Table des matières
3. A Review of the Literature and Research
- 3.1 The repatriation-peace nexus
- 3.2 Repatriation as a micro-level decision
- 3.2.1 The individual notion of “home”
- 3.2.2 The decision to stay or to return
- (a) Security-related factors
- (b) Economic factors
- (c) Social factors
- (d) Psycho-physical factors
- 3.3 Applicability of the theory to the Darfur case
5. Findings and analysis
- 5.1. The refugees’ notion of home
- (a) Darfur: our land, our home
- (b) The camp: locus of trust, locus of alienation
- Conclusion I
- 5.2 Refugees’ socio-economic ties
- (a) Relationships within the camp
- (b) Relationships with other camps and with Chadian communities
- (c) Relationships with people in Darfur
- (d) Trans-border movements
- Conclusion II
- 5.3 Perception of threat in Darfur
- (a) Physical insecurity and persistence of conflict
- (b) Presence of new settlers and land occupation
- (c) Institutionalized ethnic discrimination?
- (d) A mistrusted peace settlement
- Conclusion III
- 5.4 Perception of threat in eastern Chad
- (a) Political pressure
- (b) Camp restrictions and insecurity
- (c) Economic pressures
- Conclusions IV
- 5.4 Methodological and analytical limitations