Long Shadow of the Border

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African migration
African studies
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Assisted Voluntary Return
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B01=Hans Lucht
B01=Ida Marie Savio Vammen
B01=Signe Cold-Ravnkilde
Border Control Initiatives
Border governance
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=JBFH
Category=JFFN
COP=United Kingdom
Critical Border Studies
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Ethiopian Migrants
ethnographic fieldwork
EU Border
EU Border Control
EU Border Externalisation
EU Return
EU Return Policy
EU Staff
EU's Externalisation
EU's Externalisation Policy
EU's Narrative
EU's Pressure
EU's Southern Neighbour
EU-African Borderlands
European migration governance Africa
EU’s Externalisation
EU’s Externalisation Policy
EU’s Narrative
EU’s Pressure
EU’s Southern Neighbour
Everyday Practices
external border control
G5 Sahel
Geopolitics
International Security Official
Intimate Economies
irregular migration
Language_English
Migrant Smuggling
migrant smuggling networks
migration policy Africa
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Readmission Agreements
securitisation of mobility
softlaunch
Western Sahara
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032501833
  • Weight: 280g
  • Dimensions: 178 x 254mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Nov 2024
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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This book delves beyond the spectacular images of African migrants struggling to scale border fences or cross the Mediterranean in unseaworthy rubber dinghies by unpacking the policies and emerging practices that shape contemporary border governance in the expanding EU–African borderlands.

For decades, Africa has been the scene of a wide range of European interventions aimed at restraining irregularised migration to Europe creating an accelerated moment of control and confinement. Today, the externalisation of Europe’s borders into Africa encompasses agreements on the return of migrants, securitised border operations and projects under the EU’s Emergency Trust Fund for Africa. At a time when safe and legal mobility is limited, and the human, social and political conditions of African migrants are severely challenged, this book emphasises how European efforts are both assisted but also resisted by local actors with agendas of their own. Based on ethnographic fieldwork, the different contributions vividly portray how African lives continue to be shaped by Europe’s desire to contain and govern human mobility and how dominant spatial geopolitics are contested on various levels.

This book will be of particular value to students and researchers interested in African studies, International Politics, Border Governance, Anthropology, Human Geography and Global Studies. The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Geopolitics.

Ida Marie Savio Vammen is Senior Researcher at the Danish Institute for International Studies. Her work focuses on the multi-scale politics of mobility that shape West African migration today. Based on fieldwork in Senegal and Argentina, Vammen examines the human, social and political consequences of Europe’s border externalisation.

Signe Marie Cold-Ravnkilde is Senior Researcher at the Danish Institute for International Studies. Her primary areas of research are security, migration and development in Africa. Based on ethnographic fieldwork, Cold-Ravnkilde focuses on conflict, terrorism and borders as well as on transnational security interventions (including the UN, the EU and Western intervening states) in West Africa’s Sahel region.

Hans Lucht is Senior Researcher at the Danish Institute for International Studies. Based on ethnographic fieldwork in Ghana, Niger, Libya, Italy and Greece, his research focuses on undocumented migration, brokerage and smuggling networks from Africa to Europe via the Sahel and North Africa, and on migrant-sending communities in West Africa.