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Social Embeddedness of Human Smuggling in East Africa: Brokering Ethiopian Migration to Sudan
Author(s) -
Tekalign Ayalew,
Fekadu Adugna,
Priya Deshingkar
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
african human mobility review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2411-6955
pISSN - 2410-7972
DOI - 10.14426/ahmr.v4i3.849
Subject(s) - embeddedness , government (linguistics) , state (computer science) , politics , qualitative research , political science , human trafficking , economic growth , human migration , development economics , geography , sociology , population , social science , criminology , economics , linguistics , philosophy , demography , algorithm , computer science , law
This article discusses the migration processes and brokering practices that link Ethiopia and Sudan by taking into account the social, economic, political and cultural underpinnings of human smuggling in the region. The analysis is based on three months of fieldwork using a conventional qualitative research methodology. Respondents were selected from actors such as smugglers, migrants and government personnel involved in the migration process, facilitation and control activities. Since the 1990s, significant irregular overland labour migration has emerged from Ethiopian towns and villages to Khartoum, Sudan via the border towns of Metema on the Ethiopian side and Galabat on the Sudanese side. However, how various actors engage in shaping this migration process and how human smuggling sustains despite increasing control efforts by the state is less understood.

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