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Introduction

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Africa on the Move

Part of the book series: Springer Geography ((SPRINGERGEOGR))

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Abstract

Africa is immensely influenced by the spatial movement of its population. Africa on the Move, however, is not about “African refugees” nor African migration to Europe. It is about much larger movements: the “everyday migrations” within Africa. And it is about the enormous relevance of migration to livelihood security on the African continent. Africa on the Move also makes clear that Africa is changing. Its social, economic, and ecological structures are subject to rapid processes of transformation. How do people organize their daily lives, either to improve their living conditions or to respond to these various changes? Here, migration plays as decisive a role as the social networks that span across vast distances between regions of origin and arrival. In particular, rural and urban areas in Sub-Saharan Africa are closely linked through informal relations. Circular migration and an intensive exchange of information, capital, and goods characterize the interdependence of rural and urban areas. These linkages are largely constituted in the informal structures of social networks which span territorial borders and, in turn, have a considerable impact on the everyday life on the African continent. Within many people’s livelihood systems, the Here and There—e.g., in the city and in the countryside—have certain, partially complementary functions. It is only through a specific In-Betweenness that these can be linked and combined to contribute to livelihood security. This book is a plea for the translocal dimension of development to be given more attention than it has received so far. It is time both for development research and for practical development planning to adopt a translocal perspective . This introduction describes the basic idea of the book and explains its inner structure.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    This is how Karin Finkenzeller titled an article in the German magazine Welt am Sonntag (October 9, 2005, p. 9).

  2. 2.

    “Migration in Africa is predominantly circular in nature and characterized by an emigration-diaspora -return continuum or origin-destination continuum.” (UN 2018: 58)

  3. 3.

    We would like to thank the team of the project “Towards Inclusive and Sustainable Rural Transformation in Sub-Sahara Africa” (Engel et al. 2017) and especially Susanne Neubert and Gabriele Beckmann for their helpful suggestions.

References

  • Engel E, Rettberg S, Rauch T, Neubert S, Richter D, Minah M, Berg C (2017) Towards inclusive and sustainable rural transformation in Sub-Sahara Africa. Selbstverlag Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Berlin

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  • Rauch T, Beckmann G, Neubert S, Rettberg S (2016) Ländlicher Strukturwandel in Subsahara Afrika. SLE Discussion paper 01/2016. Available via SLE. https://www.sle-berlin.de/files/SLE%20Discussion%20Paper%2001-Strukturwandel%20mit%20Cover.pdf. Accessed 18 Mar 2019

  • Steinbrink M, Niedenführ H (2017) Afrika in Bewegung: Translokale Livelihoods und ländliche Entwicklung in Subsahara-Afrika. Transcript, Bielefeld

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  • UN (2018) Economic development in Africa report. Migration for structural transformation. New York, Geneva

    Google Scholar 

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Correspondence to Malte Steinbrink .

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Steinbrink, M., Niedenführ, H. (2020). Introduction. In: Africa on the Move. Springer Geography. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-22841-5_1

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