This article explores nationhood and migration through a policy-adjacent ethnographic lens, observing the centre from the margins. It focuses on two Pakistani-born young men, Abbas and Nadeem, who work as social workers in an Italian refugee shelter. As children of migrants, they straddle roles of care and control within the asylum reception system. Their narratives reveal the paradox of being ‘domesticated’ into Italian society while instru-mentalised in disciplining newly arrived migrants. They negotiate complex migrant tempo-ralities and clashing perceptions of Italian-ness—both their own and that of native hiring managers. Can 1.5-generation migrants act as ‘reverse anthropologists’? And how can the eth-nographer acknowledge their contributions as co-analysts of the field? The article examines these tensions and the fragile reciprocity of perspectives they enact.
Immigrants as Reverse Anthropologists
Sara Bonfanti
2024-01-01
Abstract
This article explores nationhood and migration through a policy-adjacent ethnographic lens, observing the centre from the margins. It focuses on two Pakistani-born young men, Abbas and Nadeem, who work as social workers in an Italian refugee shelter. As children of migrants, they straddle roles of care and control within the asylum reception system. Their narratives reveal the paradox of being ‘domesticated’ into Italian society while instru-mentalised in disciplining newly arrived migrants. They negotiate complex migrant tempo-ralities and clashing perceptions of Italian-ness—both their own and that of native hiring managers. Can 1.5-generation migrants act as ‘reverse anthropologists’? And how can the eth-nographer acknowledge their contributions as co-analysts of the field? The article examines these tensions and the fragile reciprocity of perspectives they enact.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.



