State Sovereignty vs. Refugees’ Resilience: Repatriation, Securitization, and Transnationalism in Dadaab

Abdulkadir Osman Farah

    Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapport/konference proceedingBidrag til bog/antologiForskningpeer review

    Abstract

    This paper understands state efforts in pursuing legitimate sovereignty and security concerns, but also adds the efforts of humanitarian organizations and refugee responses into the analysis. With observations and responses from refugees in East Africa, this paper complements earlier studies stressing refugee perspectives (Peteet, 2005; Carolina and Nyers, 2007; Rebecca, 2010; Rajaram, 2002; Bradley, 2014; Harrell-Bond and Voutira, 2007; Eastmond, 2007). The aim is to go beyond the conventional understanding of refugees as people fleeing persecution from one state and appealing protection in another. Instead the paper proposes a dialectical process of interconnected state actions, humanitarian concerns and refugee reactions- suggesting recurring state-civic dynamics
    OriginalsprogEngelsk
    TitelRefugees and Forced Migration in the Horn and Eastern Africa : Trends, Challenges and Opportunities
    RedaktørerJohannes Dragsbaek Schmidt, Leah Kimathi, Michael Omondi Owiso
    Antal sider20
    ForlagSpringer
    Publikationsdato1 jan. 2019
    ISBN (Trykt)978-3-030-03720-8
    DOI
    StatusUdgivet - 1 jan. 2019
    NavnAdvances in African Economic, Social and Political Development
    ISSN2198-7262

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