Transferts migratoires, institutions sociales migrantes et territorialité morale transnationale

How do those who stayed behind exert their authority over emigrants (notably to make sure they keep on sending remittances) despite the distance? How does power circulate beyond borders? For the last twenty years, the concept of territory is at the core of the scholarship on migrants’ spatiality and...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Thomas Lacroix
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université de Reims Champagne-Ardennes 2020-02-01
Series:L'Espace Politique
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/espacepolitique/6997
_version_ 1818421970534924288
author Thomas Lacroix
author_facet Thomas Lacroix
author_sort Thomas Lacroix
collection DOAJ
description How do those who stayed behind exert their authority over emigrants (notably to make sure they keep on sending remittances) despite the distance? How does power circulate beyond borders? For the last twenty years, the concept of territory is at the core of the scholarship on migrants’ spatiality and mobility. However, this paper turns upside down the common problematique by addressing the migratory space as a vector of the exercise of transnational authority. The paper draws on a series of qualitative investigation among emigrants from the Moroccan Middle-Atlas and Kabylia in Algeria. After a literature review of the use of the notion of territory in migration studies, it shows how a transnational territoriality is built up through the creation of migrant social institutions (transnational families, migrant associations and ethnic businesses) that serve as a relay for power dissemination. The transnational network of these social institutions is the crucible for the reproduction of a moral geography maintaining emigrants in a stance of obligation towards those who stayed. This moral geography is imbued with deeply ambivalent representations: the place of departure is simultaneously perceived as a place unable to sustain the social mobility of actors and a moral centrality. Conversely, the place of destination spurs a certain fascination while being perceived as corrupted by foreign values. This ambivalent moral geography underpins the moral economy of the relationship between migrants and non-migrants: while migration triggers fascination and envy, migrants are accused of selfishness and moral dubiousness when they do not abide to their duty of emigrants, and, in particular, when they refrain from transferring money to the left-behind.  Finally, drawing on the example of development projects undertaken in villages of departure, the article examines the way the transnational territory becomes henceforth a real stake for the renegotiation of rights and duties between actors.
first_indexed 2024-12-14T13:18:49Z
format Article
id doaj.art-516f79939e444a6b953ecbe9a9aceb1d
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1958-5500
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-14T13:18:49Z
publishDate 2020-02-01
publisher Université de Reims Champagne-Ardennes
record_format Article
series L'Espace Politique
spelling doaj.art-516f79939e444a6b953ecbe9a9aceb1d2022-12-21T22:59:59ZengUniversité de Reims Champagne-ArdennesL'Espace Politique1958-55002020-02-013810.4000/espacepolitique.6997Transferts migratoires, institutions sociales migrantes et territorialité morale transnationaleThomas LacroixHow do those who stayed behind exert their authority over emigrants (notably to make sure they keep on sending remittances) despite the distance? How does power circulate beyond borders? For the last twenty years, the concept of territory is at the core of the scholarship on migrants’ spatiality and mobility. However, this paper turns upside down the common problematique by addressing the migratory space as a vector of the exercise of transnational authority. The paper draws on a series of qualitative investigation among emigrants from the Moroccan Middle-Atlas and Kabylia in Algeria. After a literature review of the use of the notion of territory in migration studies, it shows how a transnational territoriality is built up through the creation of migrant social institutions (transnational families, migrant associations and ethnic businesses) that serve as a relay for power dissemination. The transnational network of these social institutions is the crucible for the reproduction of a moral geography maintaining emigrants in a stance of obligation towards those who stayed. This moral geography is imbued with deeply ambivalent representations: the place of departure is simultaneously perceived as a place unable to sustain the social mobility of actors and a moral centrality. Conversely, the place of destination spurs a certain fascination while being perceived as corrupted by foreign values. This ambivalent moral geography underpins the moral economy of the relationship between migrants and non-migrants: while migration triggers fascination and envy, migrants are accused of selfishness and moral dubiousness when they do not abide to their duty of emigrants, and, in particular, when they refrain from transferring money to the left-behind.  Finally, drawing on the example of development projects undertaken in villages of departure, the article examines the way the transnational territory becomes henceforth a real stake for the renegotiation of rights and duties between actors.http://journals.openedition.org/espacepolitique/6997transnationalismterritorialityremittancesdevelopmentinternational migration
spellingShingle Thomas Lacroix
Transferts migratoires, institutions sociales migrantes et territorialité morale transnationale
L'Espace Politique
transnationalism
territoriality
remittances
development
international migration
title Transferts migratoires, institutions sociales migrantes et territorialité morale transnationale
title_full Transferts migratoires, institutions sociales migrantes et territorialité morale transnationale
title_fullStr Transferts migratoires, institutions sociales migrantes et territorialité morale transnationale
title_full_unstemmed Transferts migratoires, institutions sociales migrantes et territorialité morale transnationale
title_short Transferts migratoires, institutions sociales migrantes et territorialité morale transnationale
title_sort transferts migratoires institutions sociales migrantes et territorialite morale transnationale
topic transnationalism
territoriality
remittances
development
international migration
url http://journals.openedition.org/espacepolitique/6997
work_keys_str_mv AT thomaslacroix transfertsmigratoiresinstitutionssocialesmigrantesetterritorialitemoraletransnationale