Description

Book Synopsis
In this book the author addresses the tenacity of the nation-state and how it continues to regulate transnational migration. She critiques assumptions on motivations embedded in the North-South dichotomy and shows how motivations transcend the regional divide with specific reference to non-missionary migrants in Zimbabwe in relation to South-North migrants. She also addresses Zimbabwe’s non-conformity to the conventional profile of a destination country. The circumstances of migrants from the global North living in Zimbabwe also challenge the migration lexicon in which countries and mobile populations are named and categorized in an either/or schematic. The author addresses spatial demarcation of space premised on the colonial dividend and neoliberalism’s influence on the organization and occupation of urban space. She specifically juxtaposes non-missionary migrants’ lives in the gated communities of Harare with those of missionaries in the low-income neighborhoods and at a rural hospital. She analyzes transnational outcomes in relation to the liminality that multi-sited belonging and cosmopolitanism engender.

Table of Contents
1 North-South Migration Trajectories 2 Migration and the Nation-State Classificatory Dilemma 3 The Deviant Destination 4 Pathways to Zimbabwe 5 Spatial Ordering of Status and Experience 6 Transnationalism, Paradoxes, and the Ambivalence of Liminality

Deviant Destinations: Zimbabwe and North to South

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Tue 23 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Rose Jaji

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      View other formats and editions of Deviant Destinations: Zimbabwe and North to South by Rose Jaji

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 22/10/2019
      ISBN13: 9781793604460, 978-1793604460
      ISBN10: 1793604460

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In this book the author addresses the tenacity of the nation-state and how it continues to regulate transnational migration. She critiques assumptions on motivations embedded in the North-South dichotomy and shows how motivations transcend the regional divide with specific reference to non-missionary migrants in Zimbabwe in relation to South-North migrants. She also addresses Zimbabwe’s non-conformity to the conventional profile of a destination country. The circumstances of migrants from the global North living in Zimbabwe also challenge the migration lexicon in which countries and mobile populations are named and categorized in an either/or schematic. The author addresses spatial demarcation of space premised on the colonial dividend and neoliberalism’s influence on the organization and occupation of urban space. She specifically juxtaposes non-missionary migrants’ lives in the gated communities of Harare with those of missionaries in the low-income neighborhoods and at a rural hospital. She analyzes transnational outcomes in relation to the liminality that multi-sited belonging and cosmopolitanism engender.

      Table of Contents
      1 North-South Migration Trajectories 2 Migration and the Nation-State Classificatory Dilemma 3 The Deviant Destination 4 Pathways to Zimbabwe 5 Spatial Ordering of Status and Experience 6 Transnationalism, Paradoxes, and the Ambivalence of Liminality

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