Proof Taylor & Francis Not for distribution Proof Template: Royal A, Font: , Date: 09/06/2012; 3B2 version: 9.1.406/W Unicode (May 24 2007) (APS_OT) Dir: Y:/2-Pagination/TandF/SPIP/ApplicationFiles/9780415673464.3d Chapter 4 Sanctuary sans frontières Social movements and solidarity in post-war Northern France Naomi Millner Introduction Calais has long been known as a bottleneckwithin Europe, and as a site of conicting conceptions of citizenship rights and claims. As the geographically most proximal point to the UK in mainland Europe, it had been site of past migrations and anti-immigrant riots for centuries (Derville 1985). But as chan- ging EU laws had made clandestine movement an almost necessary part of seeking asylum in Europe (Bolten 1991; Schuster 2005; Huysmans 2006), the presence of hundreds of migrants in the town, trying to cross the Channel, brought it to a new level of symbolic signicance. This signicance was amplied when the Red Cross built a humanitarian shelter, Sangatte, although it was closed in 2002 only eighteen months later (Laacher 2002; Fassin 2005). This materialisation of a literal sanctuaryin Northern France reected the increasing displacement of religious, mission-based forms of sanctuary by secular, transna- tional associations, upholding internationally-sanctioned notions of human rights. Some argue this emergent production of spaces is part of a broader pro- ject of the extension of state sovereignty, which depends on the ability to ban others from belonging for its very existence, and reproduces hierarchies of citizenship belonging (Agamben 1997; Fassin 2005; Darling 2009). However, this is not the only story that can be told of Sangatte, or of Calais and Northern France in the post-war period. The collaborations which formed to assert the rights of sans-papiers in the remaking of the French Republic, distinctive articulations of immigrantsrights in the 1960s and 1970s, and new forms of organising that emerged as migrant squatter camps, or jungles, were destroyed in 2009, also reect the inuence of other social movements, newly linked within and across nation-states (Freedman 2008). While in Paris and in Calais, protesters frequently took refuge in churches and sacred social spaces, such acts also drew on other histories, including European Leftist, post-colonial, and migrant-led forms of organising. This chapter explores sanctuary practices enacted in Northern France as one form of ethical response to irregular migrants in the post-war period. However, highlighting the multiple inuences on ethical subjectivity besides a history of state-making, I demonstrate how this notion has