埃塞俄比亚-南非移民走廊移民趋势和性质的变化

Y. Estifanos, Laura Freeman
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在过去的25年里,大量(但未知的)来自埃塞俄比亚的移民通过“南部路线”移民到南非。这种男性主导的移徙正变得越来越不正常,包括多个过境国,主要由人口走私者控制。南非的埃塞俄比亚移民人口规模有所增加。流动人口在年龄、种族、原籍地、性别和社会经济地位方面也发生了变化。来自农村地区的年轻人加入了移民大军,在南非,越来越多的妇女为了结婚而移民。今天,来自埃塞俄比亚南部(Hadiya和Kambata)的移民主导着埃塞俄比亚向南非的移民。近年来,青少年、大学毕业生和公务员加入了移民大军,他们的年龄和社会经济地位也发生了变化。走私和移民过程的性质和操作也在发生同样的变化。与来源国和目的地国受到压倒性关注的更广泛的移徙研究领域一样,埃塞俄比亚人前往南非所经过的多个过境国以及移徙旅程本身并没有得到充分的研究注意。这些旅行对定居过程的影响在很大程度上也被忽视了。因此,本文探讨了这些新兴模式,以期了解埃塞俄比亚移民在前往南非的途中所面临的不平等现象及其背后的因素。由于包括COVID-19大流行在内的多种因素导致边境关闭加剧,我们研究了走私的性质和趋势的变化,以及它如何反映在南非埃塞俄比亚移民所经历的不平等现象中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Shifts in the Trend and Nature of Migration in the Ethiopia-South Africa Migration Corridor
Over the past 25 years a significant (but unknown) number of migrants from Ethiopia have been migrating to South Africa through the “southern route.” This male-dominated migration is becoming more and more irregular and includes multiple transit countries, largely controlled by human smugglers. The size of the Ethiopian immigrant population in South Africa has increased. The profile of individuals on the move has also changed in terms of migrants’ age, ethnicity, place of origin, gender and socioeconomic status. Youth from rural areas have joined the migration trail, and, increasingly, women are migrating for marriage in South Africa. Today, migrants from southern Ethiopia (Hadiya and Kambata) dominate Ethiopian migration to South Africa. The age and socioeconomic status of the migrants have also changed where teenagers, college graduates and civil servants are entering the migration stream in recent years. Equally changing is the nature and operation of the smuggling and settlement processes. Like the broader field of migration studies in which source and destination countries receive the overwhelming focus, the multiple transit countries Ethiopians on the move to South Africa travel through, and the migration journeys themselves, have not received adequate research attention. The effects these journeys have on the settlement processes are also largely ignored. This article, therefore, explores these emerging patterns with a view to understanding the inequalities faced by Ethiopian migrants on their journey to South Africa and the factors behind it. With the intensification of border closures due to multiple factors, including the COVID-19 pandemic, we examine the shift in the nature and trend of smuggling and how it is reflected in inequalities experienced by Ethiopian migrants in South Africa.
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