Navigating Migrant Trajectories through Private Actors

2018 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 55-82 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anja K. Franck ◽  
Emanuelle Brandström Arellano ◽  
Joseph Trawicki Anderson

Abstract Recent research on the ‘migration industry’ has provided a means to interrogate how private actors come to be used as a means to facilitate, direct and control migration. Both through incorporating private actors into security functions and outsourcing certain functions to labour brokers, the use of migration industry actors is an important part of the ways in which the state works to maintain its sovereign control over territory and the ways people move across it. Yet this is not the only way in which migration industry actors are used. Instead, private actors also play a key role for migrants, although attention towards how migrants themselves perceive and use these actors during the migration process has received far less attention. Using timelines of migrant trajectories from Burma/Myanmar to Malaysia, the following study therefore sets out to map the private actors involved in the migrants’ projects to travel to and stay in Malaysia—and to investigate how these actors are strategically used by migrants as a means to increase their room to manoeuvre during the migration process. In approaching this, the study combines literature on the privatisation and commercialisation of international migration with scholarship on migration trajectories and migrant agency. Empirically the study builds upon fieldwork conducted in the Burmese migrant community in the city of George Town in northern Malaysia.

Author(s):  
Yasmine Ramadan

This chapter focuses on the representation of the urban space of Cairo. It examines Sonallah Ibrahim’s Tilka-l-raʾiha (The Smell of it, 1966), Gamal al-Ghitani’s Waqaʾiʿ harat al-Zaʿfarani (The Zafarani Files, 1976), Ibrahim Aslan’s Malik al-hazin (The Heron, 1981), and Radwa Ashour’s, Faraj (Blue Lorries, 2008) reading the novels in opposition to the realist narratives of earlier decades. The shift away from the realist depictions of the urban metropolis as the site of national struggle, or of the alley as the cross-section of Egyptian society, is accompanied by a new representational aesthetics. Through the presentation of the city as the space of incarceration, the reimagination of the alley as a fantastic space, and the turn towards the previously ignored neighborhood of Imbaba, these writers showcase new literary techniques; aspects of magical realism; elements of the fantastic; a turn to hyper-realism, in order to represent the transformation of the urban space of Cairo into one of surveillance and control.


Author(s):  
José Galindo Rodríguez

En el año de 1948, siendo presidente de México, Miguel Alemán Valdés, y gobernador interino de Veracruz, Ángel Carvajal Bernal, la Legislatura estatal expidió el decreto número 73, declarando “Cuatro Veces Heroica” a la ciudad de Veracruz, por haber tenido lugar ahí cuatro de los sucesos más importantes en la defensa de la soberanía nacional, en los que la población luchó “heroicamente” contra invasores extranjeros. Este ensayo busca analizar algunos aspectos clave de los acontecimientos que condujeron a cada nombramiento; destaca los mitos tras dichos acontecimientos y el sentido de tales nombramientos y analiza, finalmente, las maneras en las que el poder público ha utilizado los nombramientos para alcanzar metas específicas de política y control público, y algunos de sus efectos sobre las instituciones formales del país.Palabras clave: Heroísmo, Historia oficial, Mitos Historical Reflection on the Appointments of Heroism: The case of Veracruz, “Four-Time Heroic”AbstractIn the year of 1948, being president of Mexico, Miguel Alemán Valdés, and interim governor of the state of Veracruz, Ángel Carvajal Bernal, the Legislature of this state issued a decree (Decree 73), declaring Four Times Heroic the city of Veracruz, for having taken place in this site four of the most important events in the defense of national sovereignty, in which its population fought "heroically" against foreign invaders. This article seeks to objectively analyze some key aspects of the events that led to these appointments. It will also highlight the myth or myths behind these events and the meaning of these appointments. Finally, it will analyze the ways in which public power has used these appointments to reach specific public policy and control goals and some of their effects on the country's formal institutions.Keywords: Heroism; Official history; Myths Réflexion historique sur les nominations de Héroïsme: Le cas de Veracruz, « Quatre Fois Eroica »RésuméEn 1948, étant Président de la République Miguel Alemán Valdés et Gouverneur intérimaire de l’État de Veracruz Ángel Carvajal Bernal, la Législature de cet État a expédié le décret numéro 73 qui déclare Quatre Fois Héroïque à la ville de Veracruz, confirmé par quelques nominations antérieures dans ce sens, pour avoir eu lieu à Veracruz quatre des événements les plus importants dans la défense de la souveraineté nationale, dans lesquels sa population a lutté « héroïquement » contre des envahisseurs étrangers.Cet article analysera quelques aspects clés des événements qui ont conduit envers ces nominations. De même, il distinguera les mythes derrière ces événements et le sens de ces nominations. Finalement, il analysera les manières à travers lesquelles le pouvoir public les a utilisé à fin de couvrir des aspects spécifiques en politique et en contrôle public, ainsi que ses effets sur les institutions formelles du pays.Mots clés : Héroïsme ; Histoire officielle ; Mythes 


Author(s):  
Federica Violi

This chapter analyses the notions ‘territoryʼ, ‘jurisdictionʼ, and ‘controlʼ and their influence on the scope of due diligence obligations. It demonstrates that these notions epitomise the link between the state charged with the obligation and the risk itself and argues that the precise identification of this link is essential to understand how due diligence obligations arise and function. The chapter traces the gradual ‘widening’ of the scope of due diligence in international law, through court and arbitral decisions, treaties and non-binding instruments. It reflects on whether current international law is able to move away from the territoriality principle and conceive other forms of organising power and authority, and whether due diligence obligations might also be borne by private actors.


2021 ◽  
Vol 92 (4) ◽  
pp. 461-477
Author(s):  
Lilian van Karnenbeek

Governments are increasingly facing conflicting land uses in cities. Many governments strongly aspire to provide green spaces for the public, yet simultaneously stimulate private preferences for real-estate development. This paper argues that examining the interrelationship between land ownership and control over land clarifies the provision of green spaces in the context of private preferences for development. It presents a case study of the Carré de Soie urban development in which the government aspires to an abundance of green but concurrently encourages the market to take the initiative. The findings show that the lack of public land ownership combined with private actors having a say in control over land fell short in satisfying public aspirations for green spaces. This paper concludes that if cities need to become greener, recognising the role of the government to act in the public interest is of utmost importance.


Revista Prumo ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (6) ◽  
pp. 26-40
Author(s):  
Vângela Maria Ísidoro de Morais ◽  
Damião Marques de Lima

This essay is a way to approach the migration process of Venezuelans to Brazil, through occasional visuals perceived by transiting on avenues and streets in the city of Boa Vista, capital of the state of Roraima. The objective is to organize in an array of images the meanings behind the borders and symbolic crossings about this phenomenon, comprehending the human displacements as dynamic, interactive and changeable processes, that do tell about others and, at the same time, about us. The frame of this constructive narrative is made in the visual inscription of Venezuelan immigrants in the city and the diverse fragments of this tense coexistence, by indicating situations of vulnerability of those who seek refuge in Brazil and the important hybrid and cultural appropriations in what nowadays presents itself as one of the most expressive migration phenomenon in the country.


2017 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 181 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fátima Antunes ◽  
Vera Peroni

A partir de trajetórias concretas de investigações empíricas, o artigo debate como o Estado se relaciona com o setor privado em educação e quais as implicações para a democratização e o direito à educação, no Brasil e em Portugal. Analisa-se os modos e os sentidos em que o Estado assume novos papéis, em alguns casos financiando, enquanto em outros o financiamento é privado, em alguns casos permanecendo o poder público no controlo e em outros assumindo o privado a direção e o controlo das políticas. Nesse sentido, à crescente centralidade da educação nas políticas públicas parece corresponder, entre outros fenómenos, uma ampliação das respostas e das populações abrangidas acompanhada da multiplicação das modalidades de privatização e de mercadorização da educação. Conclui-se que a lógica mercantil tem participado ativamente na direção e execução das políticas educacionais, com graves consequências para o processo de democratização.Palavras-chave: Redefinições no papel do Estado; Políticas educacionais; Gerencialismo; Mercadorização da educação; Direito à educação ABSTRACTOn the basis of concrete empirical research trajectories, the article addresses how the State relates to the private sector regarding education, and what the implications to democratization and the right to education in Brazil and Portugal are. The ways and the meanings in which the State takes on new roles are analysed, keeping public funding in some cases, whereas in others the funding is private; in some situations public power remains in control and in others private actors take the direction and control of the policies. In this sense, the growing centrality of education in public policies seems to correspond, among other phenomena, to an expansion of educational responses and of the populations concerned, accompanied by the multiplication of the modalities of privatization and commodification of education. It is concluded that the market logic has actively participated in the direction and execution of educational policies, with serious consequences for the process of democratization.Key-words: Redefinition of the role of the State; educational policies; marketization of education; the right to education; managerialism


1973 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 72-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Tennant

The demise of elective local government in the State of Penang, Malaysia, is worth examining for several reasons. George Town, the state capital, was the first British settlement in the Far East; traces of elective local government appeared in the city early in the nineteenth century and the subsequent development of local government in the city followed British theory and practice to such a degree that at the time of Malayan Independence in 1957 the George Town City Council was a remarkable replica of a British town council. To study the George Town Council after Independence is thus to study a transplanted western institution which failed to survive within an Asian political system. Of more significance, however, is the light which a study of elective local government in Penang casts upon the fundamental transformations now underway in local government throughout Malaysia. Penang was the only state in the Federation to attain fully developed elective local government. Penang was one of the two states (the other was Malacca) in which all state territory and all state citizens were within the jurisdiction of local authorities. Penang however, was the only state in which every local authority consisted entirely of elected members and the only state in which every local authority was financially autonomous of the state government. Yet in 1966 the George Town Council was suspended and in 1971 the remaining local authorities were suspended as well. Penang became the first state in the federation to have no elective local government at all. It now seems likely that the other Malaysian states will follow Penang's lead (indeed, Malacca did so in early 1972), since it is now clear that the sanguine view of elective local government originally held by state and central officials has given way to one of pessimism and distrust. In July 1971 the Minister of Local Government indicated in Parliament that the central government believed that elective local government should be abolished. For these reasons, and for others which will become apparent in this paper, a study of the decline of elective local government in Penang provides an opportunity not only to test the hypotheses which have already been advanced to explain the demise of elective local government in the State itself, but also to test wider hypotheses advanced to explain the actions of national and state government towards elective local government throughout Malaysia.


Antiquity ◽  
1976 ◽  
Vol 50 (200) ◽  
pp. 216-222
Author(s):  
Beatrice De Cardi

Ras a1 Khaimah is the most northerly of the seven states comprising the United Arab Emirates and its Ruler, H. H. Sheikh Saqr bin Mohammad al-Qasimi, is keenly interested in the history of the state and its people. Survey carried out there jointly with Dr D. B. Doe in 1968 had focused attention on the site of JuIfar which lies just north of the present town of Ras a1 Khaimah (de Cardi, 1971, 230-2). Julfar was in existence in Abbasid times and its importance as an entrep6t during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries-the Portuguese Period-is reflected by the quantity and variety of imported wares to be found among the ruins of the city. Most of the sites discovered during the survey dated from that period but a group of cairns near Ghalilah and some long gabled graves in the Shimal area to the north-east of the date-groves behind Ras a1 Khaimah (map, FIG. I) clearly represented a more distant past.


2018 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 545-559 ◽  
Author(s):  
Florian Tissot

The aim of this article is to clarify the role of the organisations that support skilled migrants after a relocation, using the analytical concept of migration industry. The concept is used as a tool to explore the gap between the macro and the micro levels and by that stresses the crucial meso-level when it comes to conceptualizing (skilled) migration. I use 30 semi-directive interviews with skilled migrants and six interviews with key informants in the migration industry as a basis for the analysis, leading me to distinguish three main services at the heart of this industry. Each service is covered by distinct private actors: the basic needs of the family by relocation offices, the education of the children by international schools, and the careers of the partner by outplacement agencies.


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