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EU Cooperation and Migration Policy Development in West-Africa

Africa
Migration
Asylum
Leonie Jegen
Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Leonie Jegen
Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Ilke Adam
Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Florian Trauner
Vrije Universiteit Brussel

Abstract

European policy-makers have, since the early 2000s, increasingly turned to cooperation with so-called migrant-sending and transit countries as the policy of choice for migration management (Boswell 2003; Lavenex 2006). Scholars have scrutinised implementation of respective instruments in the external dimension of the EU's and member-states' migration policy, id est readmission agreements (Apedoju et al, 2009; Cassarino, 2007, …), 'mobility partnerships' (Reslow and Vink, 2015), informal 'regional consultative processes' on migration (Thouez and Channac, 2006), cooperation on return through memoranda of understanding, and police cooperation among others (Cassarino, 2010; El Quadim 2014). However, this growing body of research focuses very little, or only indirectly, on the perspective and agency of migrant-sending countries in the Global South and the impact of the EU cooperation schemes on migrant-sending countries. This paper tries to address this double research gap by showing how EU migration cooperation impacts differently on the regulation of migration in two West-African countries, Ghana and Senegal. The paper explains the differentiated impact by the varying degrees of politicization of migration within Ghana and Senegal, the different postcolonial ties and divergent interests of both countries in the internal regulation of migration.