This paper explores migrants' experiences and their specific practices geared towards negotiating migration barriers and the effects of externalization. Contemporary migration from Eritrea is shaped by changing migrant aspirations, expanding networks of intermediaries and socioeconomic challenges. This is compounded by the European Union's (EU) externalization of border controls and limited opportunities for legal migration paths. In this context, a vast majority of Eritrean young men and women opt for overland exits through dangerous and long trails across the Sahara Desert and the Mediterranean Sea until they arrive in Europe. The irregular transitions and stepwise mobility are facilitated by the interactions of actors, mainly smugglers, family members in one's homeland, former migrants en route and in the diaspora as well as the local people along the trails, which I call infrastructures of migratory mobility. The paper argues that migrants and their communities develop and use alternative mobility infrastructures by establishing a transnational knowledge community to navigate increasing migration controls in origin and transit countries, as well as the externalization of European borders and migratory controls.
CITATION STYLE
Mengiste, T. A. (2019). Precarious Mobility: Infrastructures of Eritrean migration through the Sudan and the Sahara Desert. African Human Mobility Review. University of the Western Cape. https://doi.org/10.14426/ahmr.v5i1.874
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