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Panel 76: Borders, Gates, Gatekeepers

Panel organisers: Stephan Dünnwald, Ana Larcher Carvalho and Ulrich Schiefer (Lisbon Univ. Institute, Portugal)

Contact: Stephan.Duennwald@lrz.uni-muenchen.de

In manifold ways African societies are the source and destination of flows of goods, capital, information, or people. These circulations involve more or less complex social and political structures and arrangements, some of them rooted in historical relationships, others young and still evolving. As flows they are channelled, blocked, split and bundled, slowed down or accelerated.

Migration is such a field that is characterised by flows, food security is another. As in migration, where sedentariness is taken as the norm, most approaches on flows start from a static point of view, seeing movements as exception, as extra effort, as sometimes exaggerated or spoiled energy. If we take a different, more agile, stance, we might come to a better understanding of the social forces that channel flows, try to tax or block them, and can see local strategies dealing with these forces, the different actors involved and the effects of their operations on society.

For this panel we invite contributions that deal with these flows, offer views about their developments, structures, interferences, effects and side effects. We want to stimulate discussions about how these flows can be analysed and compared, and how we can handle these forms of movements in a more than metaphorical way.

Accepted Abstracts

Flows of Change: Intervention and Food Security

Rebordering to Control Mobility from Afar: Narratives and Actions of Local and International Institutions in Senegal

Porous Borders, Small Arms and Light Weapons Proliferation and Human Security in Africa

Non-migrant, Sedentary, Immobile, or ‘Left Behind’? Reflections on the Absence of Migration

Dreaming Europe: Gatekeepers between West Africa and Mediterranean Europe

Emigration and the Internal Limits in Cape Verde and São Tomé and Príncipe

Victims of their Fantasies or Heroes for a Day? The Study of Representations/self-representations as Contribution to the Understanding of the Phenomenon of Boat Migrations from Senegal.

Blurring and Resurrecting Boundaries: A Qualitative Approach to Social Transformation

Out of Bounds – From Development Intervention to Human Security as a Containment Strategy

Food Balance and Food Security in Guinea-Bissau

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