Célia Lamblin - Experiencing the Egyptian revolution from a distance

arton2059

ed. L'Harmattan / Movida - mobilités africaines, 2021
Foreword by Sarah Ben Néfissa

During the revolutionary process of 2011, Egyptians living in France, whether in Bordeaux, Marseille, Paris or Toulouse, broke down the identifications assigned to them and changed their migratory, family and professional plans. Based on a sociological approach to Egyptian migration to France, this book aims to understand the way in which an event of national scope has a more or less lasting influence on the individual trajectories of those who did not witness it directly. The author proposes to analyse the dynamics of migration in relation to a number of major themes in political sociology: remote electoral participation, collective action and involvement in associations.

Célia Lamblin is a research associate at Mesopolhis

Read also

kairos logo

Article by Stella Volpe: «From invisibility to representation. Difficulties, challenges and prospects of a novel experiment involving non-citizens, designed and carried out by the «Roman laboratory»» (K@iros magazine).

Dictionary of ecology and politics

Benoît Luczak and Christophe Traïni, contributions to the «Dictionnaire d'écologie politique» (Presses de Sciences Po, 2025)

COM_N117_Couv_Annonce_Redim

Article by Léna Haziza: «Rester, partir, circuler? La fabrique de l'absence et du «rester»: entre désirs individuels, solidarité familiale et transnationalisme» (Communications magazine)