Factors Underlying Return Migration Decisions among Nigerian Victims of 2019 Xenophobic Violence in South Africa

Author:

Tade Oludayo12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Ibadan Criminology and Victimology Unit, Department of Sociology Nigeria Ibadan

2. University of Ibadan Diaspora and Transnational Studies Unit, Institute of African Studies Nigeria Ibadan

Abstract

Abstract Studies on xenophobic violence have mainly focused on their causes and effects, but have yet to probe how victimisation experiences of xenophobia trigger migration intentions and actual practices. In a balance of tales, I examine how families contributed to staying put/return decisions by Nigerian migrants in South Africa following the September 2019 xenophobic violence. The study asks: to what extent do family facilitate and/or contribute to the decision to return? And how do return strategies unveil the centrality of family in taking migration decisions? Data emerged through online interviews with Nigerian immigrants in South Africa who stayed put, and six family members in Nigeria were reached through snowball sampling. This was supplemented with secondary interviews conducted with Nigerian returnees in three National newspapers (The Punch, Vanguard, Nigerian Tribune and The Nation newspapers). Findings show the centrality of family in both migration intentions, staying-put, and the actual practices of Nigerian victims of xenophobia in South Africa.

Publisher

Brill

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Sociology and Political Science,History,Language and Linguistics,Cultural Studies

Reference45 articles.

1. ‘I Don’t Want to Have a Separated Home’: Reckoning Family and Return Migration Among Married Nigerians in China;Adebayo, Oluwatoyin

2. Immigrants Exclusion and Insecurity in Africa: Co-ethnic Strangers;Adida, Claire

3. Xenophobia: Our South African Classmates Bully, Tell us to Leave their Country – Nigerian Pupils;Afeez, Hanafi

4. Ajobi and Ajogbe: Variations on the Theme of Sociation;Akiwowo, Akinsola

5. Transnational Families in the Era of Global Mobility;Baldassar, Lorreta

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