Inside Outsiders: Tactical Citizenships and Cultural Intimacy in Cypriot Statecraft
Date Issued
June 18, 2025
Author(s)
Abstract
This paper explores the paradoxical relationship that Cypriot citizens maintain with the state, positioning themselves as both ”insiders” who navigate and understand bureaucratic structures intimately and ”outsiders” who critique and resist these same systems. Drawing on the concept of tactical citizenship, this article explores how citizens use culturally embedded strategies—such as personal relations, appropriation of public resources, or humor and irony—to navigate their relations with an often opaque and arbitrary state. These tactics belie a form of cultural intimacy within which Cypriots enact a shared knowledge of the state’s inner workings while distancing themselves from that authority through subtle acts of subversion. It reconfigures citizenship not as a fixed set of rights and obligations but as an adaptive, lived practice under the influence of a mix of closeness and critique. A study of this ”inside outsider” dynamic sheds light on how citizens actively reshape their relationship with state power. It also brings out the complicated space within which compliance and resistance, familiarity and alienation coexist. Through this lens, citizenship becomes a creative response to the structures in place by the state, highlighting the fluid and complex nature of belonging and political engagement.

