Precarious Emplacement in Croatia: Conceptualising More-Than-Transient Migration on the Balkan Route Cover Image

Precarious Emplacement in Croatia: Conceptualising More-Than-Transient Migration on the Balkan Route
Precarious Emplacement in Croatia: Conceptualising More-Than-Transient Migration on the Balkan Route

Author(s): Igor Petričević
Subject(s): Regional Geography, Migration Studies, Socio-Economic Research, Asylum, Refugees, Migration as Policy-fields
Published by: Institut za migracije i narodnosti
Keywords: Balkan route; Croatia; migrants; transit migration; (im)mobilities; precarious emplacement;

Summary/Abstract: The article argues that the dynamic of migration on the Balkan route is changing into something more than transit. Croatia is presented as a case in point of a site where former migration aspirations are redefined as migrants encounter various types of bordering mechanisms that decelerate migration and begin developing relations with other residents. We argue that the dynamic of mobility and immobility and the ways it entangles localities en route are crucial for understanding the changing migration patterns in the Balkans. We overview concepts such as “stuckness”, “waiting”, “permanent temporariness”, “limbo”, and “liminality”, which describe the ways in which migrants navigate between temporary and permanent states of movement and residence. Additionally, the article develops the concept of “precarious emplacement” in order to move beyond transit and to capture the ambiguities between moving and staying, temporariness and permanence, and inclusion and exclusion. The concept highlights that the practices related to settling, along with the social interactions with other residents associated with them, occur in conditions of uncertainty and social marginalisation. Precarious emplacement encompasses the ways precarity permeates migrants’ experiences and the fabric of post-war and postsocialist urban spaces and relations they move through and come to inhabit. The article concludes by arguing that, given the heterogeneity of migrants’ life trajectories, the concept of a “transit migrant” may obscure the vulnerabilities migrants experience during periods of immobility, and it advocates for a more nuanced conceptual approach.

  • Issue Year: 2023
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 57-80
  • Page Count: 24
  • Language: English
Toggle Accessibility Mode