000 01531cam a2200241 4500500
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041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aPliez, Olivier
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aNomads Yesterday, Nomads Today
260 _c2006.
500 _a73
520 _aThe Africans who migrate towards the Maghreb and Europe via the Sahara since 1990 do not reactivate the old caravan roads. Rather, these movements fit into the continuity of the migratory flows from the Sahel towards Libya, which are both older and more significant as far as number is concerned, and yet lesser known. Dissociating these two movements makes it possible to understand better how the contemporary trans-Saharan migrations quicklyreach that extensive level. From the example a vast space between Libya, Chad and Sudan, we will try to understand how the nomads of yesterday and those of today live in cities created by the States, and how urban functions and identities are redefined by the movement. It is the entire geography of the partitioned Sahara that is called into question by these new circulations, as well as a better understanding of a network-like Sahara.
690 _aChad
690 _ainternational migration
690 _aThe Sahara
690 _aSudan
690 _atransnationaltrade
690 _anomads
690 _aLibya
786 0 _nAnnales de géographie | o 652 | 6 | 2006-12-01 | p. 688-707 | 0003-4010
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-annales-de-geographie-2006-6-page-688?lang=en
999 _c137647
_d137647