Makeshift camps have increasingly become a permanent presence along border areas and in cities around Europe and elsewhere, constituting a ‘hidden geography’ that is crucial to overland mobilities of thousands of migrants each year and essential to understanding contemporary informal migration. While there is rich and burgeoning scholarship on makeshift camps, substantial gaps remain in the understanding of these informal geographies which have not yet been conceptualized in terms of the key roles they play in the production of informal migration corridors nor the unique forms of daily life en route that they support, as this paper intends to do.
Joanna Jordan, Claudio Minca (2023). Makeshift camp geographies and informal migration corridors. PROGRESS IN HUMAN GEOGRAPHY, 47(2), 259-279 [10.1177/03091325231154878].
Makeshift camp geographies and informal migration corridors
Joanna Jordan
Primo
Writing – Original Draft Preparation
;Claudio MincaSecondo
Writing – Original Draft Preparation
2023
Abstract
Makeshift camps have increasingly become a permanent presence along border areas and in cities around Europe and elsewhere, constituting a ‘hidden geography’ that is crucial to overland mobilities of thousands of migrants each year and essential to understanding contemporary informal migration. While there is rich and burgeoning scholarship on makeshift camps, substantial gaps remain in the understanding of these informal geographies which have not yet been conceptualized in terms of the key roles they play in the production of informal migration corridors nor the unique forms of daily life en route that they support, as this paper intends to do.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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