Mobility in pastoral societies of Northern Mali: Perspectives on social and political rationales

Charles Grémont
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Since the 1980s, the so-called “nomadic” populations in the regions of Northern Mali and Niger have embarked on an extensive process of settlement. Today they mostly live in villages or “settlement sites”. But, at the same time, individuals and small groups among these same populations have considerably enlarged their area of mobility and accelerated the rate and the value of the trade in which they engage. These two phenomena could, at first sight, appear contradictory. But the observation of empirical situations shows, rather, compatibilities, similarities even, between these two concomitant phenomena. Building on innovative debates conducted in geography and sociology, this article puts forward the hypothesis that the building of villages, as well as integration into military bases and barracks, proceeds from (social) rationales of mobility, just as much as transhumance, journeys, migration. Much more than a simple displacement in space, the notion of mobility could describe an “art of doing”, a way of being to others and to the world.
马里北部游牧社会的流动性:社会和政治理由的观点
自1980年代以来,马里北部和尼日尔地区的所谓“游牧”人口开始了广泛的定居进程。今天,他们大多住在村庄或“定居点”。但与此同时,这些人口中的个人和小团体大大扩大了他们的流动范围,加快了他们从事的贸易的速度和价值。乍一看,这两种现象似乎是矛盾的。但是,对经验情况的观察表明,这两种伴随现象之间的兼容性,甚至相似性。在地理学和社会学的创新辩论的基础上,本文提出了这样一种假设,即村庄的建设,以及与军事基地和军营的整合,就像迁移、旅行、移民一样,源于流动的(社会)理由。流动性的概念不仅仅是空间上的简单位移,它还可以描述一种“行动的艺术”,一种与他人和世界相处的方式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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