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E-raamat: Forced Migration, Masculinities, and Vulnerabilities in the Mediterranean: Refugee Men on the Margins of Europe

(University of Bradford, UK)
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Forced Migration, Masculinities, and Vulnerabilities in the Mediterranean

explores the role of intersectional power hierarchies and the social reproduction of vulnerability in shaping forced migrant men’s embodied realities of suffering along the Central Mediterranean migration route (CMR), which connects sub-Saharan Africa to Sicily via Libya.

Based on life-history interviews and observational research collected from sub-Saharan international protection-holders and seekers in Sicily, the book expands our understanding of the violence-migration nexus by exploring refugee men’s gendered mobilities. Participants’ narratives of gendered embodiment within the trans-Mediterranean illegality industry are used to shed light on the violence continuum produced by their marginalised position within locally salient hierarchies of masculinities across different migration stages. Following the ethnographic encounter between the researcher and participants in the racialised landscape of the Mediterranean migration ‘crisis’, the performance of competent manhood emerges as a crucial narrative site where forced migrant men can contest their protracted experiences of marginalisation and reclaim subjectivity. Overall, the book views the relationships between forced migration, masculinities and vulnerabilities as a locus which reveals participants’ neglected social welfare needs and demands in postcolonial Europe.

Forced Migration, Masculinities, and Vulnerabilities in the Mediterranean

appeals to those with research interests in migration, gender, sexuality, postcoloniality, race, ethnicity, European studies, and humanitarianism.



This book explores the role of intersectional power hierarchies and the social reproduction of vulnerability in shaping forced migrant men's embodied realities of suffering along the Central Mediterranean migration route (CMR), which connects Sub-Saharan Africa to Sicily via Libya.

Arvustused

Reporting on methodologically rigorous research Marco Palillo provides a theoretically informed, and wonderfully readable, account of men performing masculinity through refugee journeys. The critical intersectional interrogation of gender, power and vulnerability painstakingly illuminates people and experiences that are often misunderstood and misrepresented.

Gayle Letherby, Universities of Plymouth, Greenwich, Bath

Introduction: Forced migrant men on the margins of Europe
Chapter
1.
Forced migrant men as vulnerable bodies
Chapter
2. Researching masculinities,
vulnerabilities, and forced migration during the Mediterranean migration
crisis
Chapter
3. A route to manhood: Masculinity, vulnerability, and the
inception of forced migration
Chapter
4. Lost in between: Dangerous
adventures and vulnerable gendered mobilities in Libya
Chapter
5. Men on
the run: Black masculinities in the Libyan illegality industry
Chapter
6.
Men, interrupted: The institutionalisation of vulnerability in Sicilian
refugee centres
Chapter
7. A continuum of intersectional vulnerabilities in
refugee mens narratives Conclusions
Marco Palillo is a Senior Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Greenwich, UK. They have a PhD in Social Policy from the London School of Economics (LSE) and have held teaching positions at Sciences Po Paris, LSE, and the University of Bradford.