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Panel 95: On African Terms: Migration, Development and Gender

Panel organisers: Katarzyna Grabska (Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Switzerland) and Cindy Horst (The Peace Research Institute, Norway)

Contact: kgrabska@yahoo.com

In today’s world, migration flows seem to be increasing and are conceptualised as an emergency, especially in the context of Africa. Migration whether due to economic, social or political factors, including violent conflicts, development projects and environmental disasters has been a permanent and recurring phenomenon in African societies, as well as elsewhere. It is also often perceived as a remedy to diverse problems such as underdevelopment and violent conflicts. This panel will address the meaning, processes and impact of migration on African countries and communities.

Some research and policy discourses perceive migration, and especially return migration and the flows of economic remittances from diaspora as having developmental impact on the economy in sending countries. This panel attempts to critically assess this assumption and problematise the link between migration, development and gender. This includes a critical perspective of African migrant women and men as well as those have stayed behind on the processes and impacts of migration on their communities and their personal lives. Key questions:

- What kind of development is an outcome of migration and from whose perspective?

- How is development defined and prioritised by the African migrant and stayee women and men?

- Is development (and what type of development) the same for women and men?

- What type of remittances are African diasporas engaged in? What are the differences between women and men in terms of the types of remittances they send and their impact?

- What are the impacts and links between political 'remittances' of African diasporas and 'development' in sending communities/countries?

- What impact on social relations, gender categories and identity politics do migration and its processes of return carry with them?

Accepted Abstracts

SESSION 1

Mirroring Gender Discourses. Migrants as Development Broker and Gender Equity

Gender, Migration and Remittances in Lesotho: On Whose Terms?

Keeping it All Together? Somali Women’s Roles as Household Heads and Remittance Senders

‘Threatening Mini Skirts’ or ‘Agents of Development’: Returnee Southern Sudanese Women and their Contributions to Development

SESSION 2

Migration, Gender and Pugkeenga: A Re-interpretation of Change in Family Farming on the Central Plateau of Burkina Faso

Girls’ migration, poverty and development: challenging stereotypes Evidence from Cote-d’Ivoire and Mali

Consequences of Male International Migration for Women’s Position in Senegal: Reinforcement or Weakening of Traditional Social Relationships?

Four Wives and a Migrant Husband. Female Migration from Rural Burkina Faso since the 1950s

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