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Symposium: No Linear F*cking Time Disjunctive Temporalities of Migration and Refuge A roundtable discussion with Isshaq Al-Barbary (online), Merve Bedir, Olga Bruyukhovesta (online), and Anfisa Doroshenko, moderated by Natasha Matteson with Rachael Rakes Forced displacement has been an endemic part of ongoing imperial violence through multiple generations—and flares up, especially, when that violence surges. The act of leaving or migrating is attended by multiple specific temporalities: the right to leave, when there is a right to leave, is disintegrated by being forced to wait. There is the scramble of fleeing from home, city, or country; the haze of living in hiding; and the limbo of the lily-pad country or the camp. Seemingly endless bureaucratic delays extend life into a daily impermanence: waiting for visas, for embassy interviews, and for biometrics collection. The intermittent relief of departing is matched with the incessant news of brutality and erasure close to home. A kind of time-dislocation occurs between family members at home and those abroad, over years, over decades, fueling a sense of separation. The contributors to this discussion bring their own experiences of and on displacement, doing so with the heavy weight of time in mind and with consideration for those who are left behind.