Blinded by security

<p>This working paper offers a local perspective on the dynamic nature and recent transformations of the Saharan migration system, showing how such policies affect those who live or travel through these areas. An illustration of the historical significance of intra-African migration systems fo...

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Main Author: Brachet, J
Format: Working paper
Language:English
Published: International Migration Institute 2010
Subjects:
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author Brachet, J
author_facet Brachet, J
author_sort Brachet, J
collection OXFORD
description <p>This working paper offers a local perspective on the dynamic nature and recent transformations of the Saharan migration system, showing how such policies affect those who live or travel through these areas. An illustration of the historical significance of intra-African migration systems for the economic development of North-West Africa is followed by an analysis of new patterns of migrations that have emerged since the 1990s throughout central Sahara, and by a critical appraisal of media and government fears about human trafficking and smuggling in the region. A brief outline of the externally driven legal and institutional frameworks that govern the movements of people in this area is provided, followed by a discussion of how people succeed in crossing the borders between Niger, Algeria and Libya, highlighting how state representatives deal with (and partake in) local migration systems. The various strategies adopted by migrants and facilitating agents to cope with hardened migration policies are presented in light of their possible local impacts in central Sahara.</p><p>The final version of this paper will be published in 2011 by Springer in a volume on the migration-development-security nexus, edited by Thanh-Dam Truong and Desmond R. Gasper.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:586db8be-671d-4f4c-87d5-fae56b1e67fb2022-03-26T17:03:21ZBlinded by securityWorking paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:586db8be-671d-4f4c-87d5-fae56b1e67fbMigrationEnglishOxford University Research Archive - ValetInternational Migration Institute2010Brachet, J<p>This working paper offers a local perspective on the dynamic nature and recent transformations of the Saharan migration system, showing how such policies affect those who live or travel through these areas. An illustration of the historical significance of intra-African migration systems for the economic development of North-West Africa is followed by an analysis of new patterns of migrations that have emerged since the 1990s throughout central Sahara, and by a critical appraisal of media and government fears about human trafficking and smuggling in the region. A brief outline of the externally driven legal and institutional frameworks that govern the movements of people in this area is provided, followed by a discussion of how people succeed in crossing the borders between Niger, Algeria and Libya, highlighting how state representatives deal with (and partake in) local migration systems. The various strategies adopted by migrants and facilitating agents to cope with hardened migration policies are presented in light of their possible local impacts in central Sahara.</p><p>The final version of this paper will be published in 2011 by Springer in a volume on the migration-development-security nexus, edited by Thanh-Dam Truong and Desmond R. Gasper.</p>
spellingShingle Migration
Brachet, J
Blinded by security
title Blinded by security
title_full Blinded by security
title_fullStr Blinded by security
title_full_unstemmed Blinded by security
title_short Blinded by security
title_sort blinded by security
topic Migration
work_keys_str_mv AT brachetj blindedbysecurity