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Title
From Integration to Repatriation. Flight, Displacement, and Expulsion in Post-colonial Africa |
Full text
https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/from-integration-to-repatriation-flight-displacement-and-expulsio |
Date
2022 |
Author(s)
Frankema, Ewout |
Abstract
This chapter reviews the surge of forced migration against the backdrop of intensifying political violence in post-colonial Africa. I argue that, historically, African societies had long supported the integration of 'aliens' into domestic systems of slavery to enhance agricultural labor supplies, accumulate wealth, strengthen military capacity, reproduce lineages, and bolster elite status. In colonial times, when slavery was outlawed, forced displacement remained primarily motivated by the desire to concentrate cheap labor in key sites of export production. However, Africa's post-colonial nation-states increasingly turned to the expulsion of aliens, to the deliberate displacement of enemies within and across national borders, and to the repatriation of international refugees. This chapters attributes this shift from integration to repatriation, and the related changes in the attitude of receiving societies, to the long-run demographic transition that has profoundly altered the relative scarcity of rural and urban labor supplies, as well as the juncture in the meaning and legal status of territorial borders and related notions of national identity and citizenship in the transition from colonial to sovereign rule. |
Subject(s)
Life Science |
Language
en |
Publisher
Taylor and Francis |
Relation
https://edepot.wur.nl/582068 |
Type of publication
Part of book or chapter of book |
Format
text/html |
Source
Migration in Africa; ISBN: 9781032125299 |
Rights
Wageningen University & Research |
Identifier
10.4324/9781003225027-21 |
Repository
Wageningen - University of Wageningen
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Added to C-A: 2022-12-05;09:08:20 |
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