Diasporas, Development and Peacemaking in the Horn of Africa: Africa Now
Editat de Liisa Laakso, Petri Hautaniemien Limba Engleză Paperback – 13 aug 2014
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781783600977
ISBN-10: 1783600977
Pagini: 248
Dimensiuni: 138 x 216 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Zed Books
Seria Africa Now
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1783600977
Pagini: 248
Dimensiuni: 138 x 216 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Zed Books
Seria Africa Now
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Notă biografică
Liisa Laakso is professor and dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Helsinki. Previously she held the UNESCO Chair in Development and International Cooperation at the University of Jyväskylä.Petri Hautaniemi is a former senior researcher in development studies at the Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Helsinki. His dissertation in social anthropology was on Somali child migration and young men, and he has published a number of articles on related themes.He currently works as a senior adviser in the Department of Development Policy at the Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Cuprins
Introduction: Diasporas for peace and development - Petri Hautaniemi and Liisa Laakso Part one: Contextualising the Horn of Africa and the diaspora 1. Diaspora and multi-level governance for peace - Liisa Laakso 2. Regional political history and the production of diasporas - Guenther Schlee Part two: Case studies from the Horn of Africa 3. Rebuilding Somaliland through economic and educational engagement - Markus Virgil Hoehne and Mohamed Hassan Ibrahim 4. The Somali diaspora in conflict and peacebuilding: the Peace Initiative Programme - Mahdi Abdile 5. The 2007 delegation of the Muslim diaspora to Ethiopia - Dereje Feyissa 6. The Ethiopian diaspora and the Tigray Development Association - Bahru Zewde, Gebre Yntiso and Kassahun Berhanu Part three: European approaches to diaspora engagement 7. Interaction between Somali organizations and Italian and Finnish development actors - Petra Mezzetti, Valeria Saggiomo and Päivi Pirkkalainen 8. Approaches to diaspora engagement in the Netherlands - Giulia Sinatti 9. Norwegian collaboration with diasporas - Rojan Ezzati and Cindy Horst Afterword - Petri Hautaniemi, Liisa Laakso and Mariko Sato
Recenzii
The enriching volume presents a stimulating overview of the varied positions that members of diasporas hold - such as peacebuilders, investors and civic members - as well as extant gaps related to the study of diasporas, including theoretical frameworks and host country institutional incorporation and engagement.
This collection successfully translates the nebulous term "diaspora" into precise human and policy terms. The case studies by African and European scholars generate new insights into both the potential and the limitations of "diaspora engagement" policies. The authors' clear conceptual and empirical analyses focus on the dynamic linkages between migrants from the Horn of Africa and Europe. These studies will be of value to students of migration, development and conflict, and the findings should inform donors as well as European and African policy-makers.
While focused on the Horn of Africa, this volume has relevance far beyond that region, as increasing scholarly and policy attention focuses on the developmental role of diaspora and migration. It draws together an impressive array of experts in the region and its diaspora, and adds complexity and nuance to contemporary debates of great significance in our transnational times.
This carefully crafted collection not only provides a novel insight into the role of diaspora networks in the Horn of Africa and various European host countries, it is also a highly valuable contribution to the field of peace and conflict studies in general, as it lays out the case for a more nuanced approach to the role of diaspora networks in the process of both crafting peace and sustaining wars. As such it is highly recommended.
This nuanced collection both identifies and transcends a theoretical vacuum in international and regional relations: how varieties of transnational communities or networks contribute to multilevel governance in a trio of somewhat fragile states in the Horn of Africa. Its comparative analyses of diasporas, religions and remittances go beyond realism and romanticism to juxtapose and advance conflict, development, migration and security studies in a way which resonates far beyond Africa and Europe.
This collection successfully translates the nebulous term "diaspora" into precise human and policy terms. The case studies by African and European scholars generate new insights into both the potential and the limitations of "diaspora engagement" policies. The authors' clear conceptual and empirical analyses focus on the dynamic linkages between migrants from the Horn of Africa and Europe. These studies will be of value to students of migration, development and conflict, and the findings should inform donors as well as European and African policy-makers.
While focused on the Horn of Africa, this volume has relevance far beyond that region, as increasing scholarly and policy attention focuses on the developmental role of diaspora and migration. It draws together an impressive array of experts in the region and its diaspora, and adds complexity and nuance to contemporary debates of great significance in our transnational times.
This carefully crafted collection not only provides a novel insight into the role of diaspora networks in the Horn of Africa and various European host countries, it is also a highly valuable contribution to the field of peace and conflict studies in general, as it lays out the case for a more nuanced approach to the role of diaspora networks in the process of both crafting peace and sustaining wars. As such it is highly recommended.
This nuanced collection both identifies and transcends a theoretical vacuum in international and regional relations: how varieties of transnational communities or networks contribute to multilevel governance in a trio of somewhat fragile states in the Horn of Africa. Its comparative analyses of diasporas, religions and remittances go beyond realism and romanticism to juxtapose and advance conflict, development, migration and security studies in a way which resonates far beyond Africa and Europe.