Post-Colonial State and Violence: Rethinking the Middle East and North Africa Outside the Blindfold of Area Studies

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Date

2015-06

Authors

Canefe, Nergis

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Mahanirban Calcutta Research Group

Abstract

In the final analysis, this paper provides an overall assessment of migration before and after the uprisings in the Southern Mediterranean. In particular, it reviews state policies regarding forced migration in the MENA region. Notably, migration (forced displacement as well as voluntary flows) to Europe has not been accelerated by the Arab Spring, apart from a short-lived movement from Tunisia, but has simply continued along previous trends. In sharp contrast, migration within the Southern Mediterranean as a region has been deeply impacted by the events as outflows of migrants and refugees fleeing instability and violence in Libya and Syria. This is a noteworthy phenomenon in terms of understanding and deciphering global migration flows in the Global South and constitutes fertile grounds for comparison between the Middle East and other regions living under the aegis of post colonial/post-imperial states such as South Asia.

Description

This article is reproduced here with permission from the author and may be found online at http://www.mcrg.ac.in/rw%20files/RW45/RW45.pdf.

Keywords

Post-colonial state, Violence, Middle East, North Africa, Arab Spring

Citation

Canefe, N. (2015). Post-Colonial State and Violence: Rethinking the Middle East and North Africa Outside the Blindfold of Area Studies. Refugee Watch: A South Asian Journal on Forced Migration, 45, 7-31. http://www.mcrg.ac.in/rw%20files/RW45/RW45.pdf