2005
DOI: 10.3917/autr.036.0003
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Migrations entre les deux rives du Sahara

Abstract: International audienc

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Cited by 128 publications
(58 citation statements)
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“…Studies that have closely examined the lives of irregular migrants, rather than limiting themselves to a few quotes from survivors, lend credence to the idea that most of them, far from being naive or ill informed, also make highly conscious decisions within the realm of what is possible for them. They do so even if they lack sufficient means or transnational networks to implement their plans legally (Alpes, 2012;Bredeloup and Pliez, 2006;Bredeloup, 2013). These observations also allow us to re-examine another dichotomy, this time engendered by the specialist literature that all too often considers student mobility as fundamentally distinct from other forms of migration and as only responding to the imperatives of education and careers.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Studies that have closely examined the lives of irregular migrants, rather than limiting themselves to a few quotes from survivors, lend credence to the idea that most of them, far from being naive or ill informed, also make highly conscious decisions within the realm of what is possible for them. They do so even if they lack sufficient means or transnational networks to implement their plans legally (Alpes, 2012;Bredeloup and Pliez, 2006;Bredeloup, 2013). These observations also allow us to re-examine another dichotomy, this time engendered by the specialist literature that all too often considers student mobility as fundamentally distinct from other forms of migration and as only responding to the imperatives of education and careers.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Entre les années 1990-2000, ces migrants forcés ont pour certains réussi à être réinstallés (Canada, Australie, États-Unis) et ont ainsi « ouvert la voie » à d'autres migrants venant de toute l'Afrique subsaharienne 3 . Étudiants, salariés, migrants économiques, aventuriers, sportifs de haut niveau, jeunes hommes et jeunes femmes, souvent partis seuls, ont pris la direction de l'Égypte, perçu au départ comme pays « de transit » ou « tremplin » vers un ailleurs considéré comme meilleur [Bredeloup, Pliez, 2005]. S'appuyant sur une juridiction en matière d'immigration plus souple qu'en Europe mais aussi parfois sur des réseaux sociaux et/ou familiaux, des institutions de formation (universités, formations religieuses) et des réseaux économiques et religieux, ces migrants sont nombreux à atteindre chaque jour la ville du Caire.…”
Section: Une Mégapole Religieuse Au Croisement Des Routes Migratoiresunclassified
“…In this context of pan-African foreign policy, Libya started to encourage sub-Saharan Africans to work in Libya (Hamood 2006;Pliez 2002). In the early 1990s, most migrants came from Libya's neighbours, Sudan, Chad and Niger, which subsequently developed into transit countries for migrants from a much wider array of sub-Saharan countries (Bredeloup & Pliez 2005).…”
Section: The 1991 Gulf War Turning-pointmentioning
confidence: 99%