RT Article T1 White privilege and the involution of deportation research JF Research methods in deportation SP 165 OP 177 A1 Kalir, Barak LA English YR 2024 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1939069769 AB This afterword calls on white-privileged academics like myself to rethink and possibly stop researching deportation. We critically study deportation to drastically reform or even entirely abolish it. Our white privilege allows us access to resources and leads us to believe we (must) ‘have an impact’. Yet in practice the knowledge we produce is seldom innovative and rarely of value to illegalised people or policymakers. Asking a lot from interlocutors, we give little in return. Admittedly, the knowledge we produce mostly ends up serving us in advancing our own white privilege through class and status reproduction within the middle-class and racially segregated university system. Recognizing that conducting academic research is not always the best intervention, we should shun conservative funding schemes, stop publishing articles nobody reads, fight for research and teaching on deportation to be conducted away from the ‘white gaze’, and dedicate our skills to creative collaborations with activists fighting for change. NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 176-177 SN 9781035313105 K1 Deportation studies K1 white privilege K1 Research impact K1 Involution K1 Coloniality of power