Persistent URL of this record https://hdl.handle.net/1887/77742
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- Part I: Chapter 2
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- Part I: Chapter 3
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- Part I: Chapter 4
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- Part II: Chapter 5
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- Part II: Chapter 6
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- Part II: Chapter 7
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- Part II: Chapter 8
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- Part III: Chapter 9
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- References
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- Summary in Dutch
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- Summary in English
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- Summary in French
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- Curriculum Vitae_Appendices
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- Propositions
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In Collections
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Conflict (im)mobiles : biographies of mobility along the Ubangi River in Central Africa
conflict. Based on personal narratives of those who move across borders within and beyond the
Central African region, this thesis is an ethnography of mobility. By taking mobility as its axiom and
placing the lives of people on the move at its centre, the goal of this thesis is twofold. On the one
hand, it contests fixed (national) borders and defies static historical readings of Central Africa. On the
other hand, it investigates how the multiple trajectories of individuals in Central African give form to
the mobility paradigm. There are many avatars of the conflict mobile, the CAR (Central African Republic) refugee-students in Kinshasa (DR Congo), on whom the empirical part of this thesis is based, form only one. It is these students’ journeys, their life stories and means of fending for themselves, as well as their dreams and frustrations, that...Show moreConflict mobiles are individuals whose mobility—and lack of mobility—is informed by violence and
conflict. Based on personal narratives of those who move across borders within and beyond the
Central African region, this thesis is an ethnography of mobility. By taking mobility as its axiom and
placing the lives of people on the move at its centre, the goal of this thesis is twofold. On the one
hand, it contests fixed (national) borders and defies static historical readings of Central Africa. On the
other hand, it investigates how the multiple trajectories of individuals in Central African give form to
the mobility paradigm. There are many avatars of the conflict mobile, the CAR (Central African Republic) refugee-students in Kinshasa (DR Congo), on whom the empirical part of this thesis is based, form only one. It is these students’ journeys, their life stories and means of fending for themselves, as well as their dreams and frustrations, that stand at the core of this thesis. By acknowledging the role of the people (including artists) with whom researchers produce knowledge, this thesis finally invites the reader to ‘un-border’ by looking at the field, and academia, through a mobile lens.Show less
- All authors
- Wilson Janssens, M.C.
- Supervisor
- Bruijn, M.E. de; Mous, M.P.G.M.
- Committee
- Schrover, M.L.J.C.; Rowlands, M.J.; Ayimpam, S.
- Qualification
- Doctor (dr.)
- Awarding Institution
- Institute for History, Faculty of Humanities, Leiden University
- Date
- 2019-09-11
Funding
- Sponsorship
- NWO (W01.70.600.001)