ISBN:
9781349949717
Language:
English
Pages:
1 Online-Ressource (307 Seiten)
Series Statement:
Palgrave Series in African Borderlands Studies
Parallel Title:
Print version Gaibazzi, Paolo EurAfrican Borders and Migration Management : Political Cultures, Contested Spaces, and Ordinary Lives
DDC:
320
Keywords:
Border security
;
Emigration and immigration
;
Political science
;
International relations
;
Political sociology
;
Human geography
;
Border security
;
Africans Migrations
;
Africa Politics and government
;
Europe Politics and government
;
Electronic books
;
Afrika
;
Afrikaner
;
Europa
;
Staatsgrenze
;
Migration
;
Management
;
Politische Kultur
;
Internationale Politik
;
Politische Soziologie
;
Internationale Migration
;
Anthropogeografie
;
Grenzschutz
;
Ausländerpolitik
;
Migrationspolitik
;
Sozialgeografie
Abstract:
Dedication -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- List of Contributors -- List of Figures -- List of Map -- Part I: Framing EurAfrican Borders -- Chapter 1: Introduction: An Afro-Europeanist Perspective on EurAfrican Borders -- Africa and Europe's Externalized Management of Borders and Migrations -- Political Cultures of EurAfrican Borders -- Toward an Afro-Europeanist Perspective -- Places, Actors, Lives -- Places -- Actors -- Lives -- References -- European Union Official Documents -- Chapter 2: Effective Protection or Effective Combat? EU Border Control and North Africa
Abstract:
Borders, Closed Systems and Borderscapes -- The External Dimension of the European Borderscapes -- The EurAfrican Borderscapes as Geo- and Biopolitical Interventions -- Tracing the Libyan Camps -- Conclusion -- References -- European Union Official Documents -- Part II: Places -- Chapter 3: The Tensions of the Ceuta and Melilla Border Fences -- Conceptualizing and Contextualizing Walls and Fences -- Fencing Ceuta and Melilla -- Spaces of Tension -- Resistance to the Fences -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 4: Bamako, Outpost of the European Border Regime? -- Flows, Borders, Places
Abstract:
What Makes Bamako a Border Place? -- The Way Back -- Doing Border: Policies, Bureaucracies and the Societé Civile -- The 2005 Incidents of Ceuta and Melilla as Turning Points -- Managing Migration in Bamako -- The 'Calebasse Bambara' -- France and Spain as Main Actors in Migration Management -- Harmonization: The Role of the European Union -- Facets of Bordering -- References -- Chapter 5: Deportation Ghettoes in Mali: Expelled Migrants Between State Exclusion and Self-Organization -- From Expulsion to the Ghetto -- Tinzawaten: The Border Ghetto -- Gao: The Intermediate Ghetto
Abstract:
Bamako: The Urban Ghetto -- The Ghetto, an Enclave in a Complex Geography of Expulsion and Mobility -- References -- Part III: Actors -- Chapter 6: Policies, Practices, and Representations Regarding Sub-Saharan Migrants in Libya: From the Partnership with Italy to the Post-Qadhafi Era -- A History of Migration -- Sub-Saharan Migrants in Qadhafi's Libya -- The Externalization of EU Borders and Relations Between Libya and Italy -- Change and Continuity in Post-Qadhafi Libya (2011-2014) -- Sub-Saharan Migrants in Post-Qadhafi Libya -- References
Abstract:
Chapter 7: The Making of the Schengen Regime: Visa Filtering at the Italian Consulate in Senegal -- Applying for a Visa at the Italian Consulate in Dakar -- Arranging the Appointment: An Outsourced Service -- Supporting Documents -- Timing the Queue -- The Examination Phase and the Role of Officials -- Interview and Note Taking -- Assessing the Migratory Risk -- The Role of Officials -- Control on Return and Refusals -- Conclusion -- References -- European Union Official Documents -- Chapter 8: Marriage at the Embassy: Securing the EurAfrican Border in Cameroon
Abstract:
Marriage Migration and the Securitization of the Border
Note:
Description based upon print version of record
,
"This publication originated in ABORNE (African Borderlands Research Network) through the International Workshop 'Fences, Networks, People: Exploring the EU/Africa Borderland' ... at the University of Pavia, 15-17 December, 2011." - (Acknowledgements, Seite VII)
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