Disentangling Mining and Migratory Routes in West Africa: Decisions to Move in Migranticised Settings

This article scrutinizes the trajectories of African men whose cross-border movements intersect two types of mobility routes: mining and migration routes. Drawing on field research in Mali and Guinea, as well as phone interviews with male miners/migrants in North Africa and Europe, this article prov...

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Main Author: Matthieu Bolay
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2021-03-01
Series:Social Inclusion
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/3715
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spelling doaj-0247cbd9e54a4b4184a989a15c7952632021-03-25T15:04:10ZengCogitatioSocial Inclusion2183-28032021-03-019123524610.17645/si.v9i1.37151910Disentangling Mining and Migratory Routes in West Africa: Decisions to Move in Migranticised SettingsMatthieu Bolay0Centre on Conflict, Development and Peacebuilding, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, SwitzerlandThis article scrutinizes the trajectories of African men whose cross-border movements intersect two types of mobility routes: mining and migration routes. Drawing on field research in Mali and Guinea, as well as phone interviews with male miners/migrants in North Africa and Europe, this article provides a case to empirically question some of the premises in the approach to migration decision-making by giving a voice to African men moving across borders who do not necessarily identify as (prospective) ‘migrants.’ Building upon International Organization for Migration data and secondary sources, this article starts by sketching where migration and mining routes overlap. It then examines, in detail, the mobility trajectories of men who were sometimes considered migrants and other times miners in order to identify how these different routes relate to one another. While overseas migration is certainly not a common project for itinerant miners, the gold mines constitute a transnational space that fosters the expansion of movements across the continent, including outside the field of mining. Rather than encouraging overseas migration, gold mines appear to be more of a safety net, not only for seasonal farmers or young people in search of money and adventure, but also, increasingly, for people who are confronted with Europe’s intra-African deportation regime.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/3715artisanal and small-scale miningborder regimeguineamalimigrationmobilitynorth africawest africa
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matthieu Bolay
spellingShingle Matthieu Bolay
Disentangling Mining and Migratory Routes in West Africa: Decisions to Move in Migranticised Settings
Social Inclusion
artisanal and small-scale mining
border regime
guinea
mali
migration
mobility
north africa
west africa
author_facet Matthieu Bolay
author_sort Matthieu Bolay
title Disentangling Mining and Migratory Routes in West Africa: Decisions to Move in Migranticised Settings
title_short Disentangling Mining and Migratory Routes in West Africa: Decisions to Move in Migranticised Settings
title_full Disentangling Mining and Migratory Routes in West Africa: Decisions to Move in Migranticised Settings
title_fullStr Disentangling Mining and Migratory Routes in West Africa: Decisions to Move in Migranticised Settings
title_full_unstemmed Disentangling Mining and Migratory Routes in West Africa: Decisions to Move in Migranticised Settings
title_sort disentangling mining and migratory routes in west africa: decisions to move in migranticised settings
publisher Cogitatio
series Social Inclusion
issn 2183-2803
publishDate 2021-03-01
description This article scrutinizes the trajectories of African men whose cross-border movements intersect two types of mobility routes: mining and migration routes. Drawing on field research in Mali and Guinea, as well as phone interviews with male miners/migrants in North Africa and Europe, this article provides a case to empirically question some of the premises in the approach to migration decision-making by giving a voice to African men moving across borders who do not necessarily identify as (prospective) ‘migrants.’ Building upon International Organization for Migration data and secondary sources, this article starts by sketching where migration and mining routes overlap. It then examines, in detail, the mobility trajectories of men who were sometimes considered migrants and other times miners in order to identify how these different routes relate to one another. While overseas migration is certainly not a common project for itinerant miners, the gold mines constitute a transnational space that fosters the expansion of movements across the continent, including outside the field of mining. Rather than encouraging overseas migration, gold mines appear to be more of a safety net, not only for seasonal farmers or young people in search of money and adventure, but also, increasingly, for people who are confronted with Europe’s intra-African deportation regime.
topic artisanal and small-scale mining
border regime
guinea
mali
migration
mobility
north africa
west africa
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/3715
work_keys_str_mv AT matthieubolay disentanglingminingandmigratoryroutesinwestafricadecisionstomoveinmigranticisedsettings
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