Lexington Books
Pages: 202
Trim: 6⅜ x 9¼
978-1-7936-0446-0 • Hardback • October 2019 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
978-1-7936-0447-7 • eBook • October 2019 • $105.50 • (£82.00)
Rose Jaji is senior lecturer in the Department of Sociology at the University of Zimbabwe.
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
In her recent book “Deviant Destinations: Zimbabwe and North to South Migration,” Rose Jaji, senior lecturer in Sociology at Harare University, pays attention to an unusual type of migration journey. . . Rose Jaji`s book gives an entirely new reading of Zimbabwe, showing how studying migration from the Global North to the Global South can give new insights into the common elements of migration motivations, the place of migrants in a host society and the pitfalls of a containerized understanding of the nation-state. . . . Jaji`s deconstruction of motivations, consequences and territorialisation of common migration containers is vital reading for anyone seeking nuanced debates that go beyond the norm.
— ALMA Reviews Blog
This study of Zimbabwe is a timely reminder that there is a lot more to migration than is provided for in the problematic assumptions and binary oppositions about who gets to move where, how, and on whose terms in an interconnected world that is more appropriately characterized by flexible mobility.— Francis B. Nyamnjoh, University of Cape Town
Refusing to deal with the obvious, Deviant Destinations is a brave and challenging piece forcing us to rethink global migration in contemporary times.— Vupenyu Dzingirai, University of Zimbabwe
This book on North-South migration to Zimbabwe is an original work on a most important topic. It turns the tables and breaks from the often referred to Global South/Global North divide. It is set in a solid transnational perspective whilst recognizing the role of the nation state in determining migration, and encourages critical and reflective thinking about migration at a time when it seems to be one of the most controversial issues. Highly recommended!— Tanja Kleibl, University of Applied Sciences Würzburg-Schweinfurt (FHWS)
Rose Jaji's Deviant Destinations has moved the needle in migration studies. This book is fresh, nuanced, informed, and full of the economic and political contradictions that represent the complexities of migration to and from Robert Mugabe's Zimbabwe. Jaji insists that Zimbabwe cannot be correctly viewed by simple polarities amidst its heroic and tragic demographic catastrophe.— Richard Lobban, Naval War College
Deviant Destinations is a valuable addition to debates on migration in Zimbabwe, which is synonymous with emigration.— Leben Nelson Moro, University of Juba