The world is regularly confronted in the media with dramatic images of African boat migrants. Seemingly desperate, these Africans, most of them males, are willing to risk a perilous journey at sea, hoping for a better life in Europe. And, even worse, hundreds more are believed to die each year, swallowed up anonymously by the choppy waters off Africa's coast. This book focuses on fishermen who have played a pivotal role in boat migration from Senegal to Spain's Canary Islands, advancing various reasons for the fishermen's prominent role. Besides their long history of migration, their proven experience with navigating, their family's push and investment, their perceptions and ideologies about Europe, there is also their growing marginalizati...
This Masters thesis is the winner of the ASC's Africa Thesis Award 2009. It examines the decision-ma...
Guest Lecture at Department for Anthropology, KULThe widely media covered waves of out-migration fro...
Colourful pirogues return to the shores of a Senegalese fish market, their catch diminishing as fore...
The world is regularly confronted on television and in other mass media with dramatic images of Afri...
Each year, thousands of Senegalese migrants brave the perils of the oceans in tiny canoes bound for ...
This study explores living conditions of people in Senegalese fishing communities in relation to env...
Senegalese fishermen have significantly expanded their mobility into the eastern Atlantic Ocean sinc...
In 2008, the UN designated Saint-Louis “the city most threatened by rising sea levels in the whole o...
The marine resources in Senegal are still relatively abundant, and Senegalese fisheries generate a h...
Bassirou Diarra, a fisheries inspector with the Office for Oceanography and Sea Fisheries (DOPM) in ...
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...
R. Nguyen Van Chi-Bonnardel—The Expansion of a non-Industrial Fishing Economy and its Consequences o...
In Western Africa and more particularly in Senegal, the fishing represents an important sector. This...
Ghanaian artisanal fisheries have dominated the West African coastal region for over 100 years. Due ...
This Masters thesis is the winner of the ASC's Africa Thesis Award 2009. It examines the decision-ma...
Guest Lecture at Department for Anthropology, KULThe widely media covered waves of out-migration fro...
Colourful pirogues return to the shores of a Senegalese fish market, their catch diminishing as fore...
The world is regularly confronted on television and in other mass media with dramatic images of Afri...
Each year, thousands of Senegalese migrants brave the perils of the oceans in tiny canoes bound for ...
This study explores living conditions of people in Senegalese fishing communities in relation to env...
Senegalese fishermen have significantly expanded their mobility into the eastern Atlantic Ocean sinc...
In 2008, the UN designated Saint-Louis “the city most threatened by rising sea levels in the whole o...
The marine resources in Senegal are still relatively abundant, and Senegalese fisheries generate a h...
Bassirou Diarra, a fisheries inspector with the Office for Oceanography and Sea Fisheries (DOPM) in ...
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...
R. Nguyen Van Chi-Bonnardel—The Expansion of a non-Industrial Fishing Economy and its Consequences o...
In Western Africa and more particularly in Senegal, the fishing represents an important sector. This...
Ghanaian artisanal fisheries have dominated the West African coastal region for over 100 years. Due ...
This Masters thesis is the winner of the ASC's Africa Thesis Award 2009. It examines the decision-ma...
Guest Lecture at Department for Anthropology, KULThe widely media covered waves of out-migration fro...
Colourful pirogues return to the shores of a Senegalese fish market, their catch diminishing as fore...