Libye

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Darfurian Livelihoods and Libya: Trade, Migration, and Remittance Flows in Times of Conflict and Crisis

Authors Helen Young, Abdalmonium Osman, Rebecca Dale
Year 2007
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 3
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1 Journal Article

The Abidat and Arabu: The Nigerian Migrants in Libya and International Migration Law

Authors Olawale Lawal
Year 2021
Journal Name LAJOHIS
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2 Journal Article

EU-Libya Cooperation on Migration: A Raw Deal for Refugees and Migrants?

Authors Sara Hamood
Year 2008
Journal Name Journal of Refugee Studies
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4 Journal Article

The Long-term Influence of a Short-lived Colony: Postcoloniality and Geopolitics of Energy and Migration Control in Libya

Authors Mathias Hatleskog Tjønn, Martin Lemberg-Pedersen
Year 2022
Book Title Postcoloniality and Forced Migration – Mobility, Control, Agency
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7 Book Chapter

What are the protection concerns for migrants and refugees in Libya?

Authors Claire Healy, Roberto Forin
Year 2017
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8 Policy Brief

Migration Across the Mediterranean: Shaping Italy-Libya Relations Over Time

Authors Mathias Hatleskog Tjønn, Maria Gabrielsen Jumbert
Year 2024
Book Title Migrations in the Mediterranean
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9 Book Chapter

The Politics of Egyptian Migration to Libya

Authors Gerasimos Tsourapas
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11 Journal Article

Smuggling, Trafficking, and Extortion: New Conceptual and Policy Challenges on the Libyan Route to Europe

Authors Katie Kuschminder, Anna Triandafyllidou
Year 2020
Journal Name Antipode
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12 Journal Article

Fin de régime et migrations en Libye : les enseignements juridiques d’un pays en feu

Authors Delphine PERRIN
Year 2011
Journal Name [Migration Policy Centre]
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13 Journal Article

The Libya–Italy migration corridor

Authors Daniela DeBono
Year 2020
Book Title Routledge Handbook of Migration and Development
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14 Book Chapter

CARIM – Migration Profile: Libya

Authors Anna DI BARTOLOMEO, Thibaut JAULIN, Delphine PERRIN
Year 2011
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15 Report

Racialized Impacts of Migration Governance in Mali

Authors Marie Deridder, Almamy Sylla
Year 2024
Journal Name Revue européenne des migrations internationales
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16 Journal Article

Labour migration dynamics in Libya

Authors Linda Cottone
Year 2020
Book Title Labour migration dynamics in Libya
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17 Book Chapter

Libya and African Migration to Europe

Authors Olubukola S. Adesina
Year 2021
Book Title African Migrants and the Refugee Crisis
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18 Book Chapter

Reconciliation with Qaddafi An Offer Refused

Authors David Gerbi
Year 2011
Journal Name JUNG JOURNAL-CULTURE & PSYCHE
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20 Journal Article

Regional responses to forced migration : the case of Libya

Authors Sonja NITA
Description
The 2011 Libyan civil war, part of the wider Arab Spring, triggered considerable population displacements. These displacements included both Libyans and third-country nationals fleeing the country by land, air and sea. Data available for spring/summer 2011 shows that an estimated 1,128,985 people left Libya to seek shelter in Tunisia, Egypt, Niger, Algeria, Chad and Sudan as well as in Malta and Italy. Research has, thus far, mainly focused on the response of the international community (UNHCR and IOM, above all), the European Union and individual countries in dealing with large numbers of displaced persons (Kelly and Wadud 2012, Fargues and Fandrich 2012, Tucci 2012, Forced Migration Review 2012). Less attention has been given to those regional entities of which Libya has been a member. These include: the African Union (AU), the League of Arab States (LAS), the Community of Sahel Saharan States (CEN-SAD), the Arab Maghreb Union (AMU), the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA) and the Organization for the Islamic Conference (OIC). The aim of this paper is, therefore, to shed light on the (actual and potential) role of these regional organizations in alleviating those fleeing from Libya.
Year 2013
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22 Report

Advocates, Implementers or Allies? NGOs between Humanitarian Borderwork and Migration Management in Libya

Authors Melissa Phillips
Year 2022
Journal Name Journal of Intercultural Studies
Citations (WoS) 1
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23 Journal Article

East Africa Migration Route Initiative. Gaps&Needs Analysis Project Country Report Libya, Ethiopia, Kenya

Authors International Centre for Migration Policy Development (ICMPD)
Description
As part of the East Africa Migration Route Initiative (EAMRI), the United Kingdom Home Office, with the support of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, had tasked the International Centre for Migration Policy Development (ICMPD) to implement the East Africa Migration Route Gaps and Needs Analysis project, to establish a clearer picture of migration flows and trends as well as migration management capacities and frameworks in place in East Africa. The project consisted of two phases: a desk research phase, concluded with the “East Africa Migration Route Report”, and a field research phase to validate and complete the findings of the preceding desk analysis. The “East Africa Migration Route Report” had recommended focussing the field research on three countries placed along the East Africa migration route – Ethiopia, Kenya and Libya - stating that they merited “further attention in the EU’s effort to understand migration flows in East Africa.”1 The report at hand is the result of the field research missions to Ethiopia, Kenya and Libya, which took place between December 2007 and February 2008. During the missions a broad range of stakeholders were consulted on the migration flows to/through/from, and migration trends in, Ethiopia, Kenya and Libya. Migration management capacities and needs of relevant authorities were also assessed.
Year 2008
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24 Report

The impact of trauma and daily hardships on the mental health of unaccompanied refugee minors detained in Libya

Authors Ilse Derluyn, Giacomo Orsini, Floor Verhaeghe, ...
Year 2023
Journal Name BJPsych Open
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26 Journal Article

Egypt's International Migration after the Revolution: Is There Any Change?

Authors Ayman Zohry
Year 2013
Journal Name Confluences Méditerranée
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28 Journal Article

Libyan Legislation on Labour: Political Tool or Legalization?

Authors Azza K. MAGHUR
Description
Libya with its 4,000 km of land and 1,700 km of coast frontiers is one of Africa’s main hubs for irregular migrants, especially those en route to Europe. A rich country with high oil revenues, Libya has, on its southern borders, poverty-stricken and unstable sub Saharan countries; and is an attractive destination for neighboring Arab states workers, seeking employment. Libyan foreign policy during the late eighties and the nineties, encouraged African and Arab irregular workers to come to Libya. Their presence was permissible. However, once Libya became an irregular migration hub and certain internal problems came to the surface relating to irregular migration, Libya discovered its lack of legal instruments to face this reality. Moreover, the reactivation of the Libyan private sector after more than a decade of a dominant public sector, led to disorder in the rapidly developing labour market. In labour market terms, Libyan legislative policy was reactive rather than strategic. The Libyan government, including the Ministry of Manpower, issued decisions to better organize the work market, while laws issued in the 1970s and 1980s are still in force and clogging up the system. Moreover, decisions dating from periods of Arab and African enthusiasm remain operative. All this led to discrepancies in Libyan legislation. Libya today is in need of strategic long-term legislative policy towards foreign workers in general, and those in the private sector in particular. Résumé Avec ses 4 000 kilomètres de frontières terrestres et 1 700 kilomètres de frontières côtières, la Libye est un pivot pour les migrants irréguliers, en particulier pour ceux en partance vers l’Europe. Pays riche du fait de ses revenus pétroliers, ses frontières méridionales sont bordées par des Etats subsahariens instables et enserrés dans la pauvreté, et elle constitue une destination attractive pour les travailleurs des pays arabes voisins à la recherche d’un emploi. La politique étrangère libyenne des années 80 et 90 encouragea les travailleurs irréguliers africains et arabes à venir dans le pays. Leur présence était tolérée. Cependant, lorsque la Libye devint un nœud de la migration irrégulière et que certains problèmes internes remontèrent à la surface en ce qui concerne la migration irrégulière, elle découvrit son manque d’instruments juridiques pour faire face à la réalité. De plus, la réactivation du secteur privé libyen après plus d’une décennie de domination du secteur public créa un désordre sur le marché du travail alors en développement rapide. En termes de marché du travail, la politique législative libyenne était plus réactive que stratégique. Des décisions visant une meilleure organisation du marché du travail ont été adoptées par le gouvernement libyen, y compris le ministère de la main d’œuvre, tandis que les lois des années 70 et 80 restent en vigueur et grèvent le système. Les décisions datant des périodes d’enthousiasme arabe et africain demeurent elles aussi opérantes. Tout ceci conduisit à des contradictions dans la législation libyenne. La Libye a aujourd’hui besoin d’une politique législative stratégique sur le long terme concernant les travailleurs étrangers en général, et ceux du secteur privé en particulier.
Year 2009
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29 Report

Highly-skilled Migration (Libya): Legal aspects

Authors Azza K. MAGHUR
Description
Libya, a country that gained independence in 1951, has known only two contradictory regimes: a monarchy from 1951-1969, and a revolution since 1969. With oil as its main source of revenue, and after ten years of UN backed-sanctions, in addition to a decade of public sector dominance, Libya suffers from both brain drain and brain waste. The active Libyan market of today, after its return to the international community, and given decades of economic and administrative instability, requires skilled and unskilled labour. Libya’s labour policies have always been motivated by politics. There has not been a labour strategy, and the need for skilled labour has been a constant in a rich country with only six million inhabitants.Libya today is country full of promise that offers opportunities to its own citizens. It is still, however, unable either to contain brain waste, or to stop brain drain, especially in the medical field. The private sector which has been reactivated after years of public sector dominance is hungry for labour and regulation is imminent. Economic activities, in infrastructure and building for example, need the labour market, private and public, to be properly regulated. La Libye, devenue indépendante en 1951, n’a connu que deux régimes opposés : une monarchie de 1951 à 1969 et une révolution depuis 1969. Avec le pétrole comme principale source de revenu, après dix ans de sanctions onusiennes, et une décennie de prédominance du secteur public, la Libye subit à la fois une fuite et un gaspillage des cerveaux. Le marché du travail libyen actuel requiert de la main d’oeuvre qualifiée et non qualifiée depuis son retour sur la scène internationale après des décennies d’instabilité économique et administrative. Les politiques de l’emploi libyennes ont toujours été motivées par la politique. En l’absence de stratégie de l’emploi, le besoin de main d’œuvre est une constante dans ce pays riche pourvu de seulement six millions d’habitants.La Libye d’aujourd’hui est un pays plein de promesses, porteur d’opportunités pour ses citoyens. Elle est cependant encore incapable de réduire le gaspillage des cerveaux et de stopper la fuite des cerveaux, surtout dans le domaine médical. Le secteur privé, réactivé après des décennies de domination publique, a faim de main d’œuvre et la régulation est imminente. Les activités économiques, dans les infrastructures ou le bâtiment par exemple, ont besoin d’un marché du travail, public comme privé, réglementé.
Year 2010
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30 Report

Caught in the Crossfire: Challenges to Migrant Protection in the Yemeni and Libyan Conflicts

Authors Danielle Flanagan
Year 2020
Journal Name Journal on Migration and Human Security
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32 Journal Article

Sudanese Migration to the New World: Socio‐economic Characteristics

Authors Rogaia M. Abusharaf
Year 1997
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 9
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33 Journal Article

Involuntary Return Migration and Reintegration. The Case of Ghanaian Migrant Workers from Libya

Authors Esi Akyere Mensah
Year 2014
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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34 Journal Article

Bordering practices

Authors MARTHE ACHTNICH
Year 2021
Journal Name American Ethnologist
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36 Journal Article

Soldiers of fortune: The future of Chadian fighters after the Libyan ceasefire

Authors Alexandre Bish
Description
Conflict zones are key hubs in the global criminal economy, and nowhere is this correlation more evident than in the Sahel and central Sahara, where the proliferation of armed actors and their involvement in many of the subregion’s plethora of illicit markets have contributed to cyclical instability in the region. In the Sahel and central Sahara, armed actor involvement in the region’s illicit markets have been key contributors to cyclical instability there. Chadian fighters have long been key actors within the constellation of armed groups active in the region, but the October 2020 ceasefire in Libya – and the ensuing drop in fighting – are reshaping the role that they play in regional illicit markets and stability dynamics. Chadian fighters first emerged as key actors challenging peace and security in Libya while fighting as mercenaries there after the fall of Qaddafi in 2011. However, the consolidation of their peacetime involvement in Sahelian illicit economies since mid-2020 poses a more enduring, widespread, and unpredictable form of instability. This report describes the typologies of Chadian fighters active in Libya and the central Sahara, and their role as mercenaries and enablers in the transnational mercenary trade in Libya’s second civil war. The Chadian government’s failure to reintegrate rebels after the war is then analyzed before exploring how this has led to Chadian fighters consolidating their involvement in criminal economies. Finally, the risks of this involvement and, in particular, the menace that Chadian fighters pose to border security in the region are presented. This report’s release is timed to coincide with the planned government-led ‘national dialogue’ which will discuss the future of rebel armed groups in Chad and should pave the way for elections. It makes the case for the need to provide a safe corridor for Chadian fighters to return to Chad to prevent further destabilisation of the wider Sahel and Central Sahara region.
Year 2021
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37 Report

Circular and return migration of Egyptian migrant workers in Libya

Authors Mohamed Elsayeh, Mohamed Elsayeh
Year 2024
Journal Name International Migration
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38 Journal Article

Dealing with Migrants in the Central Mediterranean Route: A Legal Analysis of Recent Bilateral Agreements Between Italy and Libya

Authors Andrea de Guttry, Francesca Capone, Emanuele Sommario
Year 2017
Journal Name International Migration
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39 Journal Article

Expanded Borders: Policies and Practices of Preventive Refoulement in Italy

Authors Chiara Marchetti
Book Title The Politics of International Migration Management
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40 Book Chapter

The role of the southern Libyan Saharan cities in building their relations with neighbouring countires

Authors Ali Jarad, Almokhtar Attwairi, Tarek Elaswed, ...
Year 2022
Journal Name Bulletin of the Serbian Geographical Society
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41 Journal Article

Migration after the Arab Spring

Authors Philippe FARGUES, Christine FANDRICH
Description
This paper provides a statistical assessment of migration before and after the uprisings in the Southern Mediterranean. It will review European and Arab state policies regarding migration and will ultimately encourage the factoring of the outcomes of the Arab Spring within migration policies on both shores of the Mediterranean. The assessment is based upon the most recent statistical data gathered directly from the competent offices in European Member States; from policy documents emanating from the European Union and concerned States; and from first-hand accounts from surveys conducted in Spring 2012 by scholars in six Arab countries (within Morocco, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Jordan and Lebanon) in collaboration with the Migration Policy Centre (MPC). Notably, migration to Europe has not been accelerated by the Arab Spring, apart from a short-lived movement from Tunisia, but has simply continued along previous trends. In sharp contrast, migration within the Southern Mediterranean has been deeply impacted by the events as outflows of migrants and refugees fled instability and violence in Libya and Syria.
Year 2012
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42 Report

Migrant Smuggling from Africa to Spain, Italy and Malta: A Comparative Overview

Authors Thanos Maroukis, Anna Triandafyllidou
Book Title Migrant Smuggling: Irregular Migration from Asia and Africa to Europe
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43 Book Chapter

Accumulation by immobilization: Migration, mobility and money in Libya

Authors Marthe Achtnich
Year 2021
Journal Name Economy and Society
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44 Journal Article

Power Relations and International Migration: The Case of Italy and Libya

Authors Emanuela Paoletti
Year 2010
Journal Name Political Studies
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46 Journal Article

Governing Through Scalar Elasticity: An Analysis of the Accountability Gap in Migration Control in the Central Mediterranean

Authors Kiri Olivia Santer
Year 2023
Journal Name SOCIAL & LEGAL STUDIES
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47 Journal Article

EU Neighbourhood Migration Report 2013

Authors Philippe FARGUES
Description
This report covers migration in 18 EU neighbouring countries, including: Algeria; Armenia; Azerbaijan; Belarus; Egypt; Georgia; Jordan; Lebanon; Libya; Mauritania; Moldova; Morocco; Palestine; Russia; Syria; Tunisia; Turkey and Ukraine. Each country report provides the most recent update on the demographic, legal, and socio-political aspects of both inward and outward migration stocks and flows.
Year 2013
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48 Report

'Terra promessa': migration and settler colonialism in Libya, 1911-1970

Authors Emanuele Ertola
Year 2017
Journal Name Settler Colonial Studies
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49 Journal Article

Reconsidering humanitarian advocacy through pressure points of the European ‘migration crisis’

Authors Dorothea Hilhorst, Maria Hagan, Olivia Quinn
Year 2020
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 3
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50 Journal Article

A Contested Asylum System: The European Union between Refugee Protection and Border Control in the Mediterranean Sea

Authors Silja Klepp
Year 2010
Journal Name European Journal of Migration and Law
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52 Journal Article

Invisible Crimes: Accountability for Crimes against Migrants in Libya

Authors Giulia Raimondo, Giulia Raimondo
Year 2023
Journal Name European Journal of Migration and Law
Citations (WoS) 1
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54 Journal Article

The commercialization of responsibility in European Union’s migration policy

Authors Natalia Szulc, Adam Szymaniak
Year 2021
Journal Name Sprawy Międzynarodowe
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56 Journal Article

A Contested Asylum System: The European Union between Refugee Protection and Border Control in the Mediterranean Sea

Authors Silja Klepp
Year 2010
Journal Name European Journal of Migration and Law
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57 Journal Article

Triangular migration diplomacy: the case of EU–Italian cooperation with Libya

Authors Michela Ceccorulli
Year 2022
Journal Name Italian Political Science Review/Rivista Italiana di Scienza Politica
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58 Journal Article

Inside wars : local dynamics of conflicts in Syria and Libya

Authors Luigi NARBONE, Agnès FAVIER, Virginie COLLOMBIER
Year 2016
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59 Book

The end of an affair? Libya and Sub-Saharan Africa

Authors Asteris Huliaras, Konstantinos Magliveras
Year 2011
Journal Name The Journal of North African Studies
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60 Journal Article

Transnational humanitarianism: blurring the boundaries of the Mediterranean in Libya

Authors Natalia Ribas-Mateos
Year 2021
Book Title Handbook on Human Security, Borders and Migration
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61 Book Chapter

Qadhafi's comeback: Libya and sub‐Saharan Africa in the 1990s

Authors Asteris Huliaras
Year 2001
Journal Name African Affairs
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63 Journal Article

Effects of Externalisation EU Migration Management in Africa and the Middle East

Principal investigator Cathrine Talleraas (Principal Investigator)
Description
This project examines the effects of the EU’s external migration management policies by zooming in on six countries: Jordan, Lebanon, Ethiopia, Senegal, Ghana and Libya. The countries represent origin, transit and destination countries for mixed migration flows, and differ in terms of governance practices, state capacities, colonial histories, economic development and migration contexts. Bringing together scholars working on different case countries and aspects of the migration policy puzzle, the EFFEXT project explores the broader landscape of migration policy in Africa and the Middle East
Year 2020
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64 Project

Seroprevalence of HBV, HCV & HIV Co-Infection and Risk Factors Analysis in Tripoli-Libya

Year 2014
Journal Name PLOS ONE
Citations (WoS) 13
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66 Journal Article

Socioeconomic Achievement Among Arab Immigrants in the USA: The Influence of Region of Origin and Gender

Authors Abdi M. Kusow, Kristine J. Ajrouch, Mamadi Corra
Year 2017
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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67 Journal Article

DEPORTED: The Right to Asylum at EU’s External Border of Italy and Libya1

Authors Rutvica Andrijasevic
Year 2010
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 38
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68 Journal Article

On firm Carthaginian ground: ethnic boundary fluidity and Chaucer's Dido

Authors Randy P. Schiff
Year 2015
Journal Name POSTMEDIEVAL-A JOURNAL OF MEDIEVAL CULTURAL STUDIES
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69 Journal Article

Bridgeheads of EU border externalisation? NGOs/CSOs and migration in Libya

Authors Paolo Cuttitta
Year 2023
Journal Name Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space
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71 Journal Article

Economies of transit: exploiting migrants and refugees in Indonesia and Libya

Authors Melissa Phillips, Antje Missbach
Year 2017
Journal Name International Journal of Migration and Border Studies
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72 Journal Article

Economies of transit: exploiting migrants and refugees in Indonesia and Libya

Authors Melissa Phillips, Antje Missbach
Year 2017
Journal Name International Journal of Migration and Border Studies
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73 Journal Article

Historical trauma and symptoms impacting United Arab Emirates migrant youth

Authors Susan Smith, Farah Nada
Year 2018
Journal Name Crossings: Journal of Migration & Culture
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74 Journal Article

HUMAN ADAPTATIONAL PATTERNS TO ARID ENVIRONMENTS IN NORTH AFRICA

Description
'The relationship between climate and culture is one of the most important areas of debate in the case of the Late Pleistocene, c.60,000-10,000 BP (years ago), when profound and frequently abrupt climatic changes coincided with significant human migrations and shifts in behavioural complexity. A major weakness in past research is that models of climate:people interactions in the Late Pleistocene have been based on regional data sets of very variable quality, so it is impossible to move beyond broad generalisations about how humans did or did not respond to climatic change. This is particularly the case in North Africa, the focus of the proposed project. There were certainly climate shifts, but they did not result in uniform environmental change: the peak of cold conditions c.18,000 BP was characterized by considerable aridity and steppe-like vegetation, but certain locations may have remained better-watered ‘rifugia’. Cultural shifts were also profound but not uniform: in the Maghreb, for example, ‘Iberomaurusian’ stone technologies continued to be used from c.24,000 BP right up to the end of the Pleistocene c.10,000 BP, whereas in Libya a distinctive Late Stone Age industry (‘Dabban’) was replaced by an ‘Oranian’ industry in some respects similar to the Maghreb Iberomaurusian c.15,000 BP. The relationships between shifts in climate, environment, and human behaviour therefore remain obscure. The proposed project will examine the stone industries of two contrasting case study regions in Libya where the results can be compared with high quality palaeoenvironmental and palaeoeconomic data. It will apply innovative methodologies to determine the likely significance of technological change in terms of cultural (social networks) and behavioural (subsistence) shifts. Integrating the various data sets will yield a nuanced perspective on human responses to climate change in North Africa in the Late Pleistocene, of wide relevance for Palaeolithic studies generally.'
Year 2011
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75 Project

The effect of settler farming on indigenous agriculture: Evidence from Italian Libya

Authors Mattia C. Bertazzini
Year 2022
Journal Name ECONOMIC HISTORY REVIEW
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76 Journal Article

Secret Language as a "Weapon of Defense": The Problem of Opacity in Italian Colonial Libya

Authors Nicco A. La Mattina
Year 2022
Citations (WoS) 2
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78 Journal Article

MNLF Hijrah: 1974–1996

Authors Carmen A. Abubakar
Year 1999
Journal Name Asian and Pacific Migration Journal
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79 Journal Article

EU border externalisation and security outsourcing: exploring the migration industry in Libya

Authors Agnese Pacciardi, Joakim Berndtsson
Year 2022
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
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80 Journal Article

Italian colonial psychiatry: outlines of a discipline, and practical achievements in Libya and the Horn of Africa

Authors Marianna Scarfone
Year 2016
Journal Name HISTORY OF PSYCHIATRY
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82 Journal Article

‘I’ll take two.’ Migration, terrorism, and the Italian military engagement in Niger and Libya

Authors Michela Ceccorulli, Fabrizio Coticchia
Year 2020
Journal Name Journal of Modern Italian Studies
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84 Journal Article

Multidimensional Threats and Military Engagement: The Case of the Italian Intervention in Libya

Authors Michela Ceccorulli, Fabrizio Coticchia
Year 2015
Journal Name Mediterranean Politics
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86 Journal Article

The EU‐Turkey‐'deal': Legal Challenges and Pitfalls

Authors Roman Lehner
Year 2018
Journal Name International Migration
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87 Journal Article

Migration diplomacy in the Global South: cooperation, coercion and issue linkage in Gaddafi’s Libya

Authors Gerasimos Tsourapas
Year 2017
Journal Name Third World Quarterly
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89 Journal Article

Sәdät, Migration, and Refugeeism as Portrayed in Ethiopian Song Lyrics

Authors Solomon Addis Getahun
Year 2011
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
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90 Journal Article

Slow Awakening? The Ethiopian Diaspora in the Netherlands, 1977–2007

Authors Jan Abbink
Year 2011
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
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93 Journal Article

Sədät, Migration, and Refugeeism as Portrayed in Ethiopian Song Lyrics

Authors Solomon Addis Getahun
Year 2006
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
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95 Journal Article

Information Sharing and Decision-Making: Attempts by Ghanaian Return Migrants to Enter through Libya

Authors Elizabeth Koomson-Yalley
Year 2021
Journal Name Social Inclusion
Citations (WoS) 1
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97 Journal Article

Africanus Princeps? The Emperor Caracalla and the Question of His African Heritage

Authors Alex Imrie
Year 2018
Journal Name Journal of Black Studies
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99 Journal Article
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