Becoming middle class : young people's migration between urban centres in Ethiopia

Author(s)
    • Breines, Markus Roos
Bibliographic Information

Becoming middle class : young people's migration between urban centres in Ethiopia

Markus Roos Breines

(Globalization, urbanization and development in Africa)

Palgrave Macmillan, c2021

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book is an ethnography of urban-to-urban migration and its role in middle-class formation in Ethiopia. Through an examination of the intersections and tensions between physical movement and social mobility, it considers how young Tigrayan people's migration between urban centres made them distinct from both international migrants and non-migrants. Based on fieldwork in Adigrat and Addis Ababa, it focuses on these young people's notions of progress, experiences of higher education and ethnic tensions to demonstrate how their movements enabled them to enhance their economic, social and symbolic capital while their cultural capital remained largely unchanged. The book provides new insights into the opportunities and constraints for upward social mobility and argues that the emergence of shared characteristics among urban-to-urban migrants led to the formation of a group that can be described as a middle class in Ethiopia.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction.- Chapter 2 Pursuing progress.- Chapter 3 Higher education and economic mobility.- Chapter 4 Being educated.- Chapter 5 Managing enhanced capital.- Chapter 6 Ethnic hierarchies.- Chapter 7 A middle class rooted in urban-to-urban migration.- Postscript.

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