In 2006, the Spanish archipelago, the Canary Islands, saw the arrival of over thirty thousand clandestine migrants in pirogues that had departed mainly from somewhere along the Senegalese coast. The large majority of those who had risked their lives crossing the 1,500 kilometres of high seas were Senegalese nationals. Many were involuntarily repatriated. This paper traces back the historical context of these widely publicized endeavours in a Senegal that evolved from being a traditional immigration country to a place of emigration in barely twenty years. The repatriates’ voices tell their stories from going to the Canary Islands to coming back. They explain why the many initiatives put into place to discourage them from future attempts of c...
Circular labour migration between Senegal and Europe has taken off during the 1990s and has mostly c...
The world is regularly confronted in the media with dramatic images of African boat migrants. Seemin...
Despite a long history and high levels of international out-migration flows, Senegal does not have a...
In 2006, the Spanish archipelago, the Canary Islands, saw the arrival of over thirty thousand clande...
Guest Lecture at Department for Anthropology, KULThe widely media covered waves of out-migration fro...
During 2020 and 2021, a migration crisis has been developing on the Canary Islands in Spain. Large n...
Contemporary Senegalese communities are devastated by the alarming rates of deaths in the Atlantic O...
The importance gained by transnationalism and growing attention for the development potential of mig...
The widely media covered waves of out-migration from West Africa, in particular Senegal, to the Cana...
Numerous immigrants from the Casamance, the southern region of Senegal, currently dwell in Catalonia...
The purpose of this working paper is to consider the images (true or false) of Senegalese migration ...
From 2005 the waves of the Atlantic Ocean that shatter on the Senegalese coasts, are ploughed by abo...
The world is regularly confronted on television and in other mass media with dramatic images of Afri...
Numerous immigrants from Casamance, the southern region of Senegal, currently dwell in Catalonia, th...
International audienceIn 2006, a few thousands Senegalese have attempted to reach the Canary Islands...
Circular labour migration between Senegal and Europe has taken off during the 1990s and has mostly c...
The world is regularly confronted in the media with dramatic images of African boat migrants. Seemin...
Despite a long history and high levels of international out-migration flows, Senegal does not have a...
In 2006, the Spanish archipelago, the Canary Islands, saw the arrival of over thirty thousand clande...
Guest Lecture at Department for Anthropology, KULThe widely media covered waves of out-migration fro...
During 2020 and 2021, a migration crisis has been developing on the Canary Islands in Spain. Large n...
Contemporary Senegalese communities are devastated by the alarming rates of deaths in the Atlantic O...
The importance gained by transnationalism and growing attention for the development potential of mig...
The widely media covered waves of out-migration from West Africa, in particular Senegal, to the Cana...
Numerous immigrants from the Casamance, the southern region of Senegal, currently dwell in Catalonia...
The purpose of this working paper is to consider the images (true or false) of Senegalese migration ...
From 2005 the waves of the Atlantic Ocean that shatter on the Senegalese coasts, are ploughed by abo...
The world is regularly confronted on television and in other mass media with dramatic images of Afri...
Numerous immigrants from Casamance, the southern region of Senegal, currently dwell in Catalonia, th...
International audienceIn 2006, a few thousands Senegalese have attempted to reach the Canary Islands...
Circular labour migration between Senegal and Europe has taken off during the 1990s and has mostly c...
The world is regularly confronted in the media with dramatic images of African boat migrants. Seemin...
Despite a long history and high levels of international out-migration flows, Senegal does not have a...