MADAR Publications

Please find additional MADAR publications in French and Arabic

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Migrant Workers in Algeria - A Journey of Looking for a Safe and Hopeful Haven: Past, Reality and Dreams
Soumia Bouchouk, Hanane Mansour and Khaled Menna (translated by Habiba Sellami)

Bouchouk S., Mansour H. and Menna K. (2024) Migrant Workers in Algeria - A Journey of Looking for a Safe and Hopeful Haven: Past, Reality and Dreams

The interviews, conducted by a team of researchers from the Center for Research in Applied Economics for Development, fall within the MADAR work package, which addresses the issue of the integration of migrants into the informal economy in Algeria. This booklet has been prepared in collaboration with researchers and photographic artists. The booklet collects accounts and photos of immigrants of different nationalities. The migrants expressed their appreciation for the initiative and saw it as a way to express their opinions. They shared their experiences regarding migration, its causes, arriving in Algeria, and the process of searching for work.

Summary: Study of the Assessment of Sub-Saharan Migrant Women’s Access to Reproductive Health Rights in Algeria: Case of Oran and Bechar 2022

Dahmani S., Hachem A., Benabed A. and Tadjeddine A. (2024) Study of the Assessment of Sub-Saharan Migrant Women’s Access to Reproductive Health Rights in Algeria: Case of Oran and Bechar 2022.

The study deals with Sub-Saharan migrant women’s access to reproductive health rights in Oran and Bechar. It sets out to assess the state of sub-Saharan migrant women’s reproductive health in Algeria, through a description of their health and an exploration of the social rationales that come into play and influence access to reproductive healthcare. This could reinforce civil society actors’ ability to act and encourage healthcare professionals to provide care without stigma or discrimination against migrant people.

This is a summary of the study. To read the full study in French, click here.

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Lahlou, M., Jamal, B. (2024) Guide of Policies and Applicable Laws in Morocco Relating to Immigrants and Refugees and Their Implementation

City of Welcome and Transit © MMC

City of welcome and transit - Migrants’ and refugees’ livelihoods and migration projects in Sousse, Tunisia
Dr Ann-Christin Zuntz

MMC (2024). City of welcome and transit: Migrants’ and refugees’ livelihoods and migration projects in Sousse, Tunisia. Available at: mixedmigration.org

Sousse, the third-largest city in Tunisia, is a sanctuary for migrants who have encountered violence and discrimination and is notable for its municipality’s progressive stance on migration management. This research report seeks to fill a research gap on the experience of migrants and refugees in Sousse and provide an evidence base to better support these populations. It draws on surveys with 200 Sub-Saharan African migrants and refugees, and qualitative interviews and focus group discussions with Sub-Saharan African, Arab, and European refugees, migrants, and local key stakeholders.

Please click here to download the report from the Mixed Migration Centre website:

"Compromise and complicity: partnership and interdependence in a global challenges research collaboration"
Mariangela Palladino, Laura Jeffery, Dounia Benslimane, and Olfa Arfaoui

Palladino, M., Jeffery, L., Benslimane, D., & Arfaoui, O. (2023). Compromise and complicity: partnership and interdependence in a global challenges research collaboration. Global Social Challenges Journal (published online ahead of print 2023).

To access the full article please click on the link below:

https://doi.org/10.1332/27523349Y2023D000000001

*Abstract*

This article contributes to debates on international collaborations by examining contradictions between the decolonial turn and the UK’s Global Challenges Research Fund which imposed Global North leadership on Global South partners. Through the lenses of compromise and complicity, the article explores how collaborators strive to work together equitably within the constraints of a UK government Official Development Assistance funding scheme. Drawing on focus group discussions with members of a research team, the article traces, first, their engagement with political and institutional constraints and, second, their articulation of collaborative compromise and productive complicity. The article foregrounds the generative potential of complicity as a productive concept that can help partners to navigate the challenges of interdependence and partnership entailed in North–South, South–South, cross-sector and interdisciplinary collaboration.

Photo taken from a rooftop in the neighbourhood of Maadid in the city of Rabat, Morocco, which hosts migrant communities. Credit: Sebastien Bachelet 2012

Press the Link icon to see the full report.

Abdeslam ZIOU ZIOU; Mehdi AZDEM, D.; Abdessamad KHADIRI; Oumayma AGHZERE; Younes TALAA (2023)

The report was researched, produced and written by a team of five researchers/field actors consisting of: two leading researchers, Abdeslam ZIOU ZIOU, anthropologist and independent researcher, and Mehdi AZDEM, D. in cultural communication and expert in cultural policy issues, who have worked for the last ten years within several Moroccan NGOs that campaign for human and cultural rights. Three junior researchers: Abdessamad KHADIRI, PhD student in urban sociology at Tetouan University who is interested in urban sustainability, Oumayma AGHZERE, a master’s student in anthropology at Laval University, and Younes TALAA, an associative actor and social worker, working with migrants and refugees at an NGO in the city of Tangier.

The project was conceived by Dr Sébastien Bachelet (University of Manchester) and Prof. Laura Jeffery (University of Edinburgh), both researchers in social anthropology, and supervised by Dounia Benslimane, a consultant on cultural projects development.