Abstract

This paper addresses the relations between migrants, mobility, tactics, negotiation, and the contemporary definition of borders in the aftermath of 9/11.The empirical focus of this paper is how Brazilians from Alto Paranaiba journey through airports located in the Schengen area and in the British territory to London. As a main research orientation, I use the notion of journey as approached by mobility studies, where actions and skills remain an important link between the wayfarer and the social space in which s/he moves through, the embodied practice to how we grasp the world. Migrants deal and struggle against border regime, but they are not powerless social actors. They rather produce creative resistance to reinvent their journey through the surveillance apparatus, which manage and delimit places with targets and threats. In this process, I explore the notion of border crossing movement as a tactical mobility developed by migrants to overcome the border control imposed by governments in airports. The article was drawn through fieldwork conducted initially in London, between 2009 and 2013, and afterwards in Alto Paranaiba, during 2013. The ethnographic study consisted in semi-structured interviews, participant observation through snowball technique, which enabled me to access a considerable number of participants in these two regions explored. The argument that I develop is that migrants as social actors are part important in the dialogue produced between border crossing and border reinforcement.

Highlights

  • IntroductionIn much academic work on borders, the main emphasis of scholars has been on European Union (EU) surveillance patterns on the entry of migrants who can unexpectedly appear at the shores or airports of Europe

  • The argument that I develop is that migrants as social actors are part important in the dialogue produced between border crossing and border reinforcement

  • In much academic work on borders, the main emphasis of scholars has been on European Union (EU) surveillance patterns on the entry of migrants who can unexpectedly appear at the shores or airports of Europe

Read more

Summary

Introduction

In much academic work on borders, the main emphasis of scholars has been on European Union (EU) surveillance patterns on the entry of migrants who can unexpectedly appear at the shores or airports of Europe. I explore, in particular, how Brazilian migrants have journeyed and negotiated their mobility from Alto Paranaiba to London through airports located across the Schengen space and the UK borders. It is worth observing that while Goffman’s (1969) contributions are of crucial importance in understanding the performance adopted by migrants to negotiate their mobility through borders, Michel de Certeau (1984) concepts of tactics and strategies provide this study with a model that reveals how this dialogue between border-crossing movement and reinforcement occurs in practice. Embedded in this theoretical approach, this article argues that the mobility of Brazilians from Alto Paranaiba to London is a tactic of border-crossing movement which starts at the very first airport where they put their feet

Navigating through European airports
Travelling as a tourist
Small airports
Journeying through the porosities of ‘Fortress Europe’
It’s time to go!
Answering the riddles at the border control
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call