Oscillating Between Hope and Despair: Understanding Migrants’ Reflections on Ambivalence in ‘Transit’

Selin Siviş, Verena K. Brändle, Jakob-Moritz Eberl, Sophia Wyatt, Kathrin Braun, Iman Metwally, Hajo G. Boomgaarden

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Abstract

This paper investigates the under-explored question of how migrants in so-called ‘transit countries’ make sense of migration aspirations. Drawing from recent scholarship on migration-related ambivalence, we focus on how people reflect on the past and present of their migration aspirations, employing a migrant-centered approach. Based on semi-structured interviews with refugees in Libya and Bosnia and Herzegovina as well as complementary expert interviews, we find that ambivalence, which (re-)shapes migration aspirations, is a necessary reaction to the structures of uncertainty installed in current European externalization measures beyond EU borders. By adopting a migrant-centered approach and taking into account the multidimensional and processual nature of ambivalence, our research contributes to a better understanding of migrants as self-critical and reflective actors facing the challenges of making decisions in situations of uncertainty; thus, ambivalence is produced in a dialectic interplay between migrants’ agency and the opportunities/limitations of changing structures that surround them which, in turn, informs the interplay between forward and backward migration aspirations.
Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies
Early online date26 Apr 2024
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 26 Apr 2024

Keywords

  • Migration aspirations
  • transit contexts
  • ambivalence
  • backward aspirations
  • Libya
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • migration governance

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