200 research outputs found

    Stock Inka, Time, Migration and Forced Immobility. Sub-Saharan African Migrants in Morocco

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    Le Maroc était autrefois un pays que beaucoup de personnes en provenance d’Afrique subsaharienne traversaient en direction de l’Europe. Plus récemment, pourtant, la continuation de ce trajet a été rendue difficile, voire même impossible, à cause de l’intensification du contrôle aux frontières extérieures de l’Union européenne. L’ouvrage Time, Migration and Forced Immobility. Sub-Saharan African Migrants in Morocco, écrit par la sociologue Inka Stock, part donc d’un paradoxe : alors que les ac..

    Hope and uncertainty in contemporary African migration

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    Stock I. Hope and uncertainty in contemporary African migration. ETHNIC AND RACIAL STUDIES. 2017;40(13):2396-2398

    Gender and the dynamics of mobility. Reflections on African migrant mothers and “transit migration” in Morocco

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    Stock I. Gender and the dynamics of mobility. Reflections on African migrant mothers and “transit migration” in Morocco. Ethnic and Racial Studies. 2012;35(9):1577-1595

    Time, migration and forced immobility. Sub-saharan African migrants in Morocco

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    Stock I. Time, migration and forced immobility. Sub-saharan African migrants in Morocco . Global Migration and social change. Bristol: Bristol University Press; 2019

    ¿Qué significaba el término inka?

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    El presente artículo trata de los referentes y del significado del término inka desde la doble perspectiva de la historia y la lingüística. Muestra que los incas no fueron una nobleza ni un grupo étnico, sino una asociación militar. Analizando los usos que el término inka tuvo fuera del campo sociopolítico, define su significado como ‘apartado, separado (con respecto al común de los productores)’. La malinterpretación moderna de los incas prehispánicos como una nobleza se origina en la evolución colonial de los usos del término.Cet article traite des référents et du signifié du terme inka depuis la double perspective de l’histoire et de la linguistique. Il montre que les Incas n’étaient pas une noblesse ni un groupe ethnique mais une association militaire. En analysant les usages que le terme inka avait hors du champ socio-politique, il définit son signifié comme ‘séparé, mis à part (du commun des producteurs)’. Cest l’évolution coloniale des usages du terme qui est à l’origine de l’erreur d’interprétation moderne des Incas préhispaniques comme une noblesse.This article deals with referents and the signified of the term inka from the double perspective of history and linguistics. It shows that the Incas were not a nobility nor an ethnic group but a military association. By analyzing the uses that the term inka had outside the socio-political field, the author defines its signified as ‘separate, set apart (from common producers)’. It is the colonial evolution of the uses of the term which is at the origin of the modern misinterpretation of the prehispanic Incas as a nobility

    Norman, Kelsey P. (2020). Reluctant Reception: Refugees, Migration and Governance in the Middle East and North Africa. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge

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    Stock I. Norman, Kelsey P. (2020). Reluctant Reception: Refugees, Migration and Governance in the Middle East and North Africa. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge. International Migration. 2021;59(4):271-273

    “Failed” migratory adventures? Malian men facing conditions post deportation in Southern Mali by Susanne U. Schultz, Bielefeld, Transcript Publishing, 2022, 262 pp

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    Stock I. “Failed” migratory adventures? Malian men facing conditions post deportation in Southern Mali by Susanne U. Schultz, Bielefeld, Transcript Publishing, 2022, 262 pp. Ethnic and Racial Studies. 2022:1-2

    When spring comes, smugglers are in the news

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    Stock I. When spring comes, smugglers are in the news. openDemocracy. 2015;(4th June)

    Immigrant women workers in the neoliberal Age

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    Stock I. Immigrant women workers in the neoliberal Age. Ethnic and Racial Studies. 2014;37(10:Ethnic and Racial Studies Review)

    Migrants' transnational social positioning strategies in the middle classes

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    Stock I. Migrants' transnational social positioning strategies in the middle classes. Global Networks : A Journal of Transnational Affairs . 2023:18.This paper examines the influence of class on migrants' social positioning strategies in transnational spaces. It contributes to debates about the processes of transnational class-making and class formation. Going beyond an analysis of class in socio-economic terms, the paper focuses on peoples' (changing) subjective understandings of middle-class membership as a relevant factor in migrants' transnational social positioning strategies. Based on qualitative interview data with middle-class migrants in Germany, the presentation relates their experiences with downward social mobility before and after migration to their subjective perspectives on middle-class membership over time and in different places. The findings show that middle-class performance is shaped by migration experiences but also shapes peoples' mobility trajectories and therefore influences and promotes different transnational lifestyles
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