Turbulent trajectories: African migrants on their way to the European Union
Publication date
2012
Authors
Schapendonk, J.
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Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2012
Abstract
Sub-Saharan African migration towards the European Union (EU) belongs to
one of the most stigmatized forms of migration of the 21st century. It is strongly
characterized by EU’s restrictive migration policies. As a consequence, migrants who are
aspiring to reach the EU often undertake fragmented and dangerous journeys to the North.
This contribution attempts to gain more empirical insights into these migratory journeys. It
is based on a ‘trajectory ethnography’ that combines in-depth interviews with sub-Saharan
Africans, who are waiting in Morocco and Turkey to enter the EU, with a longitudinal
strategy to follow some of these respondents over longer periods of time. With this
longitudinal element I was in particular able to grasp expected steps and unexpected turns
in individual migration trajectories. By discussing three main components (the motivation,
facilitation and velocity) of journeys, this contribution puts into perspective the
unidirectional and often frictionless metaphors of migration—as if migrants move like
‘flows’ and ‘waves’.
Keywords
migration trajectories, sub-Saharan Africa, EU, transit migration, borders