unifying and unified, ‘becoming one’. It is difficult to think of a previous era where there have been such gigantic unification drives, which simultaneously contain within the very same processes, so many elements of multiplicity and fragmentation.