“…They often began uncertainly, perhaps starting with episodes of 'petite marronage' or 'laying out' (Camp 2004), and continued as a protracted series of journeysas in the case of Henry Bibb (1849), who made frequent and unsuccessful attempts to runaway as a teenager before undertaking a more successful journey to Canada in his twenties, or that of Harriet Jacobs (1861), who spent seven years hidden in a coffin-like space in her grandmother's attic, waiting for an opportunity to flee north by boat. Likewise, and in line with the body of research showing that asylumseekers' journeys are rarely direct and unidirectional (Collyer 2012;Collyer and King 2016;Innes 2015;Kuschminder and Waidler 2019), the majority of our interlocutors told of a series of journeys characterised by improvisation, serendipity, reaction to danger, hardship, as well as periods of stasis (Yıldız and Sert 2019;Stock 2019;Schapendonk, Bolay, and Dahinden 2020). Like enslaved people who ran from slavery in the past, our research participants moved in fits and starts, taking steps forward followed by steps back.…”