Migrants, Borders and Global Capitalism

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A01=Hannah Cross
African Development Bank
Author_Hannah Cross
border securitisation
Category=JBFH
Category=KCF
Cc OO
Clandestine Emigration
Colonial Administration
displacement
economic dispossession
ECOWAS Protocol
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnographic fieldwork
EU Border
EU Border Control
EU Border Security
EU Citizen
EU Immigration Policy
EU Member State
EU's External Relation
EU's Role
exploitation
flows
Franc CFA
household
international relations
Ivory Coast
labour
labour migration theory
mobility
Money Transfer Operators
Operation Enduring Freedom Trans Sahara
politics
postcolonial development
President Sidi Ould Cheikh Abdallahi
Re-admission Agreements
security
Senegalese Migration
Sis II
step-wise
Sustainable development
transnational mobility studies
unfree
unfree labour mobility in West Africa
Unfree Migrant Labour
West African Migrants
Western Sahara
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415629157
  • Weight: 540g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Apr 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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People from West Africa are risking their lives and surrendering their citizenship rights to enter exploitative labour markets in Europe. This book offers an explanation for this phenomenon that is based on close analysis of the contradictory economic and political agendas that create and constrain labour migration. It shows how global capitalism regulates different stages of the process within an interconnected system of economic dispossession, the construction of an illegal status, border control, labour exploitation and processes of underdevelopment. This is summarised as a regime of ‘unfree labour mobility’.

Combined with structural and historical approaches, this book is based on ethnographic research. It incorporates those who are left behind, those who decide to stay, migrants who fail and those who are on the move, alongside clustered migrant communities in Senegal, Mauritania and Spain. The book’s panoramic approach shows how West African ‘step-wise’ journeys to Europe by land and sea sees competing territorial and economic policies regulating an unstable and unpredictable trajectory, creating ‘illegal’ labour through dual logics of border security and selective labour mobility.

This book demonstrates that the diverse channels through which people migrate in the modern era are mediated by European states and labour markets, which utilise border regimes to control labour and be globally competitive. The themes and patterns that emerge, in their context of inter-generational change, present a challenge to the accepted wisdom about the individual and household dynamics of labour migration. This book is of interest to students and scholars of migration, transnationalism, politics, security, development, economics, and sociology.

Hannah Cross is a Lecturer in International Political Economy at the University of Manchester and an Honorary Research Fellow in the Centre of West African Studies, University of Birmingham, UK. She is also a member of the Editorial Working Group of the Review of African Political Economy.

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