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About the authors
Iman Hashim is an assistant professor at the Department of International Relations, Istanbul Kültür University. She has worked on
children’s independent migration from rural north-eastern Ghana
to rural and urban central Ghana. Her current work builds on longterm child-centred ethnographic research undertaken in a farming
community in north-eastern Ghana, which examined how boys and
girls spend their time, the work that they do and their experiences of
education. It paid particular attention to the role that children play
in households’ livelihoods strategies, the nature of inter and intragenerational relations, and the negotiations and decision-making
processes associated with boys’ and girls’ various activities. She has
also worked for national and international non-governmental organizations as a programme and research officer.
Dorte Thorsen is a teaching fellow at the Department of Geography
and Environmental Science, University of Reading. She has done
ethnographic research with children and youth migrating from
the Bisa region in south-eastern Burkina Faso to Ouagadougou
and Abidjan and with their rural families in some twenty villages.
Raising methodological questions about the way in which children’s
and youth’s agency can be studied beyond a narrow focus on verbal
negotiations, her research theorizes decision-making processes
linked with young migrants’ performance of identities, urban labour
relations and the enactment of relatedness. She has published book
chapters and policy papers based on this research, and articles in the
journals Migrations & Hommes, Forum for Development Studies and the
Journal for Comparative Family Studies.
Child Migration in Africa
Iman Hashim and Dorte Thorsen
Zed Books
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Child Migration in Africa was first published in association with the
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Copyright © Iman Hashim and Dorte Thorsen 2011
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Contents
Maps | vi Preface | vii
1
Introduction: interrogating childhood and migration . . . . . . 1
2
Contexts of migration. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
3
Choosing to move: the reasons for rural children’s migration . . 42
4
Journeys and arrivals: introductions to new social worlds . . . . 65
5
Navigating migrant life: processes of constructing identities . . 85
6
Moving on . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111
Notes | 128
Bibliography | 132
Index | 145
Maps
2.1 The research areas in West Africa . . . . . . 22
4.1 Amadou’s travel route . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
vi
Preface
This book addresses the issue of children’s independent migration in West
Africa. The term children’s independent migration is increasingly used in the
literature, including our own, to refer to the movement of individuals who are
under the age of eighteen, and who are not coerced or tricked into moving by a
third person, but who migrate voluntarily and separately from their parents. This
definition, however, incorporates a number of concepts and ideas that require
some scrutinizing. First, questions arise regarding when children are ‘children’
and when they are ‘youth’, as well as whether girls and boys are labelled as ‘children’ or ‘youth’ in the same way. International conventions, such as the United
Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), define anyone below the
age of eighteen as a child. However, labelling in legal definitions, which for
practical reasons is tied to chronological age, is one thing, but how appropriate
is this for rural peoples in the West African savannah, whose conceptualization
of age is embedded in social relations and generational hierarchies?
Second, the idea of children migrating independently and separately from
their parents brings up two significant issues when speaking of societies where
kinship and social networks are important parameters in people’s lives. One
concerns who child migrants’ ‘parents’ are. The implicit assumption is that
they are only the birth parents, but is this necessarily the case in societies
where several adults may behave like fathers and mothers and have claims
on and obligations to children? The inquiry into parenthood also necessitates
a consideration of who the ‘parents’ are if a child is left behind when birth
parents migrate, and who they are if children travel with an adult who may not
be a birth parent but may be considered a parent, or even one who is not. The
second issue relates to the voluntary nature of the migration; is the implicit
corollary of not being coerced or tricked into travelling that children migrate
autonomously? The notion of ‘voluntary’ foregrounds children’s agency, but this
poses the question: to what extent can they choose to migrate or not – especially
if parents in the larger sense take charge of their journey or ask them to come?
Other questions concern what constraints children experience if they wish to
migrate, and whether girls and boys have the same opportunities for moving
and/or for staying.
Finally, the concept of migration may suggest a narrow focus on geographical
relocation, and/or on numbers and flows of child migrants. Conceptualizing
migration as one among several forms of mobility leads us to raise a set of
vii
questions that move us beyond dichotomies frequently evident in the analysis
of spatial movement; in particular those of rural versus urban, forced versus
voluntary, and traditional versus modern. Our questions touch on how children
and young people themselves understand child migration and on children’s
experiences as migrants, on how adults understand it, how these understandings and experiences by young and old are gendered, and how they are enacted
and contested. Importantly, the concept of mobility also compels us to interrogate sedentarist approaches to social life that lead to assumptions regarding
children’s migration resulting from family rupture and/or social breakdown.
In order to explore the many facets of children’s independent migration
we use the stories told by young migrants, who were either under eighteen or
had left on their first migration before they were eighteen (insofar as we can
gauge this, since many children did not know their precise chronological age).
These stories were produced in interviews and conversations with children at
migration destinations in Ghana, Burkina Faso and Côte d’Ivoire, and with
children in rural villages in what was then the Bawku East district of the Upper
East Region of Ghana and Pays Bisa in the Région Centre-est of Burkina Faso.
Adults in these locations also offered their views on children’s migration and
on childhood in general in interviews and conversations. In addition to these
child-centred and multi-sited research activities, which we carried out in Ghana
in 2004 (Iman Hashim) and in Burkina Faso and Côte d’Ivoire between 2005
and 2008 (Dorte Thorsen), we have each carried out ethnographic fieldwork
in the rural communities from where some of or all the child migrants in our
subsequent studies originate. In Ghana, this involved child-centred research in
a farming village in the north-east in 2000/01, which examined how boys and
girls spend their time, the work they do and their experiences of education, as
well as the negotiations and decision-making processes associated with boys’
and girls’ various activities. In Burkina Faso, the research was with married
women and men in a small farming village in the south-east in 2001/02. This
field study explored how rural women strategize, choose and make decisions,
and brought to light many invisible facets of the multiple social arenas that
are important sources of symbolic and material resources as well as sites of
obligation for women at different points in their lives.
Our approach to social relations, negotiation and decision-making processes
is rooted in feminist work on conceptualizing household behaviour, power relations and gender differences, among others. It also stresses an important
aspect of post-structural qualitative analysis, in that we do not represent only
a generalized picture of why and how children migrate, because this would
only reveal part of the story. There is a tendency to theorize poor children from
developing countries, and especially those such as independent child migrants,
who are in circumstances particularly challenging to universal ideals regarding what children should properly be doing, as muted victims; just as ‘Third
viii
ix
Preface
World’ women were theorized in the past. Adopting a feminist approach helps
us deconstruct such representations in order to present a more nuanced and
multifaceted understanding of children’s lives in West Africa. While children’s
and youth’s stories about their migration are at the core of our analysis, the
feminist approach encourages us to interrogate what these stories tell us about
the range of choices children have, how girls and boys are constrained and
enabled differently, and how childhood is socially constituted locally.
Listening to what young migrants have to say about their own circumstances
and refuting the almost automatic presentation of child migrants as victims
does not imply romanticizing their lives. Rather it requires representing the
complexities of their lives and foregrounding their concerns, actions and strategies. This is especially important because powerful normative ideals regarding
what childhood is shape outsiders’ views of children’s independent migration.
Through this lens, children are viewed as victims, not as migrants in their own
right. This often accounts for our own experiences when presenting material
showing children’s participation in decisions surrounding migration and work,
where we are often practically accused of advocating child trafficking and the
exploitation of children. Another allegation encountered, when talking about
young male migrants in their teens, is that when we describe how they deal
with being cheated of their wages, we offer a naive representation of innocence,
when it is assumed they are likely to engage in criminal activities and gangs.
In this book, we would like to tell a story that challenges people to rethink
these preconceived ideas. For those readers who are already aware of the multiplicity of childhood, and the capacities and capabilities of children, we hope
to add to the growing body of research that illuminates this.
Our objective is to unpack children’s migration and show the different ways
that young people can be migrants. Exploring how the categories of children
and youth are demarcated among the rural communities with whom we work in
West Africa leads us to discuss gendered notions of childhood and youth and the
identity constructions children and youth engage in and negotiate with adults
as well as with age-mates. Such negotiations concern individuals’ self-image
and how they are labelled by people around them. Interrogating the category of
‘parent’ results in a broader conceptualization of the family and of relatedness
that more accurately reflects the fluidity in household composition in societies
with a high level of mobility, and which highlights the multi-sited dimension
of families as well as the normality of movement. This leads us to look at how
‘cultures of migration’ in the West African savannah shape children’s, youth’s
and adults’ perceptions of migration and its outcomes. It also leads to exploring
how kin and other relationships are negotiated and how they may facilitate or
hinder children’s migration and shape their experience. Although we primarily
analyse the migration of youngsters aged ten to eighteen in relation to ideals
of childhood and not to ideals of youth, we are not thinking about a sixteen- or
seventeen-year-old as a child but rather as a ‘young youth’. This subcategory of
youth is marginalized in the child literature as well as the youth literature, which
tends to focus on youth up to somewhere in their thirties. We have chosen the
analytical angle of childhood because of the emphasis on children and migration
in much of the policy and advocacy addressing trafficking, and because youth
and migration is not perceived as a problem.
Writing this book and doing the multi-sited research presented in it has
been possible only with the economic and institutional support of the Nordic Africa Institute, the UK’s Department for International Development, the
Development Research Centre (DRC) on Migration, Globalization and Poverty
at the University of Sussex, the Economic and Social Research Council in the
UK and the Danish Research Agency. We gratefully acknowledge this support.
We are grateful too for the help and support of Richard Black, Saskia Gent and
Meera Warrier at the DRC, Birgitta Hellmark-Lindgren and Sonja Johansson at
the Nordic Africa Institute, and Ken Barlow at Zed Books. We each of us owe
a huge debt to Ann Whitehead, who has mentored us over the last few years
with wisdom and brilliance, and challenged as well as inspired us always to
think and to scrutinize and to question. The comments of Laura Hammond
and an anonymous reviewer also pushed us to rethink some of our arguments
and to go deeper into theoretical debates, which made the work with the book
all the more interesting.
Individually, we also have many people to thank. During both phases of her
research, innumerable people provided Iman Hashim with their time, their
help, their friendship and their moral support, in Ghana, the UK and Turkey.
Thanks are due to the capable assistance and translation of Lawrence Asambo,
and especially Peter Asaal, as well as to the people of Tempane Natinga, whose
generosity and trust made her research possible. To the children who participated in the research, special thanks for teaching her so much, and for bringing
immense joy, if sometimes sorrow, to the process; and to her family, for their
love and support, not to mention patience. Finally, to Burak Ülman, thank you
for everything. Dorte Thorsen would like to express her deepest gratitude to
all the children, youth and parents who have responded to endless questions,
narrated their journeys, even when they brought back disheartening memories,
and shared with her fun moments. She also wishes to thank her research assistants, Nombré Damata, Bidiga Assita, Dindané Mahamadou, Kéré Ousseni and
Kéré Sanhouba, for additional insights into and interpretations of children’s
and youth’s migration. Finally, she thanks friends and family in Burkina Faso,
Côte d’Ivoire, Denmark and the UK for love, support and inspiring discussions.
This book is dedicated to Emir, Nadir and Natalie,
and is in memory of Fanta.
x
1 | Introduction: interrogating childhood and
migration
‘We discovered yet another child today who had not appeared during the first
household survey. She is the daughter of the household head’s daughter and had
been staying with her paternal grandparents while her parents were working
in the south. They had both since died so her maternal grandfather decided
to bring her to live with him until her parents’ return, as there were only the
father’s brothers left in the house and he was concerned that they wouldn’t care
properly for her. Moving on to the next house we discovered that Laadi [aged
seventeen] was back from Kumasi but her brother Moses [aged fourteen] was
not, and nor will he come soon. […] She has been helping her aunt with her
catering business as well as hawking oranges. Moses, she thinks, is working on
contract for a cocoa farmer.’ (Field notes from Ghana, 7 February 2001)
‘I approached the village imam specifically to ask about his daughter, Yarassou,
as I remembered her mother telling me in 2002 that despite the fact she had not
yet reached school age, Yarassou had started school the previous year. One of
the school teachers in the village loved the child and had asked for her when she
was posted in a rural town some 55 miles away. As the imam and I were chatting
about children, family relations and, of course, Yarassou, I learned that she had
only stayed with the teacher two years before her father brought her back. In his
view, Yarassou was helping the teacher and had not left because of schooling.
At one point, someone had sent a message to let him know that his daughter
was not treated well. The problem was that Yarassou did not always do the work
required of her, the teacher then tried to force her and after that, she beat her
severely. After hearing this, he waited until the school holidays because he did
not want to disrupt Yarassou’s schooling and then went to see the teacher and,
anxious not to anger her, reclaimed the child by explaining that her mother
needed her help after having given birth. As soon as she was back in the village,
he enrolled her in school.’ (Field notes from Burkina Faso, 16 February 2005)
This book addresses children’s migration independently of their birth parents.
The extracts from our field diaries give an indication of the extent to which children in rural West Africa do move around independently of their birth parents.
Some move to help out in the household or on the farm of the person to whom
they move and/or to learn a trade, go to school or pursue other forms of learning, such as apprenticeships. Others move to find paid work – in other words,
1
they become labour migrants. Another point both diary extracts illustrate is that
children’s movements are not necessarily due to parental neglect. In the West
African context, parents and grandparents worry about children’s immediate and
future welfare, and encourage moves they believe will benefit the child, whether
the moves are away from them or bring children into their protection and care.
Moving about has long been central to West Africans’ welfare strategies, especially those of the poor, but the frequency and normality of such strategies can
be difficult to grasp when one is from a society where individuals’ lifestyles
are more sedentary. Similarly, strongly held preconceptions of childhood and
the appropriate relationship between children and their (birth) parents can
be a hindrance to seeing the different ways of being a child and of parenting.
The last couple of decades have seen the rise of child-centred studies in which
childhood – rather than being seen as a natural given – is understood to be lived
and experienced contextually (James and Prout 1997). The claims to universality
in Western studies of child development had received an early challenge from
anthropologists carrying out detailed ethnographic studies in diverse societies
(see, for example, Margaret Mead’s (1928) Coming of Age in Samoa; Meyer Fortes’s
(1938) ‘Social and psychological aspects of education in Taleland’; and Ruth
Benedict’s (1938) ‘Continuities and discontinuities in cultural conditioning’).
Moreover, it is not merely in ‘other’ societies that children’s experiences do not
conform to this idealized model of childhood. Children in the ‘West’ who do
not conform to this model – for example, by being involved in child labour, being
the primary carers of incapacitated parents, or being considered out of place
by spending much time on the streets or living outside the family realm – are
frequently labelled deviant or simply not recognized (Evans 2009; McKechnie and
Hobbs 1999; Terrio 2008). Despite this evidence-based push for the multiplicity
of childhood, child development and parenting (Lancy 2008; LeVine and New
2008), as we shall discuss in detail later, there is still a tendency to treat the
category of childhood as a universal one. Consequently, children’s migration in
developing1 countries is rarely understood in terms of how childhood, socialization, work and education normally crystallize in their local context.
The book thus addresses not only children’s migration independently of their
birth parents but argues for the importance of interrogating strongly held ideas
about childhood in order to fully apprehend as well as comprehend children’s
movement. The issues at stake in rural West Africa will become clearer through
the course of the book as we explore the different paths young migrants follow
– whether they do so intentionally, happen to be pushed in that direction by
adults, or seize upon an opportunity when it arises.
Universalizing ideals of childhood
Powerful ideas regarding what childhood consists of inform child protection
work and legislation surrounding family relations, as well as many scholarly
2
improved chances of child survival, greater resort to contraception, changing
perceptions of human life, personhood and individuality, the emergence of
affective relations within the family, more personalized parent–child, particularly mother–child relationships and a new reproductive strategy which entailed
giving birth to fewer infants and investing more heavily (emotionally as well as
materially) in each one from birth onward. (Kabeer 2000: 468)
3
1 | Introduction
analyses and media representations of social practices involving children
(Boyden 2001). Yet, childhood as a social concept did not always exist. In the
early 1960s, the French historian Aries claimed that the very institution of childhood did not emerge until the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries; even later
among the working classes. It has not always been the case, for example, that
children and work were viewed as incompatible. The first campaigns against
child labour in Britain did not take place until the 1830s and 1840s (Hasnat
1995: 424). Many historians trace the rise of this in Britain to the period of the
Industrial Revolution of the nineteenth century. Industrialization created a huge
demand for labour, which children were instrumental in filling. Children moved
out of the home and into factories and mines. However, in doing so they also
became more visible. The harsh conditions and long hours their work involved
jarred with elite sensibilities at the time, which dictated that individuals needed
protection and guidance through their early years. The result was protests and
demands for legislation against child employment (Hendrick 1997). Factory
owners, and parents who resented state interference in their lives, resisted this.
However, this initial resistance to legislation limiting children’s involvement
in work and to compulsory schooling gradually gave way, owing primarily to
rising wages for men, the increasing engagement of women in the labour force
and technological advances that reduced the demand for children in factories
(Cunningham and Viazzo 1996). State intervention in the family in the form
of compulsory education in response to the need for educated wage labourers
eventually extended children’s dependency into adolescence. Their cost to the
family soon became considerably greater than just that of their forgone labour,
so that ‘children have subtly but rapidly developed into a labour-intensive, capital
intensive product of the family in industrial society’ (Minge-Kalman 1978: 466).
These processes, combined with a dramatic drop in birth rates, also resulted in
changing ideals about childhood, and a view emerged of the child as a purely
emotional and affective asset. The economic and sentimental values of children
increasingly came to be seen as incompatible, resulting in the view that only callous or insensitive parents violated this boundary, while properly loved children
belonged in a domesticated, non-productive world of lessons and games (Zelizer
1994). This affective transition is summarized well by Kabeer, who notes how
the transition from an old to a new mortality pattern in Britain was associated
with a series of interdependent changes. These included:
Protests and subsequent legislation against children’s employment in Britain
were mirrored in other industrialized countries, with the result that moves were
made to adopt international legislation against child labour. In 1919, the first
of such legislation was instituted with the International Labour Organization’s
(ILO) Convention on Minimum Age in Industry (No. 5) (ILO 1996: 23). Between
1919 and 1998 a further ten conventions on or related to child labour were
adopted by the ILO. The most far-reaching of these is the 1973 Convention
Concerning Minimum Age for Admission to Employment (No. 138). This convention obliges ratifying states to fix a minimum age for admission to employment
or work and to undertake to pursue a national policy designed to ensure the
effective abolition of child labour (ibid.: 24–5).
However, the resistance to child labour legislation witnessed in the industrialized world was mirrored in the developing world. In this instance, in addition
to accusations of cultural imperialism, the motives behind moves to prevent the
import of goods produced by child labour were questioned. Some argued that
the protection of Northern workers’ jobs and trade protectionism, rather than
child protection, were the key factors (Hasnat 1995; see also Rosemberg and
Freitas 1999, Tan and Gomez 1993). For instance, Panicker notes, ‘their hearts
started bleeding for the poor children of the south only after the liberalization
process began and today practically all nations of the south are caught in the
web of globalization. The “free market” is what set the agenda and the priorities’ (Panicker 1998: 284–5).
The overall effect was that by the late 1990s the debate about child labour had
reached something of an impasse. As a result, much attention is now directed
at the worst forms of child labour, such as prostitution, child ‘trafficking’ and
children’s involvement in armed conflict, since there is consensus that these
are patently harmful and exploitative (Myers 1999: 24). This is reflected in the
drawing up of the latest convention on child labour, ILO Convention No. 182 –
Worst Forms of Child Labour Convention (1999). This convention, which is more
widely ratified than the Minimum Age Convention, obliges ratifying states to
take immediate and effective measures to prohibit and eliminate practices such
as slavery, the commercial sexual exploitation of children, the use of children
in illicit activities, and work which, by its nature or circumstances, is likely to
harm the health, safety or morals of a child.
Even more widely ratified is the United Nations Convention on the Rights of
the Child (CRC), adopted by the General Assembly in 1989. Developed over ten
years, with input from representatives of all societies, religions and cultures, the
CRC brought together, in a single legal instrument, all standards concerning
children. It is the most widely accepted human rights treaty and is significant in
its claim to the universality of a particular model of childhood, which we refer
to as the universalizing ideal. We use this term to underscore that this model
of childhood is one that not only is not the reality in many contexts, both in
4
5
1 | Introduction
the developing world and the industrialized world, but is also frequently one
that is contested. Our aim is to reiterate that there is not a static category of
childhood, even though international legal instruments may give the illusion of
constancy and permanence, but there still exist very powerful normative ideals of
childhood, which emerged as a result of the affective transition described above.
Undoubtedly, the CRC was an important advance in many respects, and it
certainly aimed both to protect and empower children by defining them as a
category apart from adults. However, it has also been criticized for precisely
the same reasons. By treating children as right-holders in their own right, the
CRC has expanded the reach of the state into the family by empowering outside
professionals to represent the interests of the child, displacing the child’s family as the primary advocates of a child’s interests (Pupavac 2001: 100). While
on the one hand the lack of enforcement of the CRC means that the rights it
guarantees are rarely enacted in practice, its almost universal ratification has
meant that it has become central to international principles and policy. The
African Union’s (AU) Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child (AU 1990)
is a case in point, which we shall return to below.
Other criticisms of the CRC are that it has trivialized certain rights (Ansell
2005; Ennew et al. 2005). Entitlements to government protection and services
have received more attention than children’s rights of empowerment. Critics have
suggested that ‘this leaves children more vulnerable because it reinforces the
idea that they are wholly dependent on adults and reduces their capacity for
autonomy’ (Ennew et al. 2005: 32, emphasis in original). Moreover, the emphasis
on children’s dependency contradicts the reality of many children’s lives because
it ignores children’s role as producers and therefore places working children
on the margins of what is perceived as proper childhood, despite the necessity
or normality of their contribution to family activities (Ansell 2005: 230; Boyden
2001; Punch 2001a: 805; Robson 2004b: 241). A different critique addresses the
aim of the CRC’s Article 12(1), which assures a child’s ‘right to express [his or
her own views] freely in all matters affecting the child, the views of the child
being given due weight in accordance with the age and maturity of the child’ (UN
1989). The idea that underlies the right of free expression draws on a Western
understanding of decision-making as a verbal, discursive process. This contrasts
with societies where notions of respect govern everyone’s speech and stipulate
what can be discussed openly and by whom (Ferme 2001: 7), and where the
expression of ideas and aspirations entails acting upon them in strategic or
tactical ways to get away with specific actions or to indirectly convey opinions
(Thorsen 2005). These critiques are pertinent to understanding children’s migration, and the lack of attention to the conceptualization of childhood explains
why there exist tensions and contradictions within the debates around the issue
(Hashim 2004: 13).
Another ideal of childhood is the one presented in the AU’s Charter on the
Rights and Welfare of the Child (AU 1990). As pointed out by de Waal (2002),
many of the articles in the charter are almost identical with the CRC. The African
Charter diverges from the CRC in one important respect, in stressing not only
children’s rights but also their responsibilities towards their family. This it does
in Article 31, which reads: ‘The child, subject to his age and ability […] shall
have the duty to work for the cohesion of the family, to respect his parents,
superiors and elders at all times and to assist them in case of need’ (ibid.).
Research carried out with African parents in Nigeria confirms the importance
parents place on children’s participation in activities that would be considered
work in the global perspective, as part of children’s socialization process (Ajayi
and Torimiro 2004). It illustrates how different constructions of childhood
prevail in diverse contexts. In this model, children are allowed a productive
role while still being kept as juniors in the social hierarchy. Having rights and
duties complicates the categorization of children as mere dependants, as well
as their being thought about in terms of being autonomous individuals. They
are neither; the African Charter affirms the importance of social personhood
and thus of being embedded in social units (Ansell 2005: 230; Cheney 2007).
The fact that African leaders felt the need to formulate an African model
for children’s rights illustrates the diversity of understandings of childhood,
and yet there continues to be a tendency to regard childhood as a universal
category, rather than perceiving it as an empirical question (Boyden 2001; Jenks
2004: 5). As we have noted, such ethnocentric attitudes may hinder an understanding of the motivations and justification for particular practices because
they fail to accept that people may have other ways of doing things and other
ways of living their lives. This inevitably raises the issue of cultural relativism – especially when it is a question of children’s welfare – since it raises
questions related to whether we should seek universal measures of quality
of life for all or ‘defer instead to the many different norms that traditional
cultures have selected’ (Nussbaum and Glover 1995, cited in Jackson 1997:
146). It is for this reason that cultural relativism is often posited as the opposite of ethnocentrism. However, as Eriksen (1995) points out, they are not
binary opposites since the former does not in itself contain a moral principle.
Rather, cultural relativism is a methodological and theoretical necessity if one
is attempting to investigate societies and understand their own inner logic and
workings (ibid.: 13). This is precisely what this book seeks to do; to unfold the
material, social and cultural dimensions of children’s migration in the West
African savannah without moral prejudices about local notions of the child,
parents, family and home. This, however, does not imply an uncritical view of
practices that may result in suffering or distress for children. Rather, our aim
is to examine how children, themselves, experience various practices and how
they act upon these experiences.
6
7
1 | Introduction
Childhood and its constituting concepts
In the previous section, we noted that while childhood is often seen as universal and constant, in actuality it is a category made of a bundle of concepts
that far from being static are subject to negotiation and change. Furthermore,
this is so not only in the European context, as shown above, but also in African
communities (Nyamnjoh 2002). In this section, we want to explore in greater
detail the key concepts relating to childhood; which is especially important as
changes and the negotiated nature of social categories, culture and tradition
are not always reflected in the way children, and especially poor children, are
represented (Malkki and Martin 2003).
A child, in most international legal definitions, is any individual below the
age of eighteen years. Such a wide category inevitably begs differentiation, since
the needs and abilities of a toddler and a teenager are very different. This is
the first area where there are evident differences regarding what characterizes
children in different phases of childhood and their transition from one phase
to another. In what we term the universalizing, dominant or ‘modern’ Western
model, childhood is structured around chronological age and cognitive development.2 Although subtle distinctions are made between babies and toddlers
based on their sensory and language development, and birthdays are celebrated
elaborately, the first major transition for children is linked with entering into
formal education at the age of five or six years. Leaving school and starting work
is also a major transition, but it is not linked with any particular age as children
can pursue different educational paths, which results in some being in education
well beyond the age of eighteen while others go into vocational training or leave
formal education entirely, possibly to work. Transitions in late childhood may
also be blurred by the possibility of their intersection with one another. These include children being labelled – or labelling themselves – teenagers from the age
of thirteen, youth from the age of fifteen, and various legal transitions specified
in national legislation,3 such as passing the minimum age for paid employment,
achieving the age of majority for voting or engaging in sexual relations, being
allowed to drive a vehicle, or to marry, and so on (Valentine 2003). In addition to
these types of transitions linked with chronological age, childhood is also seen
as a process of gradually gaining independence, implying that a five-year-old
and a fifteen-year-old are not being treated as dependants in the same way. For
example, while the parents of a five-year-old may restrict his or her freedom to
roam around in public places, the parents of a fifteen-year-old may impose few
constraints on their child’s everyday mobility but be concerned about the time
of the day the child goes to different places. The parents of the five-year-old
may also cook all the child’s meals, while the fifteen-year-old is asked to help
with food preparation. Children thus have liberties or constraints imposed on
them that reflect common discourses in a given society about age-appropriate
behaviour. Variations may exist within these; for example, some children may
be permitted to return home by 9 p.m. at age fourteen, while others may have
this restriction imposed until they are aged sixteen; and clearly gender may
be a factor in this, reflecting how childhood itself intersects with other issues,
such as ethnicity and socio-economic status, as well as gender. Nevertheless,
these liberties and constraints reflect more general ideas regarding childhood
transitions, whereby children are perceived to be in need of care and protection for survival, well-being and guidance in order to develop in the right way
irrespective of age.
These ideals of childhood and their expression in national legislation contrast
to those evident from empirical work in a number of societies. For one, in the
societies in which we work, as well as in other West African societies, chronological age is not central to childhood. Nevertheless, childhood does also have
different phases; for example, babies and very young children are considered
positioned between the worlds of the living and the spirits, and if they are not
satisfied with the conditions in the living world, they may choose to return to the
spirits. Children, thus, are perceived to be in a liminal phase in the first years
and need persuasion to stay in the world of the living (Gottlieb 1998; Samuelsen
1999: 76–7).4 Later transitions within childhood are rooted in social personhood
and children’s gradual incorporation into the social, spatial and material arenas
of their community through learning different tasks, rituals and practices of how
to do things. The pace at which the child becomes skilful in the various areas
varies according to how much their participation is needed and their willingness
to take part, their gender, sibling order, the number of people calling on their
services, and whether they are raised in a rural or urban setting (Hashim 2004;
Katz 2004; Nyamnjoh 2002; Reynolds 1991; Robson 2004b; for other geographical
contexts, see Nieuwenhuys 1994; Leinaweaver 2007; and Punch 2001b). Children
suggest how they should be perceived – by behaving maturely, for example, or
by absconding from work – and this also shapes others’ views of them (Hashim
2004: 81–3; Johnson-Hanks 2002; Thorsen 2006; Valentine 2003: 38). Thus, how
children are perceived in terms of maturity and ability is relational and relative:
it depends, for example, on the presence of older and younger children and on
their gender rather than on their chronological age. Moreover, education outside
the home, marriage, having children (within or outside marriage) and a variety
of other rites of passage may influence how a child is conceptualized, as these
transitions also do in the Western model. Children of all ages are perceived
to be part of the social relations surrounding the family because this provides
them with material, social and symbolic safety and well-being. Their inclusion
requires active participation by children and gives them the responsibility of
rendering services to seniors.
Any model of childhood involves ideas about who parents are, as well as
what parenting entails, and how this is tied to notions of family and home.
In the universalizing model of childhood, the relationship between parents
8
9
1 | Introduction
and children is usually conceptualized as a unidirectional one involving the
provision of basic needs, protection, socialization and adults’ emotional attention to children, and in particular from birth mothers to their offspring. This
emphasis on children as having needs and parents meeting them is linked to
the development of the family as a unit of two to three generations in which
material transfers and care-giving emanate from people categorized as producers
to people categorized as consumers (Malhotra and Kabeer 2002). Empirically our
research finds that West African children also stress how a good parent is one
who provides them with support. However, the relationship between parent and
child is seen also as a reciprocal one where children have obligations to their
parents (and other significant seniors) (Hashim 2004: 76). Equally important is
that, rather than parents being producers and children consumers, in the West
African context they are all producers and children are frequently responsible for
covering the costs of some aspects of personal consumption, such as clothing
and schooling costs.
Despite the fact that Western family patterns are becoming more and more
complicated owing to women’s and men’s reproductive trajectories stretching
over more marriages and increasingly common practices of shared parenting
after divorce, the notion of parenthood is still linked primarily with the two
birth parents. What is changing in the Western context is the constitution of
the family, not the ideas about who should be care-givers or about the need for
children and youth to be protected up to the age of eighteen. The family, by and
large, is equated with the birth parents, or those legally designated as parents. In
contrast, in many African societies, while birth parents also provide care, there
are many more parents who are or who want to be involved in raising a child and
thus contribute to its care and who feel they have certain claims on the child
(Vischer 1997). These additional parents – classificatory parents – are a product
of how the kinship system works; among the Bisa, for example, in addition to
the birth mother, her co-wives, the wives of her husband’s brothers and her
own sisters, are considered mothers. Likewise, the birth father’s brothers are
considered fathers and, although not being designated as a mother or a father,
the mother’s brothers and the father’s sisters are important kin for a child
because they have a particular set of responsibilities for and claims on the
child. Within this structure of child–parent relations there is an ideal of a child
belonging to everyone and, thus, of all children being treated equally within a
household. Yet, in reality, distinctions are made based on social and affectionate
closeness, but also on the context in which the relationship is invoked, since
the language of kinship can be used to create a particular type of relationship
within the extended family and, occasionally, outside (Bourdieu 1977; Carsten
2000; O’Laughlin 1995).
The existence of several mothers and fathers also means that children may
live with different parents for shorter or longer periods of time. This possibility
disrupts the idea of a residentially bounded, nuclear and essentially sedentary
family because children may move between family members in several locations
who are willing or feel obliged to take on parental responsibilities. While they
cannot criticize the parent(s) they live with openly, as long as they have other
mothers or fathers with whom they can live, this flexibility may permit them to
negotiate indirectly who is a parent and what parenthood should encompass
(Notermans 2008).5 Thus, another important difference between the universalizing model and the reality of childhood in other places is the narrow focus on
the two birth parents in the former and the negotiated relationships within and
outside extended families in the latter, which give children a wider set of social
relations and an active influence in the decisions that make and sustain these.
Equally, and related, is that, rather than the home being the place in which
the birth or adopted parents reside, if one has a range of individuals across
different spaces that one can call as a ‘parent’ and make a claim to live with,
the home is not the sedentary unit of the universalizing model.
Finally, as noted earlier, because of the economic, social and political
transformations associated with late industrialization, which institutionalized
‘modern’ childhood as a category separate from adulthood, childhood and formal schooling became intimately connected, such that education came to be
seen as the proper activity for children, while work is not. As a result, education has come to be seen as commensurate with schooling, although, in its
broadest sense, it refers to any process of teaching, training or improving.6
For a great number of children, however, going to school is not a normal part
of childhood, while work is. Some argue that their education is more like a
socialization process, whether when working at home, with people outside their
home and when learning particular skills in an apprenticeship (Chauveau 1998:
42). Others have suggested that even this argument is based on a normative
understanding of childhood, since it rests on an assumption that childhood is
defined primarily as a period of ‘becoming’ and, as a result, all experiences are
regarded as being education (Schildkrout 1981: 93). Children’s work activities
thus become recast as a means of learning, part of being taught to become an
adult, rather than being seen as what they actually are, and lost in the process
is the fact that children are working because that is what children properly do
(Hashim forthcoming).
In a number of ways, then, West African children’s experiences are far from
the normative globalized ideals of childhood, in which childhood is a period
of dependency, involving education, play and leisure; where the only legitimate
places for growing up are the ‘sanctity of the nuclear family on the one hand
and the school on the other’ (Nieuwenhuys 1996: 242). In this idealized version, the home is perceived as a sedentary unit that offers a safe framework for
children’s lives, with the ‘proper’ place for children being within the bosom of a
loving family.7 The only mobility offered to children in this model is movement
10
The mobility–migration nexus in West Africa
Sustained high levels of population movement in West African communities
over several generations comprise many different types of moves. Migrations,
for instance, include widespread rural movements in order to gain access to
fertile land or areas of greater agricultural potential; long-term rural movements
responding to changes in rains; seasonal livelihood migrations; movements to
towns as people seek employment in the formal or informal sector or entrepreneurial opportunities which are mainly available in towns. Such migrations
may be circular in the short or long term or of a more permanent nature.
Mobilities, on the other hand, encompass all types of movement over short
or longer distances, of different duration and frequency; from everyday travel
to seasonal transhumance, migration, tourism, occasional pilgrimage and
indeterminate forced displacement. Importantly, mobilities go beyond movement from A to B and focus on ‘how mobility is engrained in the history, daily
life and experiences of people’ (de Bruijn et al. 2001: 1). Until recently, most
movements were studied in a migration paradigm that produced a number
of dichotomies – rural versus urban, subsistence versus market economy,
and traditional versus modernity. De Bruijn et al. raise the critique that such
dichotomies and the idea of bounded spaces that goes with them are less
than useful after years of economic and social transformations. In their view,
the focus on mobility is more pertinent because it allows for ‘a close reading
of people’s own understanding of the spaces and places in which they move
and the experiences these movements entail’ (ibid.: 2). Moreover, rather than
conceptualizing movements as a social rupture, the concept of mobility helps
us unpack how different forms of mobility are ingrained in livelihood strategies
and in people’s social lives, how sedentary lives may actually result in defaulting
on social obligations (ibid.) and mobility in creating and consolidating social
relationships (Klute and Hahn 2007). We therefore need an analytical frame
that captures the fluidity of families and homes, and explores people’s sense
of belonging to places and to social groups.
A number of scholars within the disciplines of anthropology, sociology and
geography have explored notions of travel and mobility to critique and move
beyond a deep-seated sedentarism in social sciences. Sedentarism, they argue,
reiterates a narrow focus on discrete communities, a compartmentalization
that hinders an understanding of how places and communities are bounded
spatially and temporally, and how cultural and social practices may be conjoined spatially and historically. The result has been that stability of location
and people’s practices in that location is seen as normal, while mobility and
11
1 | Introduction
associated with formal education, as when they go to boarding schools or to live
with kin to enable them to go to good schools. In this way, too, West African
children challenge the normative model.
change are presented as pathological. Not being ‘at home’ is perceived as being
uprooted, thereby linking travellers’, migrants’ and displaced people’s identities
to ‘the home’ without considering how movement may influence identities (Clifford 1992: 96; Malkki 1992: 31–3; Sheller and Urry 2006: 208–9). To explore the
dynamic links between places and cultures, Clifford suggests looking at what
practices and ideas of home and dwelling people bring to a new place from
their prior location(s), and how they are maintained and transformed in the
new place (Clifford 1992: 115). Additionally, he points out that it is important to
pay attention to the ways in which outside influences shape the discourses and
practices in local communities, even if travel is not literal but through radio,
TV, commodities, visitors and structures of the state (ibid.: 103). In this sense,
mobility is both about those on the move and those staying. Apart from dynamics of change and continuity in particular locations, those who stay may enable
others to be mobile by providing the necessary infrastructure and institutional
moorings (Hannam et al. 2006: 3).
The analysis of children’s migration in the following chapters draws on the
analytical insights gained from the mobilities paradigm, which does not underestimate or trivialize the extent and significance of movements in people’s lives.
The insights of such an approach are particularly pertinent to an analysis of
children’s movement. For one, sedentarism underpins many policy approaches
to children’s welfare, especially so because of the perceived sanctity of ‘the
home’ in the idealized version of childhood and because these strongly held
ideas regarding what childhood should properly entail inhibit us from imagining
children moving on their own account. Second, the historically high degree of
mobility in West Africa means that migrants very often move within cultural
contexts and social relations stretching over numerous places. Although ideals
concerning childhood as expressed in the African Charter on the Rights and
Welfare of the Child refer to children’s responsibilities to their families, and
although many people implicitly accept children’s movements within the framework of extended families, the more abstract issue of conceptualizing families
and homes that extend to multiple locations has not been addressed. To apprehend children’s movement in the West African context we need to analyse their
movement on a par with adults’ movements rather than categorizing children as
a group apart. This does not mean that we see children as miniature adults but
rather that their movements cannot be understood in isolation. In the analysis
of children’s migration, these considerations are important for understanding
children’s aspirations regarding the outcome of migration, the roots of their
wanderlust and differences in ability to travel linked with gender, sibling order
and family size. Furthermore, they are important for understanding children’s
choices at the destination regarding their dwelling, work and social network,
the types of constraints on their choices and how their views may change in the
course of time. Finally, they are helpful for working out adults’ relationships
12
Children’s migration
Children’s migration is not new (Hertrich and Lesclingand 2007; Lambert
2007; Le Jeune et al. 2004; Punch 2009: 1); however, attention to it is relatively
new within both the policy and the academic literature.8 This is because until
recently women and children were typically imagined as merely tagging along
behind the ‘primary’ male migrant (Gugler and Ludwar-Ene 1995; King 2002;
O’Connell Davidson and Farrow 2007; Thorsen 2007a); consequently migrant
women’s and children’s perspectives were rarely heard (Punch 2009: 1). Recent
studies have shown that women are migrants in their own right (Anarfi et al.
1997; Sudarkasa 1977), and it is now more widely appreciated that the reasons
for and experiences of migration differ for women as compared to men (Elmhirst
2002; McKay 2005; Mills 2001; Muzvidziwa 2001). Female migrants now receive
more attention in the literature, but migration scholars, with few exceptions,
have continued to focus their work on adults (Mahler and Pessar 2006: 35).
Beyond the literature on the impact of parental migration on health and education outcomes for their children, on those limited occasions where children’s
experiences of migration have been considered, the assumption has been that
children move with one or both parents. Primarily here the focus has been on
immigrant children’s experiences in schools, as transnationals and as secondgeneration immigrants (ibid.).
What limited attention has been directed to children who move without their
parents has tended to focus on children in particularly difficult circumstances,
such as street children, AIDS orphans, child soldiers, child refugees and children
forced to work in exploitative, abusive and/or dangerous conditions (Whitehead
and Hashim 2005). Trafficking in children – where those under eighteen years
of age are recruited, transported, transferred, harboured or received for the
purpose of exploitation (UN 2000) – in particular receives a huge amount of
attention, especially trafficking for the purposes of commercial sexual exploitation. Though the cases of trafficking that have been documented are extremely
disturbing and warrant attention and concern, they are also very much outside
13
1 | Introduction
with migrant children, be they relatives or strangers, and how adults’ views are
interconnected across localities.
Our focus is children’s migration and their mobility, especially their spatial
mobility at the destination and the social mobility they gain from migration
or, at least, hope to gain. Although migration is one form of mobility, we wish
to highlight the fact that these children’s journeys are not day trips but may
entail movements of several hundred miles and may cross international borders.
Moreover, their journeys often imply living in other places for one, two or more
years before visiting the homes in which they spent their early years. Prior to
going into our own findings on children’s migration, however, we shall look at
how children’s movement has been explored in the literature to date.
the norm (O’Connell Davidson 2003). Nevertheless, the issue of trafficking is
receiving significant attention globally, as well as in West Africa (cf. Dottridge
2002; IOM 2003; SCF Canada 2003; UNICEF 2002).
Across the region advocacy and intervention programmes were launched
in the late 1990s and early 2000s by the International Labour Organization’s
(ILO) International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour (IPEC) and
the ‘Lutte contre le Trafic des Enfants en Afrique de l’Ouest’ (LUTRENA, the
Fight against Child Trafficking in West Africa). In most accounts of children’s
movement without their birth parents, the difference between migration and
trafficking is barely distinguishable. For instance, the ILO seems to suggest
that these practices are now merging into one, when it states, ‘[c]entral to the
phenomenon of trafficking in Africa is abuse of the tradition of placing children with extended families or other care-takers when they cannot be cared
for by their parents’ (ILO 2002: 3). Similarly, the International Organization for
Migration (IOM) views child trafficking in Ghana, in part, to be related to child
fostering, as made explicit by Ernest Taylor of the IOM Accra who commented
that: ‘Traditionally it has been a common practice for poor parents to hand over
their children to be looked after by relatives and friends. Traffickers are now
exploiting this age-old tradition resulting in parents inadvertently but effectively
selling their children’ (cited in Anarfi and Kwankye 2003: 24). In both Ghana
and Burkina Faso rural children’s migration has been a subject of national
public and media concern in the last few years, and it has increasingly come
to be equated with the trafficking of children. Alternatively, the migration of
children is seen to be the result of pathological situations, such as conflict,
abuse or poverty, and automatically to result in vulnerability to high levels of
exploitation, harmful working conditions and/or abuse.
The practice of child fostering deserves a more elaborate discussion; both
to show how the analysis of fostering has changed within the social sciences
and to provide nuances to the simplified association of children’s independent
migration with trafficking. Fostering, where children reside in households other
than their birth parents’ and/or circulate between different social parents, has
been common in many societies in Africa for a long time (Fentiman et al. 1999;
Goody 1982; Meinert 2003; Notermans 2004; Pilon 2003; Verhoef 2005). This
practice has been linked with migration and children’s well-being in different
ways in both the policy literature and in academic research. It is perceived to
facilitate the international migration of adults, and especially women, because
children can be left behind safely with close relatives. Fostering also accounts
for children’s local, regional and international migration for care and/or for
their education, when they move to other households when their own cannot
provide for them (Isiugo-Abanihe 1985: 55). Particularly in the literature on rural
African societies, staying with kin at migration destinations is generally seen as
beneficial and a safety mechanism for children who migrate because of parents’
14
15
1 | Introduction
poverty or because of crises in the family linked with illness, death, divorce or
fear of witchcraft (Einarsdóttir 2006; Isiugo-Abanihe 1985, 1994; Pilon 2003).
Other researchers find that staying with kin is likely to result in children’s abuse
or exploitation (Ansell and Young 2002). Although these diverging views reflect
the great variation in children’s experiences and lived realities, they also reflect
different methodological points of departure. The way fostering is described
depends on the questions asked, whether they were directed at senior males,
women or children, and how family relations in general are perceived. Thus, it
is imperative to unpick the notions of childhood, children and families lying
beneath quick references to ‘traditional fostering practices’ as a motivation for
children’s movement because these notions shape the interpretations of the
empirical material. The notion of traditional practices is problematic in itself
because it presents African communities as static and backward, denying the
dynamism of and changes in the economic, social and cultural life of Africans,
which have resulted in change and diversification in practices of child fostering.
Goody (1982), Isiugo-Abanihe (1985) and Jonckers (1997) outline how anthropologists and demographers have conceptualized the main features of fostering
within a structural-functionalist paradigm as the need to reallocate resources
within the kin group to increase survival and strengthen social ties, and to create
and strengthen alliances with other lineages or important religious and political
leaders. In this perspective, children are seen simply as resources on a par with
other resources, and there is no discussion of family decision-making processes
or relations between parents and children. These dimensions recur in many
economic and demographic studies working with larger statistical data sets to
model different effects of fostering practices – for example, on the availability
of household labour or children’s education. Some of these studies argue that
fostering arrangements are linked with adjustments of the household structure
to cope with risks in the form of exogenous income shocks or to satisfy labour
demands within the household (Akresh 2004a, b). Alternatively, children are
seen as important human capital assets in mitigating or preventing risks in
poor families who lack other assets (Kielland 2009: 260). While Akresh (2004a)
argues that fostering may have a positive outcome on children’s education, Kielland and Sanogo (2002: 10) are more sceptical and argue that fostering today,
especially of girls, often conceals exploitation of these children as domestic servants and, further, puts them at risk because they are not given love, protection
and education. Fostering also is misdescribed by household economists who
treat the family analytically as a black box and therefore assume that decisions
within the household aim at maximizing the collective welfare, whether decisions are governed by joint altruism or by a benevolent household head (Smith
and Chavas 1999: 4–5). From this perspective, it is not necessary to know how
fostering decisions are made.
A shift of focus in kinship studies from the rigid understandings of
genealogies and kinship in structural-functionalism (anglophone) and structuralism (francophone) towards a focus on relatedness and the making of kinship
has pushed anthropologists to explore the motivations and decision-making
processes involved in a foster child’s relocation. This shift has shed light on
women’s, and especially elderly women’s, diverse interests in fostering arrangements. Alber, for example, describes changes in fostering practices among the
Baatombu in northern Benin, where women used to have strong rights in their
daughters’ second child and assumed full responsibility for the upbringing of
fostered grandchildren from meeting their basic needs in childhood to ensuring
their transition into adulthood and finding them a husband or wife. Her study
shows a change in parents’ willingness to accept fostering requests, which is
rooted in aspirations of formal education for their children. As a result, the
circulation of children has become more unidirectional from rural to urban
areas, whereas previously urban-based parents would also accept sending a child
to a grandmother living in a rural area (Alber 2004). This change indicates an
ongoing shift in Baatomba notions of childhood as a period of learning skills
in school but not necessarily in the home of a child’s birth parents. In other
words, the family is not conceptualized as a sedentary nuclear unit but as a
multi-spatial group of people, who may offer children different possibilities.
Only in the past decade have children’s perspectives on and experience of
fostering been considered by anthropologists, sociologists and geographers.
Child-centred research draws attention to children’s choices in building or
refusing kinship. A study in Indonesia, for example, shows how children act
out their resistance to fostering arrangements in which they do not feel well
treated by refusing to address their foster parents as ‘Father’ and ‘Mother’, even
if it causes them to be punished because they transgress the code of respectful behaviour (Schrauwers 1999). Adolescents pursuing formal education in
Sierra Leone may call on their birth parents to challenge maltreatment in the
hope that they will be treated better or will be allowed to move to other foster
parents. They are not always able to elicit support, however, and may be told
to stick out hardship in order to advance their education (Bledsoe 1990). These
studies show that, even if children cannot choose their residence freely, they
may have a say in decisions, and they certainly try to negotiate the situation to
their advantage with varying degrees of success. Notermans’s work focusing on
children’s fostering trajectories and their experience of fostering bears witness
to their active participation in the processes of making kinship – for example,
by asking permission to join kin who might support their formal education.
However, her study also highlights children’s vulnerability when the circumstances in a household change and negatively affect their status within the
household – for example, if jealousies and conflicts within the conjugal unit
spill over to other household members. Such changes often compel children to
move to other ‘fathers’, ‘mothers’ or ‘grandmothers’ on their own initiative or
16
Conclusion
Child-centred studies offer insights into the complex ways in which children
respond to the circumstances of their everyday lives, inevitably influencing how
we understand fostering arrangements and children’s moves between different
family or household members. Throughout the book, we will come back to this
inquiry into children’s use of kinship as one avenue for increasing their options
in our bid to understand their choices.
Exploring children’s choices and engagement in decision-making, we argue,
is crucial to understanding their migration in a manner that neither romanticizes their strengths nor presents them as passive victims. It is especially
important as missing from many accounts are what children themselves think
about their movement and what role they play in their migration. Yet children
themselves may play a big part in the decision to move (Andvig 2000). Indeed, the
very possibility that children might be capable of exercising choice about whether
or not to move is rejected in many perspectives, including in a number of legal
instruments. One example is the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and Children supplementing the United
Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime (often known as
the Palermo Protocol), which distinguishes between smuggling and trafficking. Smuggling refers to the movement of individuals where the individual has
consented, while trafficking involves the threat or use of force or other forms
of coercion, abduction, fraud, deception or abuse of power. However, Article
3 of the protocol makes it explicit that in the case of those under the age of
eighteen the issue of consent is irrelevant if their movement is considered to
be for the purposes of exploitation (ILO 2002; UN 2000). The implication is that
those under the age of eighteen are incapable of exercising meaningful choice,
in the process inextricably linking the status of ‘child’ with that of ‘victim’ or
‘potential victim’ (O’Connell Davidson 2005). Hopkins and Hill make a similar
point in a discussion of the difference between the category of unaccompanied
asylum-seeking children and that of separated children. Unaccompanied children
are ‘defined as those who are younger than 18 years old who have been separated from both parents [and] are not being cared for by an adult who, by law or
custom, has a responsibility to do so’ (UNHCR 2005, cited in Hopkins and Hill
2008: 258). In contrast, the Separated Children in Europe Programme prefers
to use the term ‘separated’ to highlight the fact that the children may not be
unaccompanied, but may actually be travelling with others, such as a trafficker
or sibling (ibid.: 258). The reason the term ‘separated’ is preferred, apparently, is
17
1 | Introduction
to be sent by the parent with whom they lived (Notermans 2008). The dynamic
between moving on one’s own initiative as opposed to being sent by an adult is
an important one to highlight. All too often, children’s relocation is described
in terms of being sent.
because it ‘better defines the essential problem that children face, which is that
they are without the care and protection of their parents or legal guardian’ (Save
the Children (SCF) 2004: 2, cited in Hopkins and Hill 2008: 258). Hopkins and
Hill argue, however, that ‘the term “separated” implies passivity and overlooks the
children’s agency, since some of the children may have chosen to move’ (ibid.).
This presentation of childhood contrasts with those in different African
societies, where children are conceptualized as agents, even as babies (Gottlieb
1998; Nyamnjoh 2002). We would also point out that underlying both terms is
an assumption that a child moving without their birth parents or legal guardian
is automatically vulnerable.
Overall, as researchers have pointed out, dualistic categories such as adult/
child, forced/voluntary, and so on, smooth out differences in the experiences,
needs and circumstances of migrant children, while obscuring the interplay
between structure and human agency in shaping those experiences (Hopkins and
Hill 2008; O’Connell Davidson 2005). An important link exists between agency
and age, which has legal, developmental and social dimensions and needs to
be considered; and thus the issue is not simply about agency but structure
too. As Vandenbroeck and Bouverne-de Bie suggest (2006: 140), ‘the analysis of
agency on the psychological level may benefit from a structural point of view,
just as the structural analysis needs to take the personal agency into account’.
Thus, throughout the book, we attempt to move back and forth between children’s roles in their own movements, and how these are curtailed or facilitated
by their environments, and the social relations in which they are enmeshed. At
the core of the book are our own two studies with independent child migrants.
Although there are many similarities between our communities of origin, such
as the high rates of inter-household mobility that are a feature of many West
African savannah communities, the differing research strategies we adopted, as
well as the different settings to which migrants moved, make direct comparisons
impossible. This in any case is not our purpose. Rather, our aim is to contribute
to the growing body of child-centred studies that not only question the normative assumptions and discourses in many of the approaches to issues related
to children, but which try to foreground children’s own views.
The rest of the book is organized as follows: in Chapter 2, we consider the
nature of the economic and social relations in the places of origin and how these
influence girls’ and boys’ aspirations to move and family members’ incentives to
permit or discourage their children’s movement. The theme of the importance
of context and how it influences why children move continues in Chapter 3,
which explores how poverty and its gendered dimensions impact on the range
of options girls and boys have. In Chapter 4, we explore children’s journeys and
how they make kinship relations and use them as a means to become migrants.
In this chapter, we also pose the question of how migrant relatives feed the
imagination of children and thus bear on their motivations to become migrants.
18
19
1 | Introduction
In Chapter 5, we examine migrant children’s lived realities at the destination
and explore the activities in which they engage and through which they enact
different identities, reflecting how they interpret their position in society, within
their family and/or their peer group. In Chapter 6, we explore in more detail
what our empirical work contributes to investigating children’s migration in a
manner that enables both negative and positive aspects of children’s mobility
to be considered, which in turn leads us to examine, in this concluding chapter,
the key question of how we conceptualize children’s agency.
2 | Contexts of migration
‘We arrived at the household of Ayaraga Mbilla at about 9 a.m. to begin the
detailed questionnaire. The household head wasn’t ready for us so we sat and
waited under a tree. There was a man in his 30s sitting outside in the shade
(the brother’s son I think), who said he was “resting small” as he had spent all
morning on the farm. A little apart, the young girl with the limp (polio I suspect)
whom I’d noticed before, as usual was looking after the baby. She must be about
ten or so. A boy a little older was husking maize and two other boys were just
hanging around. A girl of about 15 came out of the compound with a basket of
millet and started to winnow it. A group of about ten young men then arrived
and grabbed sticks that were lying outside. They jostled and fought for the best
ones, and then went inside with the household head’s brother’s son. There
were pounding noises and occasionally they would burst into song. They were
threshing rice. Two tiny children in the distinctive purple uniform of the nursery
school arrived. We asked them why they had come back from school. They were
so shy they were barely able to bring themselves to talk to us. Apparently, the
teachers had a meeting in town so had sent the children home. They went inside
and then reappeared minutes later, minus uniforms, and disappeared off; to
play presumably. Even now, I still can’t get used to how such young children are
free to move around unsupervised. A young woman then appeared and started
breastfeeding the baby. She said something to the teenage girl who went off,
after fetching a large basin from inside. She came back about 15 minutes later
with water, I assume for the threshing party since it was not from the nearby
well, but from the borehole. The household head then arrived and apologised
for keeping us waiting. He commented that he had forgotten we were coming
today and that the household’s women “had escaped early” for work, since it
is harvesting time, so they were not available to be interviewed. Nor were his
brother’s granddaughter and grandson, who were at school.’ (Field notes from
Ghana, 15 November 2000)
This extract from one of our field diaries represents a typical morning during
harvest time in farming households of the savannah areas of West Africa, where
we have undertaken our research. It illustrates how children are occupied with
a variety of activities that include work, in addition to learning and play. These
dimensions of rural childhood contrast with the universalized ideals of childhood discussed in the opening chapter, which portray childhood as a ‘work-free,
20
If they send you [to the farm] and you go, your parents will note this and help
you. Those that don’t go will be seen as a bad child. When I’m free I go to my
own work. I decide myself. If I don’t and sit down, how will I get to eat […] All
that children do in the household is important because it brings money to the
household and the children can even get money and give it to the landlord
[household head] to drink pito [millet beer]. […] My work for my family is
important because it is where they will get their food to eat. It is also good for
me because I’ll get food too and get strength that will allow me to go to my own
work and get money […] Because of my work for them, if I have friends to help
me with my rice farming, they will fetch millet for me to prepare food for them.
[…] And when I marry my father will give me the animals for my bride-wealth.
Adamu’s narrative introduces the general discourse on children’s position in
their household in his community and underscores our argument that a narrow
conceptualization of childhood as a period free from work does not capture the
reality of childhood in the West African context. His description and understanding of his work, its role in acquiring practical and social skills, as well as
its economic significance, and the role it plays in creating interdependencies
between different categories of people inside and outside of the household,
demonstrate how the universalized ideals of childhood are entirely inadequate
for understanding many children’s lives. We argue, therefore, that it is imperative
to pay attention to the set of ideas and practices that constitute childhood in a
particular context and acknowledge their validity, even if they differ from the
universalized model. Only through addressing the specific forms of childhood
experience that are the context for migration decisions is it possible to understand children’s migration. In this chapter, we lay the foundation for a situated
understanding of the young migrants who are the primary focus of the book by
providing information about the rural areas from which they originate. This is
important for following our arguments in the subsequent chapters but, at the
21
2 | Contexts of migration
dependent, vulnerable and care-receiving phase of life’ (Abebe 2007: 78) and
one consisting of school or playful leisure (Boyden 1997; Robson 2004b: 239).
Undoubtedly the extent and nature of children’s work varies according to a
variety of factors such as age, gender, household wealth and whether they are
raised in a rural or urban setting (Punch 2001a: 806). Nonetheless, for many
children work can and does occupy a significant amount of their time (Hashim
2004; Katz 2004; Nieuwenhuys 1994; Reynolds 1991).
Significantly, work is a central part of children’s identity formation and both
self-perceptions and others’ perceptions of them as ‘a good child’ (Hashim
2004: 83). This is well illustrated in a conversation that took place in the Upper
East Region of Ghana with fifteen-year-old Aduma, as he built a protective mud
wall around his onion seedlings planted on land ‘begged’ (borrowed) from a
neighbour whom he had repaid with onion seed.
Map 2.1 The research areas in West Africa
Area of child
migrants’ origin
MALI
Destination area
where child migrants
were interviewed
B U R K I N A FA S O
Ouagadougou
Significant town
International
boundary
PAYS BISA
Bobo Dioulasso
BAWKU
EAST
DISTRICT
Bolgatanga
Tamale
Korhogo
TOGO
GHANA
CÔTE D’IVOIRE
Yamoussoukrou
Abengourou
Kumasi
L
IB
ERI
Abidjan
Accra
Aboisso
Sassandra
A
San Pedro
0
Gul f o f Guine a
0
150km
75 miles
abstract level, the chapter also raises questions that are imperative to examine
in every context where children’s mobility is scrutinized.
Communities generating child migrants
Although the children we have undertaken research with come from communities located in different countries and colonial language zones and are
comprised of different ethnic groups (Bisa in Burkina Faso and Kusasi in
Ghana1), as is evident from the map above, they are located only some 125
miles apart and share many social, cultural and economic similarities. Historically, the two communities are linked through the resettlement during colonial
rule of Bisa families in the area inhabited by Kusasi without subsequent ethnic
22
23
2 | Contexts of migration
conflicts. In this section, the similarities between our communities will be laid
out, which will also facilitate a discussion at the end of the chapter of the differences in migratory trajectories evidenced in the two contexts, particularly along
gender lines, despite these similarities. This will serve to illustrate further the
importance of in-depth knowledge of the context from which children move
when attempting to comprehend fully children’s independent migration.
The communities in which we work are among the poorest in Burkina Faso
and Ghana. In Burkina Faso, Pays Bisa is located in Province du Boulgou, Région
Centre-est, where the proportion of the population earning an income below the
national poverty line of 82,672 CFA francs per year (approximately US$0.36 per
day) was 55.1 per cent in 2003 (INSD 2008a). Asset-based well-being indicators
also show that 23.4 per cent of the households in this region are poor and 34.0
per cent very poor – values that are somewhat higher than those for the entire
country, which are 21.5 per cent and 23.3 per cent respectively (INSD 2008b).
Levels of poverty are comparable to those of the Bawku East district2 of the
Upper East Region of Ghana, from where the children in the Ghanaian research
originate. The region was identified as the poorest in the country and one where
poverty had got worse when Canagarajah and Pörtner examined the regional
trends in poverty in Ghana on the basis of the 1991/92 and 1998/99 rounds of
the Ghana Living Standards Survey (Canagarajah and Pörtner 2002: 22).
Both communities’ principal livelihood strategy consists of farming, which is
rain-fed and has a low level of mechanization where ox-ploughs substitute for the
hoe – for those who can afford an ox or its hire. They are also both located within
a large belt of West African savannah in which households on average are quite
large, and inheritance and kinship affiliation is patrilineal. The communities
are exogamous, with wives moving to live in their husbands’ communities on
marriage. One other important common feature of these societies is the way in
which households are organized as intricate layers of sub-units through which
individuals are linked with one another and make claims on resources. What
this means is that, normatively, household heads have a heavy responsibility for
ensuring sufficient food for all household members (‘dependants’ or ‘juniors’)
and for managing livestock, so larger expenses for healthcare, funerals and
young men’s marriage can be met (Whitehead 1998: 22–5). To do this they use
the labour of all household members, who are expected to contribute to production on household farms. By working in this way, household members make
implicit claims on food, shelter and other collective resources. Household heads
are also concerned about maintaining a web of social relations to facilitate good
marriages for children of both genders, and to access resources and assistance
if need be (Thorsen 2005: 96–101).
In addition to their work on the compound farms, all household members
are allowed to farm independently, organizing the work and controlling the
crops or income realized. The extent to which they are able to spend time on
these independent economic activities, however, depends on the gender, age
and status of a dependant. We found that, as was the case in earlier years (see
Whitehead 1996)3, among the Kusasi, young male youth, for example, spend
considerable time in household fields and may be ‘sent out’ to communal work
parties. In contrast, a middle-aged but junior brother of a household head may
have his own granaries and considerable independent income and largely be
providing separately for his wives and children. He may work on his older
brother’s farms only on certain symbolic occasions. The household head will
still call on his wives and children, and in return each wife will have a share in
the periodic distributions of grain from the household head’s granaries (ibid.).
Similar patterns for the organization of male labour exist among the Bisa, but
here women have a more significant role in household food security. In Zéké
village, for example, married women’s independent farms accounted for around
one third of the cultivated land in 1997/98 and much of their land was planted
with millet, the main staple (Thorsen 2002). Although girls and women work in
the household fields4 and attend working parties on behalf of the household
head, they sometimes negotiate and are allocated time to work on their own
farms for the entire day, especially in households where many women are the
wives of absent migrants or are widowed (Thorsen 2005).
Women’s obligations are demanding, given both the nature of labour hierarchies in these contexts and the arduousness of domestic tasks. In addition
to their roles in farming, they are responsible for processing foodstuffs and for
providing ingredients for the soups that accompany the staple porridge. They
are also responsible for other domestic tasks, such as childcare, water collection,
cooking and cleaning. In contrast to their responsibilities in farming, however,
Kusasi women do this work only for their husbands and children (Hashim 2004;
Whitehead 1996), while age-based hierarchies among Bisa women imply that
young married women carry out much domestic work for their mother-in-law
and often serve an elderly household head food and water (Thorsen 2005). The
hierarchical system of control and command over labour means that a successful
household head is one who manages the balance between the various kinds of
activities of household members and who is successful in the social management
of negotiations and tensions around this (Whitehead 1996: 111–12).
From a young age, children are encouraged and expected to contribute to the
household’s subsistence. This is a theme we will treat in more detail below; here
it suffices to offer a quick overview of what is expected of children growing up
in these farming communities. From when they are first able to toddle around,
children are helping with tasks such as caring for their siblings and running
errands. From age seven onwards their activities begin to make a contribution
to the running of the household and to its livelihood activities. By the age of
fourteen, they are carrying out all those tasks that adults of their gender are
able and expected to do. Children’s tasks are gendered to the extent that few
24
Histories of migration
The literature on migration frequently presents the movement of individuals
away from a household as a means of reducing demand on scant resources
and/or of diversifying potential sources of income (Cordell et al. 1996; de Haan
1999; Hoddinott 1992). Certainly, for many years, large numbers of people have
travelled out of rural areas to take up seasonal or longer-term work (Cordell et al.
1996; Breusers 1998; Zongo 2003). The migration system from the West African
savannah to the plantations in the coastal countries has been comparable in
importance and duration with the system of labour migration to the mines in
southern Africa (Cordell et al. 1996). The communities in which we work are
no exception. When addressing the migration of children independently of
their families, it is important to take into consideration these scales of migration, as well as their history, to understand how people of all ages think about
relocation, the status of migrants and the effects of migration on well-being.
25
2 | Contexts of migration
activities are undertaken both by boys and by girls. Adolescents are significant
labour assets. Girls are essential to the domestic running of most households,
since domestic labour is both arduous and time-consuming. Most women farm
and/or engage in income-generating activities, such as the brewing of beer or
trade, so they benefit from the additional labour of young girls or their taking
over of domestic tasks so the mother has more time on her hands (Hashim
2004: 58). As we have noted, male youth, too, are significant labour assets, and
the part they play in communal work parties secures their household heads’
moral claims on labour when they require their own reciprocal labour, which
is important in contexts such as these, given the labour-intensive nature of
particular farming tasks (Whitehead 1996: 253).
Unpredictable rainfall coupled with highly depleted soil fertility and increasing demands on land in the face of a growing population has meant that it is
difficult to secure subsistence through farming (Awumbila 1997; Devereux 1992;
Dietz and Millar 1999; Mazzucato and Niemeijer 2000; Reenberg and Lund 1998;
Roncoli et al. 2002). In both areas, cotton and rice have been introduced as cash
crops. Although rice is an important cash crop in the Bawku East district, in
Pays Bisa long delays in the provision of grain for seeding and payment for cotton crops, as well as falling prices, have undermined the economic potential of
these crops. Even in the Bawku East district, despite this diversification, making
a living from farming is a stressful and arduous task. Consequently, as we have
noted, most households in both areas are very poor, and, like other farming
households in such circumstances, they engage in multiple activities to secure
their immediate as well as long-term well-being (see Whitehead and Kabeer
2001). These livelihood activities include the rearing of livestock, hand-irrigated
gardening and off-farm activities, such as petty trading or artisan production.
The other key livelihood strategy for both communities is that of migration.
In the Upper Volta (now Burkina Faso), the movement of people, especially
of young men, soared in the years of colonial rule, when the French developed
a system of taxation and labour conscription to pay for the costs of the administration and to develop the Ivorian plantation economy (Breusers 1998: 102;
Şaul and Royer 2001: 88). These policies were similar to those of other colonial
powers; the difference being the degree of force imposed on the local population
to make them comply with the colonial rulers’ objectives. While the French
coerced their subjects to work on French-owned plantations in Côte d’Ivoire,
the British colonial administration pursued a policy of underdeveloping the
north of the Gold Coast (now Ghana) precisely to promote its role largely as a
labour reserve for the south (Thomas 1973). Migrants from Burkina Faso also
moved to the cocoa-growing areas of the Gold Coast, in part to evade labour
conscription and in part to benefit from the higher wages. However, when the
cocoa economy declined in the late 1950s, along with northern Ghanaians, they
increasingly shifted their migration from Ghana to the thriving cocoa farms in
Côte d’Ivoire (Anarfi and Kwankye 2003; Finnegan 1976).
Earlier sources describe migration from the savannah as occurring during
the long dry season, when there was little or no farm work to be done (Caldwell
1969); however, by the 1970s most labour migration was much more long term,
with men staying away for several years (Cordell et al. 1996; Whitehead 1996).
By the late 1980s, long-term migrants from northern Ghana also shifted their
destinations from cocoa-growing areas to work in rural Côte d’Ivoire because
of the adverse economic situation throughout Ghana. By 2000, adult male
migrants had been joined by significant numbers of women and children and
were working and living away, and more migrants were once again working in
the cocoa-growing regions of Ghana, which by then had expanded from the south
into the centre of the country. Migrants of rural origin did not limit themselves
to plantation work but also spread into the cities to take up various kinds of
trades, piecemeal work and other income-generating activities, especially when
world cocoa prices declined throughout the 1990s, making its production less
profitable (Amanor 2001).
The history of female migrants is not described to the same extent and in
the same detail as past male migrations. However, a few studies in francophone
West Africa have examined panel data on migration to shed light on gender
differences among migrants aged twelve to twenty-five. A study in Burkina Faso
showed that whereas in the 1950s female first-time migrants were either family
helpers or enumerated as ‘unoccupied’, their occupations had become more
diverse by the late 1980s and 1990s. By then 39 per cent of the young female
migrants were self-employed, 15 per cent were students, 2 per cent apprentices,
2 per cent private sector employees and the remaining 42 per cent family helpers
or ‘unoccupied’ (Le Jeune et al. 2004: 161–6). Another study from Mali combining
census panel data and interviews shows that while boys’ labour migration rose
26
27
2 | Contexts of migration
steadily in the 1940s and 1950s, girls’ labour migration picked up only in the
early 1970s. By the 1990s, boys mostly travelled to other rural areas to work as
farm labour and herders, while 90 per cent of the girls travelled to urban areas
to become domestic workers. This migration is particularly important for girls,
argue the authors, because they build up a material and symbolic capital that
enables them to assert themselves in a more personal way and increases the
way they are valued by their peers, but also by young men (Hertrich and Lesclingand 2007). Lambert’s historical analysis of young Jola women’s migration in
Senegal shows that some girls and young women migrated to the Senegambian
groundnut basin in the 1930s, where they helped their brothers and received a
small remuneration in kind for their work. Jola women became independent
migrants in the 1950s and 1960s when increasing urbanization opened up possibilities for domestic work (Lambert 2007).
In spite of the civil war in Côte d’Ivoire, which escalated in 2002, migration
to the country remains a source of livelihood for both rural populations. This is
especially so for the Burkinabé migrants who, in 1998, comprised 56 per cent of
the migrant population in Côte d’Ivoire, whereas a mere 3.3 per cent were Ghanaian migrants. About half of the Burkinabé migrants and one quarter of the
Ghanaian migrants were born in Côte d’Ivoire (Bredeloup 2003: 90–91). Although
many were forced to leave the country early in the civil war, many also remained,
either because they were too poor to return or because they had invested all
their savings in property or businesses with a view to remaining permanently.
The accounts told by people in Pays Bisa in 2005 revealed that, throughout the
civil war, both men and women continued to travel to and from Côte d’Ivoire
because the wage levels and income from trade were still considerably higher
than in Burkina Faso, in spite of the deteriorating employment opportunities.
Thus, the historical roots of migration in both areas have continued as a
dominant experience for most households in the region, to the extent that
the 2000 Population and Housing Census found that of the 379,007 Kusasi
indigenous to the Upper East Region of Ghana, only 192,360 were residing there
(GSS 2002: 23). Surveys we each undertook in our communities of origin indicate
similarly high levels of migration. For example, 68 per cent of household heads
in the village of Tempane Natinga in Ghana’s Upper East Region reported that
they had at least one adult male migrant and 13.5 per cent had four or more
in 2001.5 Similarly, in Zéké village in Pays Bisa, 85 per cent of the households
had at least one adult male migrant and 12 per cent had four or more in 2005.6
Children may also have spent their early years in towns or villages in Côte
d’Ivoire or southern Ghana or have seen their mothers travel abroad to spend
a couple of years with their father before returning to the village. With few
exceptions, the current generation of fathers and grandfathers in Pays Bisa and
Bawku East district have been migrants to the central and southern regions
of Ghana or to Côte d’Ivoire, as have some mothers and some grandmothers.
At social gatherings, stories about migrant life and urban lifestyles in Accra,
Abidjan, Kumasi and Ouagadougou often crop up, both to reinforce the social
status attained as migrants and to obtain information about current migrants.
Children see older relatives leave the village and return looking fatter and more
smartly dressed, and bringing gifts and money to invest in livestock, housing,
consumer items and other desirable objects.
Clear, too, is that children’s migration without their parents is also extensive.
For example, in Tempane Natinga, 51 of its 96 households reported having at
least one independent child migrant. Moreover, the total is probably higher,
given the sex-ratio discrepancy between girls and boys (190 to 257 respectively),
which is likely to be due in part to the under-reporting of girl migrants. Moreover, migration was not only out of the village but also into it; the polio-inflicted
girl in the opening extract being one example. The normality of children’s movement between households is well illustrated in the following case study of just
one household in Ghana’s Upper East Region.
A young man, Paul, who is aged 30, heads this farming household. Paul is the
most junior of five brothers, the other four brothers being migrants, three in
the south of Ghana and one in Côte d’Ivoire. Other household members include
Paul’s aged mother, his wife and their baby daughter. In addition, Paul’s wife’s
teen-aged sister lives with them to help with childcare and domestic work
while her elder sister carries out some petty trading and trains as a seamstress.
Another teen-aged girl living in the household is the second-born brother’s
daughter who helps her grandmother with her domestic work. Also in the household is one of Paul’s eldest brother’s sons, aged about 17, and the third-born
brother’s 14-year-old son, who was sent back by his parents in order to receive
‘traditional’ treatment for the epilepsy from which he suffers. The 17-year-old
moved into the household a few years earlier to assist Paul by looking after the
livestock and to carry out farm work. Prior to this, his older brother had lived in
this household for a number of years for the same reason. He had then moved to
the third brother’s household, in Côte d’Ivoire, to look after this brother’s family
and property while the brother was away on long trips, trading in kola and other
goods between Ghana and Nigeria.
Children’s worlds and work
Children in the majority world undertake a myriad of work tasks. Girls and
boys of all ages work in rural locations in agriculture, in domestic tasks and as
cattle-herders (Abebe 2007; Hashim 2004; Katz 2004; Nieuwenhuys 1994; Punch
2001a; Reynolds 1991), as well as in fishing (Anarfi and Kwankye 2003; Caouette
2001). They work in the informal economy of urban areas as hawkers, shoe
shiners and porters (Agarwal et al. 1997; Anarfi and Kwankye 2003; Beauchemin
1999; Castle and Diarra 2003; Khair 2005; Kwankye et al. 2007; Thorsen 2007b),
28
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2 | Contexts of migration
as garbage collectors (Khair 2005), as well as assistants to market women (Robson 2004a; Schildkrout 1981). They can work as carers (Robson 2004b) and be
employed in factories (Cauoette 2001; Nieuwenhuys 1995), in shops, restaurants
(Castle and Diarra 2003; Thorsen 2009c) and hotels (Iversen 2002), in mining (Bøås and Hatløy 2008), the construction industry, commercial agriculture
(Bastia 2005; Punch 2007), and as domestic workers (Camacho 1999; Jacquemin
2004; Khair 2005; Somerfelt 2001) and in the commercial sex industry (Caouette
2001; Montgomery 2001; O’Connell Davidson 2005).
These various studies of children’s work indicate that children’s tasks can
be paid or unpaid, that they can work for themselves, for their families or for
others, and that the work in which they participate involves a wide range and
varying degrees of hazard (Hashim 2008). The majority, though, are more concerned with children working in abusive and exploitative situations, primarily
because they are oriented towards advocacy or policy issues, often responding to the huge attention that the issues of child labour and child trafficking
have received in the last decade or so. This international advocacy has been
effective in highlighting the plight of those children in particularly difficult
circumstances. However, it has also resulted in a totalizing discourse where
the diversity of children’s experiences and work situations becomes treated as
equivalent, reducing all working children to the status of victims, and serving
to shore up a characterization of them as without agency (O’Connell Davidson
2005; Whitehead and Hashim 2005).
It has also had a number of other repercussions. For one, certain aspects of
children’s work have remained largely unconsidered. Katz, for instance, bemoans
the paucity of data on children’s labour in rural areas, especially in domestic
work, arguing that even when it is discussed it is rarely documented systematically, which she suggests reflects the metropolitan concern with remuneration
and the market (Katz 2004: 279). It is also the case that work for one’s own
household has tended to be considered as ‘helping out’ and not genuine work
(see, for example, Bequele and Boyden 1988; ILO 1997); consequently, little
attention has been given to children’s work in the domestic arena (Hashim 2004:
16). This is despite the fact that many children work as unremunerated members
of their families’ labour force (Nieuwenhuys 1994: 203); the majority of the 90
per cent of child labour in Ghana, for example, being unpaid family workers
involved in family farms and enterprises (Canagarajah and Coulombe 1997: 10).
Zelizer, for her part, argues that the dominance of attention to child labour
and its representation as a corrupting force has inhibited careful examination
of children’s economic activity, little consideration being given to children as
authentic economic agents (Zelizer 2002: 377). Whitehead et al. suggest that
this is largely due to perceptions of children as economic dependants in the
family (Whitehead et al. 2007: 37–8).
Third, a very austere picture of children’s engagement in tasks that contribute
to production and reproduction has been painted. In contrast, many childcentred studies present an alternative picture. Katz, for example, refers to how
play and work intertwine in children’s lives in a village in the Sudan where she
carried out her research, where children ‘worked at play and played at work. They
worked while they played and played while they worked, they worked around
their play and they played in the interstices of their work’ (Katz 2004: 60). In
our own research, we frequently found that this was the case too, even when
the work was tough, as three young cattle-herders made evident when they were
observed taking turns to chase the cattle away from the crops, between times
playing and wrestling and swimming in the dam.
This morning at 8 a.m. we found two young boys sitting under a tree while
another boy was chasing some cattle away from crops. They were Michael, who
is nine, Luke, who is ten or so, and Abugre, who is old for a herder at about 13.
As usual, after some initial shyness, they were eager to tell me about their experiences. Apparently, they bring out the cattle at about 7 a.m. to graze and then
take them down to the dam at around midday to drink, before finding a shady
area to rest until sunset, when they take them home and pen them. They were
looking after about 30 cattle in total and they take it in turns to chase the cattle
away from the crops, starting with the most junior. When I asked them how they
decided who was the most junior they told me it was decided by wrestling. They
drank water from a well as we went down to the dam and took the opportunity
to have a dip, although the respite didn’t last long as other herders arrived and
the animals got mixed up, so they chased their cattle, whacking them to separate
them from the others. (Field notes from Ghana, 30 October 2000)
Girls in Pays Bisa used the occasion of work parties as an opportunity for
gossip and banter.
Four adolescent girls, one of whom had recently married, had entered a small
rotational work party arrangement with a woman in her mid-30s; this day, when
we were working along, they were harvesting her bambara groundnuts and in the
following days they would harvest each girl’s field in turn. During the work we
chatted and the girls were accusing the Fulani herders, who had settled in their
village, of being sorcerers because one of them had beaten a pregnant woman
from the neighbouring household during a quarrel. At another much larger work
party to harvest millet, where all the participants had been sent by their household heads, young girls were gossiping about a married woman whose husband
was in Côte d’Ivoire. Although they were made up beautifully, with coloured dots
on their foreheads and cheeks to attract the attention of young men at the work
party, they echoed adult gossip and disapproval in their own manner by noting
that it was frightening how that woman applied make-up. (Field notes from
Burkina Faso, 15 October and 10 December 2001)
30
Five-year-old Pascal was very proud that he had participated in a work party in
his own right that day. It was a work party called by one of the old women in the
household and before setting off to her farm, he had told his mother that she
didn’t need to call him when the meal was ready for he was off to a work party
and would eat there. (Field notes from Burkina Faso, 1 October 2001)
Although young children in the village in the Upper East Region of Ghana
also were not compelled to work, they sometimes were accused of being lazy
if they refused to work. Expectations grew, though, as they became older, and
sanctions could be more severe, in extreme cases with the withholding of food
or beatings (Hashim 2004: 90). Thus, by the age of twelve or thirteen, as was the
case among the Bisa, children were increasingly expected to contribute, and so
became integrated into all tasks and obliged to take part in agricultural work.
Our findings are in keeping with other studies of children’s work in both
developing and industrialized countries, which indicate that the amount and
type of children’s participation in tasks increase as they get older and that the
tasks they perform increase in complexity and responsibility (Punch 2001a:
806). Work thus becomes more important to children’s sense of self as they
get older and is as central to being a child as it is to being an adult. Children’s
development is often measured in terms of their embracing a positive attitude
to work (Hashim 2004: 78), as reflected in Adamu’s story above.
Although parents and grandparents are concerned that children become
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2 | Contexts of migration
What these examples illustrate is the risk of separating activities from their
meanings if we look at children’s work in isolation. As a result, we fail to understand that, in addition, for example, to constructing an identity of being a good
child through work, the social context of the work, of running an errand or
participating in ceremonies on behalf of an adult, gives children the opportunity
to develop other identities through observing, reflecting and participating. Thus,
it is not just play which is integrated with work in this way, but also the learning
of a variety of practical and social skills.
Work is a central part of children’s lives and reflects the high value placed on
hard work in the West African savannah. The principal greeting from a passer-by
to those engaged in any activity, for instance, in Kusasi vernacular is tom’e tom’e
and in Bisa vernacular zibeu-zibeu – terms that literally translate as ‘work work’
and signify that the passer-by wishes the worker good luck. However, people
never compelled young children to work, but children were present in all work
spheres and were encouraged to take up small tasks by their parents and older
siblings, such as collecting water or caring for younger siblings. Tasks were
usually carried out in the company of other children and under the guidance
of adults, and children took significant pride in their participation in work,
in the rewards for their work or in the purchasing of small items from the
proceeds of their work.
skilled at various economic and social activities, also important was that children
adopted a sense of self-reliance, as nicely described by Lamisi in the village of
Tempane Natinga. ‘As children grow they follow you to the farm but then they
grow enough to see that they, by themselves, want to start doing something for
themselves. You pull back small and then they are responsible for themselves’
(ibid.: 78). Similarly, in Pays Bisa, Minneta’s mother often told anecdotes about
her youngest children, among others about her seven-year-old daughter’s dream
of selling the harvest from her tiny rice field to pay for her school enrolment.
Some weeks later, she helped her daughter buy school clothes, adding a little
extra money to the revenue from the rice (Thorsen 2005: 143). Children are
expected and encouraged both to contribute and to provide for themselves by
engaging in economic activities, usually by being allocated a small field. Among
the Bisa, most boys and some girls have a rice field from an early age and older
boys also tended to have a millet field, while the girls had a groundnut field. In
Tempane Natinga almost all boys and girls from age ten and sometimes younger
had a small rice field, although younger children did not produce enough to
earn very much from their farming. In the dry season, older boys in their mid
to late teens farmed onions if they had access to the land, but older girls did
not. This, in part, accounts for the differences we found in the likelihood of
girls migrating, as we shall explore later.
Children did not always spend their money in ways of which their parents
approved – spending it on sweets, for instance; but what is clear is that children
in these contexts exercise autonomy7 over their own income. Among the Kusasi,
children tended to buy things like soap and, their income supplemented by
their parents as a means to encourage and reward them, cloth to be made
into clothing for celebrations. However, as they get older and are able either
to produce more or to pursue other income-generating activities, in addition to
cloth and soap, children begin to purchase those items that are necessary for
their progression into adulthood; namely pots, basins and bowls, in the case of
girls, and livestock to rear, in the case of boys. If they are students, they often
take on some of the costs associated with their schooling. Older children also
give gifts to seniors who have assisted them with land or labour. In so doing,
they are demonstrating an understanding of the nature of social relations in
this context (Hashim 2004: 81).
Thus in the contexts in which we work, children’s core pursuits are, at all
ages, doing many domestic, farming and livelihood tasks. Moreover, it is not
simply that children have to work – for example, because of family or community
poverty – but that work is seen as correct behaviour for children. Both children
and adults define a good child by conformity to such behaviour. Undoubtedly,
there are differences in children’s working roles on the basis of age and gender,
but, crucially, work is fundamentally implicated in the identity of a child and
working is viewed as part of her or his ‘healthy’ development.
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Children’s worlds and learning
As discussed in Chapter 1, childhood and formal education became inextricably linked during the changes in the industrialized world in the nineteenth
century. As a result, one of the key concepts that has become intrinsic to the
definition of ‘average’ or ‘normal’ childhood is formal education (Boyden 1997:
200). There is a tendency, consequently, to view children’s inability to access
schooling as an opportunity denied (Hashim 2007), both because it is seen as
a precondition for economic growth and social development, and importantly
because of its role in individual self-realization (Kabeer 2000: 463). Although
the normalcy of schooling rarely comes into question, constantly under debate
is formal education’s purpose (e.g. to prepare children to join the workforce
or to facilitate them to pursue their unique strengths and interests), its most
appropriate content (e.g. basic skills acquisition or critical thinking) and the
best means of providing it (e.g. teacher-imparted information or student-led
learning). Policy-makers nevertheless do perceive universal formal education
as important, because it is seen as vital to economic development and to the
proper functioning of the social and political process (Boyden 1997; Cheney
2007; Kabeer 2000). Consequently, national governments, as well as organizations such as the World Bank and the IMF, pursue a policy of increasing
school enrolment and attendance rates in the belief that only through increasing
formal education will countries be able to develop. In particular, the United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization’s (UNESCO) initiative
of Education for All (EFA) in 1990 established an international commitment to
bring the benefits of formal education to every citizen in every society; this was
reaffirmed in 2000, when 189 countries adopted two of the EFA goals among
the eight Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
Owing in part to EFA, both Ghana (see GME 1999) and Burkina Faso (see
Ministère de l’Enseignement de Base et de l’Alphabétisation)8 pursue the principle of free primary schooling. However, although in theory primary schooling
is free, we both found that schools usually demanded levies for a range of items,
such as equipment, extra teachers, lunches and other items and services, some
of which benefit the schoolchildren while others do not. These costs, in addition to others, such as for uniforms, textbooks and notebooks, are significant
in a context where most families are poor or very poor and family sizes large,
placing formal education for all household children out of the reach of many.
This is reflected in the relatively low rates of school uptake in both our communities of origin. In the village of Tempane Natinga in the Upper East Region
of Ghana, for example, only 62 per cent of school-aged children were enrolled in
2000/01. It is important to note, too, that these children were concentrated in the
early stages of the formal educational system, with 47 per cent being enrolled
in primary school, 10 per cent in junior secondary and just 5 per cent in senior
secondary school. This contrasts with the national gross primary enrolment
rate of 73 per cent for boys and 71 for girls,9 between 2000 and 2007 (UNICEF
2008: 134).
Across the border to the north, in the Bisa region, the formal educational takeup rates were even lower. In 1999/2000, the primary school uptake was as low
as 24 per cent at the district level (Koné 2001) but 35.1 per cent at the regional
level and 43.0 per cent at the national level. By 2007/08, the enrolment rates
had increased to 69.8 per cent and 72.5 per cent at the regional and national
levels respectively (INSD 2008a), but it is difficult to say whether this increase is
also reflected in more remote rural villages. Even within the Bisa region, school
development differs significantly. Some villages had schools built in the 1970s
and early 1980s, while others still do not have any school buildings. The primary
school in Zéké village where we lived opened only in 1988 and served three small
villages. In 1992/93 it had 160 pupils (44 girls and 116 boys) (Berthelette 2001)
and the number increased slightly in 1999/2000 to 176 pupils (55 girls and 121
boys). It decreased again in 1999/2000, when only 109 children attended (28 girls
and 81 boys) (Koné 2001). This decrease reflected the disillusionment felt by
parents when the teachers pleaded with the school authorities to be moved to
schools in rural towns or, at least, to larger, less remote villages. Nonetheless,
in both our cases most parents, even in the poorest families, enrolled at least
one child in primary school, only thirteen households in Tempane Natinga, for
example, having no children enrolled in school.
Despite the difficulties associated with schooling, some children were not
only successful in completing schooling but went to extraordinary lengths to
do so, as exemplified by the story of one teenaged boy, who was in the first year
of junior secondary school in Tempane Natinga.
In 2000, David was 14 years old and lived in a large household of 18 people.
His father, Abanga, who was in his 50s, was the head of the household. Overall,
David’s family was very poor. His father had no education and described himself
as a farmer, but produced very little. He was also a well digger and earned
some income from this. David’s mother grew a little rice, but, because she was
sickly, was unable to do much. David, for his part, was very active. In fact, it
took two weeks of us trying to interview him before he was available because he
was so busy with a variety of different activities. In addition to farming rice, he
farmed bambara groundnuts and onions. David also engaged in other incomegenerating activities. Along with two friends, he contracted himself out to work
on people’s farms during the rainy season and to build mud walls around onion
farms in the dry season. In the school holidays, he pushed a donkey cart and
sold water in the district capital, Bawku. David spent his income on school
levies, books, pens, eggs to rear guinea fowl, ingredients for his mother to cook
for a work party to weed his father’s farm and, because he had no time to collect
this himself, grass for roofing the compound’s rooms. Although David’s mother
34
It is clear from David’s story that he was working incredibly hard to put
himself through school; not only by covering his school expenses, but also by
securing the necessary labour to ensure that vital farm work was done. However,
by 2004 David had dropped out of school and was working in nearby Garu,
operating a grinding mill. He was, though, using some of his income to help
with his younger siblings’ school costs. Whether it was his decision to drop out
or he was encouraged by his elders to do so is not clear. Among Bisa families
with access to more labour, seniors sometimes encouraged their juniors in
secondary school to find paid work outside the family to meet some of their
own educational expenses, as did the elderly household head, Nokwende, in
January 2005.
One of my [grand]sons has [attended] secondary school in Tenkodogo [for] three
years. When he returned home at the beginning of the holidays, I advised him
to find a temporary job in town rather than hanging about in the village. My son
was lucky and found work in a bar, but after some time he came home for a visit
and this time he complained about not having enough sleep. I told him that life
is like that and asked if he preferred to come home or wanted to continue working. In fact, my son is still working and he will only stop once the new school
year starts!
Children’s own role in pursuing schooling in this way is rarely addressed
in the literature. It tends to be assumed that parents decide to fund or not
to fund children’s schooling, and that if they do, then children go to school
(Hashim 2007). These examples clearly show how this may not be the case;
David’s account shows the ends to which children may go to remain in education
if they believe this will benefit them in the longer term, and Nokwende’s account
shows that some elders support this type of strategizing. In an important sense,
the aspiration to go to school, to continue schooling and to get through school is
as much an individual commitment by the child, and children demonstrate this
commitment by contributing to the costs of their formal education, especially
when and if parents cannot meet them (Hashim forthcoming).
In contrast to children like David, other children clearly doubted the value of
school. This was especially so as, although there are some jobs and opportunities in the local labour market which require formal education, these are very
limited, so that children’s chief ways of earning incomes locally did not require
formal education. Also relevant is that dominant modes of securing resources in
these areas are through patronage relations and communal labour; for which,
again, formal education has no relevance. A further disincentive to schooling
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2 | Contexts of migration
had paid most of his school costs until Primary Six, since then he had covered
all expenses himself, except for his uniform, which was bought for him by his
senior brother; himself a migrant to the south.
was that formal education was rarely considered to be beneficial unless a child
completed secondary school, since formal job opportunities were uncommon
without a senior secondary school certificate (Hashim 2007). Also relevant is
that the benefits of education are evaluated not only in terms of its merits for
an individual child, but in terms of securing a household’s well-being, as made
explicit in the following, when one elderly father explains why he struggled
to send one of his sons to school: ‘If they do well they can get jobs. By the
time they finish I will be old and they can feed the younger children’ (Hashim
2004: 76). This comment reinforces how relational is well-being in this context;
as will be taken up later in later chapters. In this sense, decisions related to
schooling involve multiple considerations related to a number of individuals’
well-being, and are not simply an evaluation of the educational benefits for an
individual child.
Thus, even when they could technically afford the costs of schooling, parents still did not usually send all their children to school. Some researchers
suggest this is due to parents’ ignorance of the benefits of schooling (Ike and
Twumasi-Ankrah 1999), while others have suggested that parents prefer to send
their children to work rather than school, believing their role as parents is to
prepare their children for adulthood – for example, by teaching them a trade
early (Boyden 1997: 212). Alternatively, in contexts such as ours, wealthier households may have more incentive not to send their children to school, since in
those households which are successful in farming, children’s labour is needed
and is more ‘productive’. This is related to a further vital factor in determining
whether formal education is considered a viable option for the poor in rural
areas, which is the perception of the benefits of formal education compared
with other available opportunities (Punch 2002a: 126). These considerations are
particularly important if the labour market ‘is structured such that there is a
market for children’s work and for unskilled adult labour, but a limited market
for semi-skilled labour offering limited improvements in returns in addition to
poor quality education’ (Moore 2001: 8). Some economists, in particular, pursue
the idea that ‘formal education makes very little difference, given limited formal
sector opportunities, and most skills are acquired by the “learning by doing”
principle’ (Grootaert and Kanbur 1995: 193), reflecting the ideas of Rogers and
Standing, who queried the dichotomy between work and education itself. They
suggest that commentators should not ‘make an automatic assumption that
work by children impairs education and intellectual development […] work
itself may be an important component of “education” especially in householdbased production systems’ (Rogers and Standing 1981, cited in Akabayashi and
Psacharopoulos 1999: 121).
We too have highlighted how children’s work is partly about their learning;
both how to undertake their principal roles in domestic, farming and incomegenerating activities, and learning about the nature of social relations in context.
36
Of the three boys, the oldest is helping his father on the farm. He is the one to
lead the oxen when they plough. The second one will be sent to a Koranic school
in a village near the Ghanaian border when he gets a bit older. Eventually that
will give him work, for someone who knows how to read the Koran can teach
others and he can also perform ceremonies. The youngest – my son – will go to
the school here in the village. He is too soft to endure a Koranic school.
This comment also illustrates how there is diversification within strategies
for learning. In addition to the formal education system, which in Burkina
Faso include state- and mission-run schools, parents, and in particular fathers
or male household heads, sent children to different types of Koranic schools.
Mostly they sent one or two boys to a rural Koranic school, where the children
worked on their master’s farm in addition to learning the Koran.10 Some children
were sent to a ‘franco-arabe’ school in Tenkodogo, where the system resembled
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2 | Contexts of migration
This is especially so, as formal education in the area is either perceived as of too
poor quality to be worth the investment or not likely to provide livelihood opportunities on completion. However, we also caution against seeing all children’s
work as the process of acquiring the skills necessary for their advancement into
adulthood. Children also work because, in contexts such as these, work is an
age-appropriate behaviour (Hashim 2004).
Also significant is how households in contexts such as those in which we
work, where there is considerable agro-climatic difficulty and uncertainty, adopt
a range of strategies to secure immediate and long-term security, including both
crop diversification and diversification of livelihoods (Whitehead and Kabeer
2001: 8–9). Migration itself is a diversification strategy, in that it expands potential sources of income (Cordell et al. 1996; Hoddinott 1992). Formal education
is also one means of potential diversification, with households investing some
resources as it represents the possibility of future alternative livelihoods (Hashim
forthcoming). However, because formal schooling is not a guarantee of security,
it remains, for most households, just one of a range of activities, and parents
often express the need to balance out the various strategies to secure present
and future well-being, as well expressed in the comments of one household head
in Ghana, himself educated: ‘If you have four boys, you send two to school and
two will stay to care for animals and help you on the farm. That way you can
care for those in school. If you have girls, you give them vocational training,
such as sewing or hairdressing.’
In the Bisa region, the mother of a young boy who was approaching school age
explained their educational strategies for him and for two older half-brothers,
whose mother had remarried and left the village. None of the parents was formally educated and only two daughters had been enrolled in school earlier,
but one had dropped out when her father died and the other died in her first
year of school.
the formal school system in the sense that the children lived with kin and were
taught French, mathematics and the Koran at regular hours. Finally, some were
sent to masters in town, where their training would include begging and working
for various employers to get food. Another strategy was to find an apprenticeship
for a son, usually with kin, as otherwise it would require a large fee to be paid
to the patron. This diversification of learning strategies diminishes competition
between children and also increases the chances that some are successful and
can support others (Thorsen 2007b).
The ability to adopt learning diversification strategies, of course, is dependent
on the opportunities available locally, and one contrasting aspect of our sending communities is the availability of formal and informal education. In the
village of Tempane Natinga, the recent addition of a senior secondary school
to the existing primary and junior secondary schools meant that children were
able to complete their school education without leaving home. Nevertheless,
many still preferred to go to other schools owing to the village school’s relative
newness and perceived deficiency, especially as the village had no electricity,
limiting the operation of the school and its appeal to good teachers. Limited
opportunities to carry out apprenticeships locally meant children had to travel
farther afield to pursue opportunities in the apprenticeships they preferred. In
both our areas, favoured apprenticeships were as vehicle or moped mechanics
and in carpentry for boys, as well as tailoring in Pays Bisa. Girls in both our
areas preferred tailoring, followed by hairdressing apprenticeships. In Pays Bisa,
however, all learning strategies outside farming meant that children had to
leave home before the age of eighteen. Secondary formal education required
that they moved into the nearest rural town at the age of twelve or thirteen;
some attended Koranic school from the age of seven or eight but often started
when they were a few years older, and apprenticeships were usually initiated
when children were in their mid-teens. Thus, in the contexts in which we work,
schooling is not intrinsic to childhood. Parents view formal education as just
one among a variety of ways of preparing their children for adulthood and ensuring their ability to secure a livelihood, which is also tempered by perceptions
of what types of learning are more appropriate for girls and for boys and by a
child’s perceived interest and ability. Adolescent children also begin to make
conscious decisions regarding which form of learning to pursue.
Conclusion: the importance of context
In the opening chapter of this book, we discussed how the universalizing ideal
of childhood may not capture the reality of children’s lives in diverse contexts.
This chapter has illustrated just how different are the local ideas and practices
related to childhood in the areas in which we work. For one, in contrast to the
global model, clearly work in these contexts is intrinsic to childhood. Moreover, schooling is not. We argue, as a result, that when trying to comprehend
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childhood, it is necessary to explore this situationally. The importance of this
is made clear through a comparison of our studies in two rural communities,
which despite many social, cultural and economic similarities have significant
differences in children’s migratory trajectories.
The most significant difference between the areas of origin in our studies
concern girls’ opportunities to migrate. Although Bisa girls are just as keen to
migrate as boys, the girls are far more constrained socially in their movement
compared to boys, who set off on their first migration in their mid to late teens.
Parents are generally reluctant to allow adolescent girls to migrate independently of relatives, hence only six of fifty-nine young migrants interviewed in
Ouagadougou and two rural towns in the south-east in 2005 were girls. This,
moreover, was not a methodological bias emerging from the more hidden nature
of the work that migrant girls tend to do, as it was supported by household
composition surveys in the area of origin in 2001/02 and 2005 that showed that
teenaged girls primarily moved to join their husband. This contrasts with the
findings from the research in Ghana, which showed that girls were migrating
independently in larger numbers than were boys, with thirty-six boys compared
to forty-one girls living outside the village at the time of a migration survey
in March 2001, while eighteen boys and thirty girls migrated into the village.
Moreover, as noted earlier, the sex-ratio discrepancy between boys and girls
is likely in part to be accounted for by the larger number of girls migrating.
A further difference was that, although in both cases boys were found to take
matters into their own hands and run away from home if parents did not give
permission for them to migrate, Bisa girls seemed more reluctant. In contrast,
as we shall discuss in more detail later in the book, in the Ghanaian research,
girls as well as boys were reported to have ‘run away’, and three of the four
runaways interviewed in southern Ghana were girls. Both of us found that one
tenet of the discourses surrounding girls’ migration was the imagined benefit
of acquiring trousseau items. For girls in Pays Bisa, someone ‘who has acquired
most of this herself has a better standing vis-à-vis her in-laws, and in the case
the marriage broke she will not have to start anew’ (Thorsen 2010: 273). The
paradox of adolescent Bisa girls wishing to migrate and see the world, and yet
having their movements constrained, was actually pushing them not to delay
marriage, and to preferably marry migrants who more readily guaranteed to
take them abroad.
These kinds of discourses linking girls’ migration with the acquiring of a
trousseau are common in other contexts too, and referred to in a number of
academic and policy-oriented studies of children’s migration in West Africa (cf.
Beauchemin 1999; Castle and Diarra 2003; Kielland and Sanogo 2002; Riisøen
et al. 2004). For instance, one study which looked at kayayoos (head porters) in
Accra, Ghana, found many of these girls to be migrants from the north, who see
their migration ‘as the short-term cost to be paid for a long-term gain – change
to a better occupation, marriage, or the purchase of capital goods necessary
for training for a better occupation’ (Agarwal et al. 1997: 257). Casely-Hayford’s
work with the Dagomba of the Northern Region of Ghana found that ‘in the
last few years young girls and women have begun migrating to the cities on a
seasonal and yearly basis to find work and improve their income. Girls interviewed stated that they went on “kayayoo”, to “have their eyes opened” and also
buy the necessary items for marriage’ (Casely-Hayford 1999: 16). An interesting
longitudinal perspective of this is provided by Lambert, in his analysis of young
Jola women in Senegal. Lambert argues that, in the beginning, the mobility of
the early urban migrants in the 1950s and 1960s was circumscribed by their
elders’ fears of losing control over their domestic capacity in the day-to-day and
longer-term running of the household. Nevertheless, young women were able
to overcome the opposition to their urban activities by returning each farming
season and by justifying their migration with the need to amass a trousseau, a
practice that had become increasingly widespread during the 1950s. According
to Lambert, this justification has been transformed in the course of time to
entail, in the 1970s, girls providing some or all of their own clothing and, by
the 1990s, girls aspiring to be urban residents. Part of this transformation, he
argues, was rooted in the development of new youth styles associated with school
and modernity and enacted through clothing and visits to dance halls. Older
girls were able to orient their identity construction towards these styles only
after working in domestic service and, in turn, spurred the material desires of
their younger sisters (Lambert 2007). Limitations on Bisa girls’ ability to migrate
in turn pushed boys to migrate because otherwise they might have had a hard
time finding a wife. Marriage was also a factor in boys’ movement among the
Kusasi in the Upper East Region of Ghana; however, in this case it was related
to the need to earn an income, as there appears to be increasing pressure on
boys to have certain items, such as furniture, in order to marry (Hashim 2005:
50). Consequently, while in both our cases children and youth expressed the
desire to see a bit of the world outside the village, along with other migratory
aspirations, in Pays Bisa this put pressure on girls to marry early, while in the
Upper East Region the effect was to delay marriage.
Thus, in spite of some parental concern, in the Upper East Region of Ghana
girls appear more able to migrate, while just a couple of hundred kilometres
north, in Pays Bisa, despite the many similarities in economic and social relations, girls are far less able to move away from home except as wives. As females
farm more actively in Pays Bisa, this may be significant. Because of this, Bisa girls
were more able to earn an income in their home villages from the sale of the
proceeds of the crops. In contrast, girls in the Upper East Region of Ghana, who
were less able to farm privately yet still had a need for an income, used this as
leverage when negotiating with their seniors to migrate in order to acquire either
an income or what they hoped to purchase with it – for example, by being gifted
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2 | Contexts of migration
it by a relative whom they ‘helped out’. Also crucial are strong taboos against
having children outside marriage and elders’ fears that their daughters will
fall pregnant if they migrate independently. Parents also feared that daughters
might marry a man from a different region at the migration destination and
thereby decrease the parents’ ability to call on married daughters’ help and on
the labour contribution that was part of their son-in-law’s lifelong obligations to
them. Kusasi elders are similarly concerned that girls may not marry a Kusasi
man if they are migrants, as this might mean the loss of valuable bride-price
cattle; however, as we shall see later, the pressures brought to bear by girls to
be allowed to migrate can be quite significant.
While this discussion of migration may be somewhat pre-emptive here, it is
useful to make these comparisons in order to illustrate the very important point
that the economic and social dynamics of a place make possible or constrain
girls’ and boys’ mobility in diverse ways, such that children’s migratory paths
and trajectories cannot be assumed but need to be established.
3 | Choosing to move: the reasons for rural
children’s migration
‘Akuka was 18 when we interviewed him in a village in the Ashanti Region of
Ghana. He had never attended school and had been a migrant since the age of
14, working always in rural areas in farming, for both a relative and a non-related
employer.
‘“It was poverty that made me come here. I wasn’t in school and I was suffering [in my village] so my senior brother brought me here. I did not want to come,
but poverty forced me out. […] I am working with my brother farming maize, and
tomatoes too.”
‘Just six weeks after his arrival in Ouagadougou in February 2005, we
interviewed the 16-year-old shoe-shiner, Seni, whose brothers introduced us. As
it were, we also knew his father from a visit to his village a few weeks earlier; the
snow-balling strategy to find street-working child migrants was introducing us to
a large, multi-local network of people and livelihoods.
‘“This year, instead of working on the irrigated rice farms at Bagré with my
father, I came to the city because I wanted to be familiar with the city too. […]
I’ve come to Ouaga to get money! When I go back to my village, I’ll give some to
my parents to receive their blessings and I’ll also buy a bicycle to travel to the
village [from the nearest town twelve miles away].”’
The above remarks, made by child migrants whom we interviewed, begin to
convey the reasons why the children from our areas migrate. In both accounts
poverty and the desire to earn money figure large in the boys’ reasons for moving,
as they do in much of the literature addressing children’s migration, especially
the advocacy literature (cf. ILO 2002; SC UK 2005, 2006, 2007; Terre des Hommes
2003). How poverty exactly influences migration decisions needs to be unpacked
and examined in more detail. For example, Beauchemin, in a report for UNICEF
and Catholic Action for Street Children in Accra, Ghana, states that 35 per cent
of the children registered in a street children’s programme in Accra cited poverty
as their reasons for leaving home (Beauchemin 1999: 15). Other studies suggest
that although migrants may come from poorer families, they do not necessarily
represent the poorest. One survey of child labour migration from rural Burkina
Faso based on interviews with parents, for instance, shows that differences in
household and village wealth were a much weaker factor than anticipated. The
analysis was premised on children’s relocation being an outcome of household
42
the outcome of an extremely complex interplay between macro-level structures,
micro-level institutions and individual agency. Broader social, economic
and political structures provide the context in which individuals and groups
must decide whether or not to migrate. Their decisions, however, are strongly
influenced by their own personal histories, identities and resources; their connections with social networks in a destination country […]; and by the extent to
43
3 | Choosing to move
decisions, and the authors conclude that poorer households lack the information, the social networks and the resources to organize their children’s migration, even if they desire to send them to the city or to neighbouring countries
(Kielland and Sanogo 2002: 30–33). Another study conducted in Laos, Myanmar
and Thailand finds that the expenses associated with migration may be beyond
the reach of the very poor, and the risk of not finding work may also discourage
movement (SC UK 2005: 30). These findings reflect research focusing on adult
transnational migrants travelling much longer distances. While these trends
may be valid for the children in our studies who migrate to destinations farther
away, notably to Côte d’Ivoire, travel costs to destinations closer to home are
often within the reach of everyone (discussed in more detail in Chapter 4).
As with our research, other more child-centred, qualitative studies also provide testimonies regarding the role of poverty in children’s independent migration. A study led by Sumaiya Khair on independent child migrants in Bangladesh
finds that poverty was the major reason why children move (Khair 2005), as we
found in our own research.
Khair also finds that maltreatment at home was one of the many implications
impoverishment carried for children (ibid.). Similarly, Beauchemin’s study in
Accra finds that children ran away to escape abusive home environments. This is
an important point, as it illustrates the ways in which reasons for migration can
be interrelated. For instance, domestic violence and family breakdown, which
might compel individuals to move, are often linked to economic decline and
political and social destabilization (O’Connell Davidson and Farrow 2007: 16).
However, it is equally important to remember that children run away because
they have information regarding where they can run to and the possibilities
of being able to survive should they do so (Hashim 2008: 8). Such a strategy,
consequently, may be more common in areas where migration has long been
perceived as a rite of passage for adolescent children, as was found by Castle
and Diarra (2003) in Mali and Lambert (2007) in Senegal, or where there are
historically high rates of adult migration, such as is the case in much of West
Africa (our studies; Bredeloup 2003; Castle and Diarra 2003; Lambert 2007;
Lesclingand 2004; Zongo 2003) and in other places, such as Bolivia (Bastia 2005;
Punch 2002b), to name but a few examples. Individuals’ movements, thus, are
not simply due to push or pull factors, as neoclassical models of migration would
suggest. Rather, as O’Connell Davidson and Farrow succinctly put it, they are:
which out-migration from their country or region is institutionalized. (O’Connell
Davidson and Farrow 2007: 16)
The communities in which we work are poor in many ways. There is very
little local employment and farming productivity is very constrained; basic food
supplies are insufficient and insecure, and people go hungry; incomes are uncertain and low; people have few clothes or possessions; they lack access to
basic services and amenities; and the quality of and opportunity for education
are very low. Individual households are on a continuum from being destitute
through varying degrees of serious poverty to being poor, but having a limited
number of assets that enable a household to withstand shocks to food supplies
or to income sources (Whitehead 1996). Children migrate from households at
all these different socio-economic levels, but it is likely that different children
are responding to different aspects of this multidimensional poverty. In this
chapter, we explore what these different motivations may be.
In addition, we focus closely on what the motivations to move are from the
child’s point of view. Attention to children’s own perspectives, as well as how
best to access these effectively, is an important issue for a number of reasons
and thus warrants a more detailed discussion. Consequently, before we move
on to consider what children actually tell us about their motives for moving,
we shall consider these issues, which are fundamentally related to the methods
and methodologies used.
Researching with children
In the opening chapter of this book, we noted how a mobilities paradigm
assists us in better understanding children’s movement. The importance of the
mobilities paradigm extends beyond challenging the sedentarism underpinning the universalized ideals of childhood and the family, which hamper our
apprehension of children moving on their own account without necessarily
breaking with their family or their social context. It also challenges the social
sciences in terms of the objects of inquiries and the methodologies for research
(Clifford 1992; Malkki 1992; Sheller and Urry 2006). Until recently children, by
and large, have been invisible from the field of social science inquiry (Hirschfeld
2002), and even when their migration is acknowledged it tends to be subsumed
within the literature on family migration (King 2002). Where children’s movement without their birth parents is recognized, it is frequently pathologized.
As a result, the focus is on the role of adults in the decision-making process,
thereby stressing the degree of compulsion or coercion involved. This focus, by
and large, underplays children’s own motivations to migrate.
The methodological implications of the mobilities paradigm – of considering
how movement may influence people’s identities and trying to understand how
migrants and non-migrants make sense of and experience the spaces and places
44
45
3 | Choosing to move
characterized by movement – require a multi-local research strategy. Likewise,
the recognition that children have been left out of the research agenda also
has implications, just as it did for research and theory that ignored women,
subsequently recognized as impoverished and misleading (Hirschfeld 2002:
613); hence the growing attention to children as a research category.
However, a number of authors have noted how researching with children
presents unique challenges (Notermans 2008; Punch 2002b). Age-related societal
arrangements frequently result in powerlessness for the young. This can be the
basis for perceptions regarding the necessity for special measures to protect
them, but may also end up being a source of vulnerability, since the very idea
that children need protection can inhibit actually listening to what they have to
say, or giving it any credence. As Leinaweaver (2007), drawing on Ardener’s work,
points out, in this regard children truly represent a subaltern or ‘muted group’,
whose voices are effectively silenced. As Ardener himself points out in relation
to women as muted groups, this is not a matter of women’s position but rather
the methodological and theoretical problems raised by women in relation to
research (Ardener 1977). In other words, it is because women may be difficult to
engage in conversation that they are muted, and the same applies to children,
whose worlds, like women’s worlds, are more difficult to access and explore.
At their most basic, age hierarchies may prevent children openly or freely
speaking to adults and thus constrain them from even expressing their views,
never mind having them heard. The methodological challenge, thus, is to find
ways to discover and represent how children make choices and act upon them
in less visible and audible ways (Thorsen 2006: 94) without labelling them indiscriminately as transgressions of social or familial norms. This is one of the
reasons why we adopted an ethnographic approach in our research, since such a
methodology is particular important given the inaccessibility of children’s lives
and, importantly, their views. This is especially so as the research is concerned
with interrogating normative ideas (including our own) regarding childhood
and parenting – as well as very powerful dominant policy discourses on a highly
emotive issue – that of children’s welfare. Moreover, because of our interest in
children’s migration, we adopted what Sheller and Urry describe as ‘mobile
ethnography’, or participation in patterns of movement and transition between
a number of different localities (Sheller and Urry 2006: 217), in our bid to better
understand young people’s migration.
A final crucial factor, we argue, when it comes to working with young people,
is the need to privilege their voices. The work of postmodernist, post-structuralist
and feminist theorists has made a significant impact on our understandings
of how the production of knowledge is not an apolitical process (Abu-Lughod
1993; Harding 1987; Lather 2000; Mani 1992; Mohanty 1991). The result has
been a growing focus on the participation of research subjects in the process of
research and a privileging of their views. Such approaches have been mirrored
in initiatives concerned with children and their welfare. As Grover puts it when
referring to researching with children, social scientists can be sensitive ‘by giving
a voice to the vulnerable, rather than by creating images of those studied which
are infused with the political and social agendas of the power elite’ (Grover
2004: 83). These ‘child-centred approaches’, thus, have increasingly placed a
high priority on the participation of children in research and policies aimed at
their welfare, as they discourage stereotypes of children as helpless victims, and
instead facilitate their involvement in decisions and activities concerning their
lives (Myers and Boyden 1998: 12). This does not solve all problems because,
as Reynolds et al. point out, the very practice of giving voice asserts power hierarchies. The listening to subaltern voices does not automatically change the
frame; indeed, the fact of giving voice affirms that the listener has the power
to do so (Reynolds et al. 2006: 294).
We are of the opinion that listening to the views of children is vital in order
to provide insights into their subjective worlds. We are therefore convinced of
the necessity to recognize children’s subaltern status and the need to work
towards overcoming their muted position by actively involving them in challenging others’ representations of them and their best interests (Leinaweaver 2007).
Attention to gender and age as sources of additional vulnerability notwithstanding, the failure to listen to child migrants has led to an underestimation of the
extent to which a child’s gender and age impacts on their decision to move, as
well as their ability to do so. Although we privilege children’s voices, we also
refer in this chapter and throughout the book to the views of significant adults,
and especially children’s kin. As we argue that childhood cannot be seen as an
abstract concept but must be understood contextually, by the same token it is
vital that we consider significant adults’ (as well as peers’ and siblings’) views,
since in these contexts they are significant relationships in children’s lives. In
other words, children do not live in isolation but are embedded in often complex
and extended webs of kin and other social networks, which, as will become
even more evident in this chapter, have a significant bearing on the decisions
children make about their migration, even if they are made independently.
Moving to find work
As we saw in the previous chapter, in Ghana’s Upper East Region and in Pays
Bisa children are embedded in family-based household relations that are a complex mix of dependence, independence and interdependence in which there are
significant economic dimensions. While growing up, children increasingly work
for their seniors and contribute to their households’ production and reproduction. This work contributes to their upkeep and enables them to make claims
on seniors. In addition, from early adolescence children begin to be expected
to earn an independent income, which they are encouraged to spend on clothes
and other necessities for themselves and on inputs to generate more income.
46
Poverty! I wasn’t in school so I when I was in the house, I was suffering and I
didn’t have any handiwork [apprenticeship] so I decided to come to see if I can
get small, small. […] I spoke to my senior brother and he agreed that I should
come as he had no money to help me. […] After three years, I will return home
because by then I will have enough to help me in the house.
This kind of trajectory seems to be common for adolescents in the West African savannah and supports our findings that migration becomes an important
means for children to engage in independent economic activities and for their
parents and elders to allow them to do so, albeit at times reluctantly. It is clear
from Sibo’s story that, although he was motivated to migrate on his own, he
was supported by his family, which, like most other families in our areas, has
connections with households in multiple locations. It is between these households that many children and young people, as well as adults, move, among
other reasons because it may facilitate the access to more rewarding labour
markets. Thus, the long histories of migration from areas of origin mean that
children know of alternative locations and labour markets where they can earn
an income, as is expected of them by members of their family, even when it is
not necessary for their households’ subsistence.
Another motivating factor in Sibo’s desire to move is the lack of opportunities to access symbolic or material resources that will enhance his status and/
or future opportunities, as mirrored in his quest for an apprenticeship. Among
the young migrants from Pays Bisa in Ouagadougou, the material aspects of
working in the city were reiterated discursively. While explaining why he had
migrated at the age of fourteen, Seni, whom we met at the beginning of the
chapter, presented the dominant view among adult migrants about learning
from travelling. As important to him was being integrated in the gift economy,
where social relationships are consolidated through reciprocating gifts and receiving approval, often enacted through sacrifices and prayers to the ancestors,
God and/or Allah. However, he soon started to talk about the more immediate
desires of an adolescent boy who had never owned anything.
The only thing I want is my bicycle. […] It is different here than in the village
because to find money is not so easy. I don’t feel being in Ouagadougou changes
me, the only thing that could change me would be to earn money. If I had
money, I would change completely!
47
3 | Choosing to move
Opportunities to earn an income, however, are limited in the communities of
origin, and this is a significant motivation to move. In the Central Region of
Ghana in June 2004, we spoke to eighteen-year-old Sibo, who was orphaned and
had been a migrant in a farming village for four years, and who depicted the
process of deciding to migrate in terms of material poverty as well as of poverty
of opportunity. When we asked him why he had come he said:
Almost one year later, when we met Seni in his village, he was cycling. Despite
the fact that he had returned because of an illness that prevented him working
and required indigenous medicine, he had been able to buy a bicycle. Not just
a second-hand bicycle or a cheap Ghanaian bicycle, which in 2005 would cost
25–30,000 CFA francs, but a better-quality blue Peugeot bicycle that must have
cost 45–50,000 CFA francs, and which was still wrapped in protective cardboard
to highlight the fact that it was brand new (Thorsen 2007b).
Seni and Sibo are just two among many children who are motivated to migrate
because of the lack of economic opportunities in rural areas. Unless children
and youth from Pays Bisa planned to migrate to rural areas where they would
undertake farm or plantation work, they had only vague ideas about the work
they would do to earn the desired income. Their primary objective was to become
a migrant, and they were willing to take up whatever job they were offered.
Although they knew they would not get employment that required literacy, since
only four of the seventy-five children and youth interviewed had left primary
school with a certificate, the boys were optimistic about the wages they would
earn and the ease with which they would find work. Bisa girls, on the other hand,
expected to work for kin, usually classificatory mothers or older sisters, and were
realistic about being remunerated with small gifts and clothing. Nevertheless,
they still thought migration would be ideal for them (Thorsen 2007a). Although
Kusasi girls from the Upper East Region also often went to work for relatives,
their experience contrasted with that of the Bisa girls, in that they appeared freer
to move to work for non-related employers. In addition, they tended to receive
more remuneration if they worked for non-family members, and for this reason
they sometimes preferred this. A good example here is that of two teenaged
sisters interviewed in Tempane Natinga in 2001. The youngest, thirteen-year-old
Barakeso, said of her work on a commercial farm in Côte d’Ivoire, ‘Here you
won’t get so tired, but you won’t have anything for yourself. There you are tired
but you get money.’ By comparison, her sixteen-year-old sister, Fostina, who had
gone to an aunt’s in a town in the central area of Ghana, said that she preferred
life in Tempane Natinga because ‘here I can do my own rice farming but there
I couldn’t’. Rice farming is one of the few means by which young children,
and especially girls, are able to earn a private income, which they use to buy
personal items and those related to their trousseaux, so the inability to do so is
a significant setback. Nonetheless, Fostina was not unhappy about having been
a migrant since her aunt had presented her with some items on her return. Also
significant was that Fostina was happy about her migration experiences because
she now ‘knew there’, illustrating the multiple ways in which children perceive
their communities to be lacking. Thus, labour migration is not simply about
earning an income. It is also about attaining knowledge and status, and the
empowerment children and youth achieve through the social status ascribed to
migrant identities in their contexts (Aitken 2007; Punch 2007; Thorsen 2007a).
48
49
3 | Choosing to move
Moving and education
Constraints on resources allocated to schools by the state, the availability
of teaching materials, and infrastructure related to school education in the
majority world can lead to a lack of confidence in the benefits of schooling
among young people and their families (Boyden 1997; Grootaert and Kanbur
1995; Kabeer 2001; Myers and Boyden 1998). This is especially pertinent in rural
areas, which often suffer greater disadvantages than urban regions (Albornoz
1993, cited in Punch 2004: 163).
Certainly, paucity of learning opportunity is often presented as an explanatory
factor in children dropping out and migrating. For example, Castle and Diarra’s
work in Mali finds that there is a statistical link between not going to school
and the propensity of rural children to migrate to work (Castle and Diarra 2003),
while Beauchemin’s study in Ghana finds that children migrate because they are
disappointed that their parents will not send them to school (Beauchemin 1999).
Equally, studies such as Kielland and Sanogo’s in Burkina Faso found that school
attendance reduces the likelihood of children migrating (Kielland and Sanogo
2002), while children’s testimonies in Castle and Diarra’s study consistently
reiterated that pupils had long-term goals and seemed less susceptible to peer
pressure to obtain material items (Castle and Diarra 2003). An interesting account
is given by Ping and Pieke (2003) in their review of children’s migration in China,
which suggests that because rural–urban migrants enter a strongly segmented
labour market, there is little incentive to acquire an education beyond elementary literacy. Consequently, in villages where outmigration is widespread, pupils
frequently drop out of school before the completion of compulsory education to
migrate to cities (ibid.). Other more negative aspects of the relationship between
migration and education relate to the differential value placed on schooling in
different regions resulting in regional inequalities within a country. In Ghana, for
example, formal education is more highly valued in southerly parts of the country
(GSS and World Bank 1998), and its acquisition provides more opportunities
there. As a consequence, children, and especially girls, may be encouraged to
migrate from the north to relatives in the south to substitute for the labour of
relatives’ own children, who are attending school (Hashim 2007).
There are these more negative correlations between migration and learning.
However, these do not necessarily always obtain, and, certainly, any negative
impact needs to be established rather than assumed. That is in addition to
the need to question assertions regarding schooling necessarily being a positive force; assumptions regarding the negative impact that migration has on
children’s education arise partly because there is a tendency to see learning
as synonymous with schooling (ibid.: 911). Thus, children’s migration is often
viewed negatively since it is assumed to undermine children’s opportunities to
go to school. However, there are alternative and more positive linkages between
migration and learning. For instance, for many young people living in rural
areas only primary education is available near by; consequently they have to
migrate to access secondary education (Ansell 2004; Punch 2004). Alternatively,
schools in rural areas can be under-resourced and the teaching quality poor,
which may lead young people to migrate to access better schools (Bey 2003).
The twelve-year-old daughter of one of the teachers in Tempane Natinga in
the Upper East Region, for example, was ‘worrying’ her father to allow her to
move to a relative’s home in a town to attend school since she deemed her
school in the village (which did not have electricity) to be inadequate. Her father
was unsure whether he was going to acquiesce as he was not convinced of the
suitability of the environment for her learning and because he was somewhat
reluctant to establish those sorts of reciprocating linkages with the household
in question. Migration of this type, where a child goes to a relative who will
send her or him to school, is common in Cameroon too (Notermans 2008)
and was so among the Mende in pre-war Sierra Leone (Bledsoe 1990). Bledsoe
argues that fosterage facilitating children’s formal education is woven into their
integration in the web of kin and, additionally, possibly facilitates their learning
new skills that birth parents cannot teach. The Mende believe that children need
to develop and earn their knowledge through struggle; hence the sometimes
harsher treatment of foster children is viewed as having a positive influence on
their learning (ibid.). Although many Kusasi and Bisa parents subscribe to an
ideology of hardship similar to that of the Mende in Sierra Leone, they oppose
frequent and harsh punishment of small children and evaluate in each case
whether a child can cope with educational relocation.
Rural discourses on the quality of formal education, which may encourage
migration to other places, are shared by children and by adults, even those without any formal education, who are often portrayed as ‘traditional’ and ‘ignorant’
of the perceived benefits of schooling. An elderly household head, Nokwende,
who remained faithful to his animist traditions and played an important role
in most sacrifices, also took great care in securing the schooling of those of
the children in his household who had lost one or both of their birth parents.
In January 2005, he described succinctly the feeling of being marginalized in
rural villages in relation to the state provision of formal education.
The real school is in Ouaga! When children go to the village school, everything
must arrive from Ouaga, if a child is in Ouaga he is at the source of things. It’s
better like that. Someone educated in Ouagadougou and someone educated in
England are the same – if a child is educated here in the village, it’s completely
different. I wanted to enrol this child in school [Nokwende pointed to a young
child] but the teachers wouldn’t accept the child. Here, it is difficult. My neighbour sent his child to school but one day the teacher beat him so badly that the
child fainted. It’s okay to pull their ears once in a while to make the children
learn but today it’s better to egg on the children.
50
[Three years ago] I was in school up to JSS2 [ junior secondary school class 2] but
when I was to register [for JSS3] I had no money so I came here to find labour
work to get money and go back but I got contract work so I registered here to
write my exams instead. […] I was just coming alone to find work but I met
another Kusasi man on the bus and he said because I didn’t know the place it
would be better to follow him. […] I worked on Saturdays and Sundays because
the man I am staying with is good, so I got to eat in the morning and I closed
work and ate in the evening. […] I registered and passed some of my exams which
enabled me to continue [to senior secondary school] but because of the financial
problems I stopped, as I am getting small, small to support myself and help my
parents. […] I am still staying with him but working on contract for an Ashanti for
the last months. I will be paid ¢650,0002 [£41] at the end of my year […] I usually
help the Kusasi man on Sundays when the Ashanti man goes to church.
It is not only for formal learning opportunities that young people may wish
to move. Interviews with young migrants illustrate that young people migrate to
access other types of learning opportunities. Vocational training and apprenticeships may be particularly valued, and indeed formal schooling may be far less
valued than vocational training. A Ghana Statistical Survey study found that the
Upper East Region had the lowest number of children who were not interested
in training; a mere 1.1 per cent (GSS 2003: 43). This was in contrast to the
findings on interest in schooling, as the Upper East Region had the highest
number of children not interested in schooling at 12.6 per cent (GSS and World
Bank 1998: 26). What the GSS study also revealed, however, was that the overall
percentage of children who were receiving any form of training was low at only
2 per cent, and that the region had the highest proportion of children who
could not afford training (56.6 per cent). Thus, moving to areas where training
opportunities were more readily available or where the money to cover the costs
could more easily be acquired is also a significant motivation for children’s
migration. Seventeen-year-old Awintim’e had several experiences of migration.
Following her first migration to the south, when she moved to the household
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3 | Choosing to move
As illustrated by the example of the teacher’s daughter above, migration to
learn is arranged also by children, who initiate different types of moves for a
variety of learning opportunities. They may migrate in order to earn the money
with which to pay fees, either over vacations or dropping out for a year in order
to do so. This is especially the case because higher costs of schooling (senior
secondary fees1) and/or the taking up of vocational training (usually after the
completion of junior secondary schooling) coincide with the period when children are expected to be more self-reliant and are increasingly able to earn an
income (Hashim 2007). Interviewed in the Ashanti Region of Ghana in June
2004, eighteen-year-old Ashikoba described how he interwove schooling with
work to finance his studies.
of a married (classificatory) sister, and was rewarded with a sewing machine for
her input into the household’s reproductive work, she is likely to have begun to
cultivate aspirations to become a tailor. We interviewed her in the Brong Ahafo
Region in June 2004, where she described what had happened to her over the
previous few years.
When I was in the house, I asked my mother to find me something [an apprenticeship] but she couldn’t so my brother asked me to come here and learn some
work. I didn’t have anything in the house so he said I should come and he would
get somebody I could stay with. […] He paid for my ticket […] He was involved in
illegal timber logging and was caught and imprisoned so I am staying with my
uncle. I am learning tailoring work and helping my uncle by preparing food, collecting firewood and caring for his children. […] It’s my brother who got me this
work; the master is his friend […] When I was about ten or twelve my sister came
and took me to Kumasi3 to look after her child while she helped her husband
with cocoa farming. I stayed with her for two years and she bought me some
clothing and a sewing machine. […] It is this machine I’m using in my work.
I still have problems as they ask us to sew a uniform or buy sandals or tracing
paper, and I have no money for that. […] Sometimes I go by-day and get ¢12,000
to ¢13,000 [£0.75–0.81] to buy my things with. […] [but if] I don’t have money
for tracing paper, then I don’t go to work [in the tailor’s workshop] and that is
bringing the work [learning] back.
In total four female and four male migrants interviewed in Ghana were
apprentices, while a further six girls interviewed were hoping that the relatives with whom they were living and/or working for would help them with
apprenticeship fees; illustrating how training opportunities figured highly in
children’s calculations. The way in which Awintim’e spoke about her tailoring apprenticeship as work is indicative of the significant point that, from the
perspective of many children, work and learning are not dichotomous concepts.
They are not necessarily even discrete but intertwined concepts. These activities,
which frequently need to be defined as work or learning because of the manner
in which education and childhood have become intimately connected in the
industrialized world, are more appropriately described exactly as she portrays
them – learning work.4 These processes of learning work are equally evident in
the learning of work at trading, food preparation or brick-making, as a fifteenyear-old daughter of a widow, whom we have known since 1997 when the girl
was still in Côte d’Ivoire, described in February 2005.
My mother’s younger sister brought me to Côte d’Ivoire because I was suffering
at home after my father had died and my mother struggled to feed us all. In the
beginning, I looked after her baby and when the child had grown a little older,
I bought cooking oil and sold that in smaller quantities and I also sold eggs. As
52
spoke Dioula, but my friends here told me that I offended them and often we
didn’t get along well.
Solange’s account thus underscores how informal learning is implicated in a
variety of ways in children’s movement, and the skills to which children ascribe
value are instrumental not only in income generation but also in broadening
their knowledge through knowing more languages and feeling at home in several
places.
Moving to ‘help’
Solange is a good example of another category of children who may move away
from home – children who go to relatives to help during periods of particular
need. These children are significant in number, particularly among younger
children. Many of the children from the Upper East Region too had migrated
to help a relative, and girls especially figured quite high among them. This is
because many adult Kusasi migrants in the south are in the early years of family
formation and consequently do not have older girls to help with the housework.
Hence, there is a high level of requests from migrant families for girls from their
communities of origin to move south to live with relatives. Parents acquiesce,
sometimes reluctantly, because of the collective or plural view of parenthood in
this context; as expressed in one father’s view that ‘if your brother asks for your
child you can’t refuse because it’s his child too’. Similar views were expressed
among the Bisa, Solange’s mother explaining that ‘if you decline sending your
child, you kind of suggest that your relationship with the person who asked is
problematic, or that you do not value this person. Moreover, if you send your
child, you can ask the other person for a favour at another moment.’ Nevertheless, demands on a child were sometimes turned down, especially to very poor
women. Topka had several times asked her brother for one of his daughters,
but the first time he said no because the girl was only four years old; a couple
of years later he declined because Topka had lost her sight and was alone and
therefore would not be able to supervise the girl properly (Thorsen 2005: 126).
It was not just girls, though, who moved in this way; boys may too, as Sedu’s
story makes clear. He was interviewed in a farming village in the Central Region
of Ghana where he had lived and worked for four years.
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3 | Choosing to move
I was only small when I went to Côte d’Ivoire, I don’t know exactly how many
years I spent there but I often wanted to see my mother again. I came back home
because she had problems with her foot and could barely get up to cook for my
brothers. That’s the reason why I came back. I was happy in Côte d’Ivoire but as
it was a health problem that made my mother ask me to return, I can’t say that I
wasn’t happy to return. It had become an obligation. Anyway, I would have come
back sooner or later because I would return to get married here. […] For me it’s
easier, I still remember how to calculate and trade. Just after my return I always
My father didn’t send me to school or [get] money to send me to handiwork.
He asked me to come south to find work in order to help them. One of my
brothers-in-law came to visit and my father asked me to follow him. Home is
more interesting for me but if you can’t get money and you can’t get to eat you
can’t stay. We can’t all be in the house because of the poverty […] When I first
came I was working for my brother-in-law but he was not giving me enough to do
the work I wanted to do [which is] to be a mechanic or something that will give
me an income when I am old so I can support my children. […] My father sent a
message that because I am not in the house to help him farm my brother-in-law
should help him, so he sent the money to him.
The picture developing here could be seen as one in which younger children
and/or girls may appear as pawns, either in relation to the various needs that
adults have for their labour or to wider social needs to maintain active kin
relations. Such an interpretation is in line with many of the approaches to
children’s trafficking in the policy literature, where what is foregrounded is
younger children and girls’ relative powerlessness in their movement between
households and the ease with which they can be coerced to migrate. Again,
however, we argue that these issues are context specific, thus the degree of
compulsion to move needs to be established. Importantly, as we noted at the
start of the chapter, only by accessing the views of children themselves is it
possible to assess this. For example, in the description of a sending household
in the previous chapter, we saw a number of children being moved into Paul’s
household to assist the adults, and with no access to their views these children
appear to be pawns in strategic decisions made by adults. However, this contrasts
markedly with our findings that child migrants mostly view their mobility as
their own choice.
Among the children interviewed in Ghana, only three children had not wished
to migrate, while the other sixty-seven said they had wanted to move. It was the
case that a significant number of children had been asked to move by parents
or other seniors, and often in response to a request from other relatives. This
was particularly the case for children in the younger age category of seven to
thirteen, who rarely initiated their move themselves. However, they also rarely
stated that they did not wish to move. These younger children frequently talk
about how ‘it was decided’ that they should move, but also about how they
decided to move. This is not necessarily contradictory and should be respected
as telling us something important about the decision-making process. As we
noted earlier, children’s obligations, expectations and responsibilities vary in
different contexts; and in the contexts in which we work in West Africa, being a
good child involves understanding and fulfilling their role in the production of
the household’s food, in the production of cash crops and in the reproductive
labour necessary to secure the household’s subsistence. Thus, in addition to
54
My sister [father’s brother’s daughter] collected me three years ago to care for
her child and because I thought it would be better here I chose to follow her.
[…] My father came here to Kumasi nine years ago and never returned nor was
he found when he was searched for so we don’t know where he is. My mother is
alone in the house and there is a lot of suffering in the house. It was my uncle
who decided I should come but I chose to come because if I stayed in the house
I would be suffering. […] Now my sister has delivered again and she went home
and brought another young girl to care for the child, so now I am following her
to the farm. […] My sister said that after the harvest she will send me to learn
work […] Hairdressing. […] Because she is my sister she is not paying me [but]
when I go home she will buy me something to send me with, [such as] clothing
or a sewing machine. Or she will allow me to enter an apprenticeship. […] Last
year I worked for my sister [farming] and she gave me one bag of corn that I
sold for ¢120,000 [£7.50] and I saved that money. […] If I learn work [enter an
apprenticeship] I will stay another three years. […] Last year my mother sent a
message that I shouldn’t come home if everything is fine for me [because] if I go
home I will suffer.
Since the domestic economy includes the pursuit of private endeavours,
notions of being a ‘good child’ also involve the adoption of a sense of selfreliance, and for children migration presents an opportunity to seek out alternative learning or economic possibilities. Consequently, children have their own
interests in links with a wider range of relatives from whom they seek to get a
commitment for support, and from quite a young age boys and girls search for
small forms of assistance from a range of relatives and build up relationships
with a variety of people.
Thus, children have a complex set of reasons of their own for going and
staying in households in different locations and, even when adults are apparently making the decisions about children’s movement, children, even when
young, may have a say.
Moving and family crisis
Children do frequently move, therefore, when they are needed by kin elsewhere, often as a result of a minor family crisis, such as illness, or a change
in circumstance, such as the birth of a child, that may elicit the need for an
extra pair of hands to farm, care for a young child or help out an elderly person.
Alternatively, the changing circumstances may be in a child’s own home and
mean that only another household can meet their basic needs and/or cover the
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3 | Choosing to move
often wanting to see beyond their home villages, as illustrated by fourteen-yearold Awpwaka in the Ashanti Region in June 2004, children are happy to migrate
because they are fulfilling their obligations to kin, merely in a different context,
since many relatives are themselves living as migrants.
costs of their schooling. In the scholarly literature, these crises are frequently
seen as evidence of family breakdown, with the result that family dysfunction
figures large in discussions of children’s migration. Bledsoe, for example, has
pointed out that in this body of literature African parents are often perceived
to be unsympathetically indifferent to their children. This view is rooted in
presumptions that parents send away children because of high child mortality
and fear of emotional attachment, that parents neglect children’s emotional
and physical distress because of poverty, that parents believe that their children
will mature through experiencing hardship, or because the parents assert their
own autonomy at the expense of their children (Bledsoe 1990: 72). Explanations
in the advocacy literature often follow the same line of reasoning. If the focus
is on the children, their movement away from the immediate family is often
seen as signalling that the child is either delinquent or reacting to insufficient
care by parents or guardians. If the focus is on the parents, the presumption
is frequently that the family is broken because parents are no longer providing
a child with supervision, affection and economic support since the child is no
longer living with them (Whitehead et al. 2007: 7).
Beauchemin’s study of street children in Accra is an example of this kind
of argument. His analysis suggests that parents may find the strain of caring
for numerous offspring too great, and so neglect some or all of their children,
leading them to leave their homes (Beauchemin 1999: 28). The exodus of children from rural areas to the urban centres of Ghana, he argues, is ‘linked to
the breakdown of the nuclear family’ (ibid.: 15). Other studies, however, cast
doubt on the too easy equation of child migration with family dysfunction or
breakdown (Whitehead et al. 2007: 7). From the Upper East Region in Ghana,
seven children (three boys and four girls) moved for reasons of neglect and/or
not being cared for sufficiently in their households in the north – some 10 per
cent of the children interviewed. Most of these children were orphans or children
who had lost their father, and some of them had run away. It is important to
note, though, that being orphaned by no means inevitably results in a child
being neglected and ill treated. Some of the children had moved in order to be
better cared for elsewhere because of a crisis in their households in the north
and were being well looked after in the households to which they had moved.
In fact, twenty-five of the seventy children interviewed were orphans or had
lost their father, although they did not give this as their primary motivation for
moving. Thus, losing one or both parents might be instrumental in the movement of children to another household, as it was for fifteen-year-old Solange and
fourteen-year-old Awpwaka, quoted above, but this does not inevitably equate
with neglect, and nor does it necessarily signal family breakdown. Indeed, we
both found instances of older children who migrated when orphaned of a father
to help their mothers cover the expenses associated with younger siblings’ formal
education, or just because they felt it to be their duty, especially if they were
56
Children’s migration and inter-generational conflict
Sometimes children’s movement is an outcome of conflicts within the family
or the household. Often such conflicts are related to the nature of the inter- and
especially intra-household interdependencies we discussed in Chapter 2. In
the West African context, as well as in other kin-based societies, corporate kin
groups are especially important for long-term social reproduction, as they ‘are
a means of “locking up” access to labour and other resources, “embedding”
them in political extensions of reproductive relations and specifying who can get
labour or food or land or equipment from whom’ (Robertson 1991: 42). In this
instance, ‘women work for men, juniors work for seniors, the poor work for the
rich, and all these relationships are inserted into a web of social relations woven
largely, in the case of small agrarian communities, through kinship, residence
and patronage’ (Moore 1988: 58). What is important in such households is
access to labour, which crucially relates to how successful the household head
is in managing the balance between the various kinds of economic activity
of household members, as well as the negotiations and tensions surrounding
these (Whitehead 1981, 1996).
Detailed ethnographic research on children’s work for their households as
well as indigenous conceptualizations of childhood illustrates how the way in
which the balance between household members’ various activities is managed
lies at the heart of the conflicts between seniors and juniors. This research found
that conflicts about work are the outcome of two separate issues. On the one
hand, there are the day-to-day negotiations involved in gradually encouraging a
child to assume some responsibility for contributing to their household, which
children may try to avoid or resist. On the other hand, as children become older
and emerge into a more differentiated world of work, where their interests
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3 | Choosing to move
the eldest son. This, in turn, was both understood and appreciated by siblings
and other kin. In the process, family ties may be strengthened.
While the notion of breakdown is linked with normative perceptions of the
nuclear family, rural families in the West African savannah consist of interconnected households in one or more places. These households can be large or
small, but very often children have several classificatory parents and grandparents whom they can call on whether or not their birth parents are present (Alber
2004; Vischer 1997). Family networks may be galvanized to ensure children’s
welfare, suggesting that in the case of orphans, as with the mobility of children
in general, the processes of migration and their impacts will be very different
for the economically secure households compared to those that are seriously
poor. While family breakdown may be a factor in some children’s migration, we
cannot automatically make causal links between losing a parent, deep poverty
and a rupture in family relations, but need to understand local norms of parent–child relationships and of who is considered family.
became more separate from those of their parents, there is conflict not about
not doing work, but about for whom that work is done (Hashim 2004: 89).
Seniors’ inability or failure to provide children with opportunities could also
result in children running away, as made explicit by what one teenaged girl
said about her younger sister’s move south: ‘Children run because if they have
nothing to do here and they see their parents are not supporting them they
will run to find work.’ The way in which a neighbour, Ama, spoke about her
sixteen-year-old son, who had run away from home, also illustrates this well.
The father says the boy’s sister stole him; but I say he has gone for work. His
sister wanted to send him [with her when she came for a visit] but we were not in
agreement and so she left but three days later he dodged and followed her. She
had found him work for a woman who owned a poultry farm, so I believe that’s
where he’s gone. […] He went in the dry season last year. We heard of him once.
Someone from here was travelling there and saw him. We don’t know when he
will come home.
Changes in the composition of small households may result in children
migrating to have more time for their own activities. In 2001, Ama’s household
consisted of an elderly household head, his second wife Ama, and an older
teenaged boy, as well as Ama’s son, who had subsequently run away. Another
son in his mid-thirties had just returned from labour migration to the south of
Ghana, and had not participated in any household farming that year, perhaps
signalling the declining fortunes of the household, and the fairly difficult task
of the household head to manage a balance between the household members’
various economic activities. This son’s two daughters also lived in the household but their mother did not as she had remarried out of the village. The last
household member was the five-year-old son of one of the household head’s
daughters. In 2000/01, it was a poor but relatively secure household, which had
some assets in the form of cattle and small livestock. By 2004, the household’s
circumstances had changed and the household had shrunk to consist only of
the elderly couple, the girls and the young grandson. This was significant in
terms of both why the household head had not wanted to lose the labour of
Ama’s son and also why the boy would be keen to leave, since the labour of only
two males is likely to be insufficient for the household’s subsistence and would
certainly curtail any opportunities for the boy to farm for himself. The earlier
research in Tempane Natinga threw up another relevant example, where a young
teenager who, although living in his father’s household with his paternal grandmother while his father was away in the cocoa-growing areas of Ghana, was
frequently found in the company of a neighbour, an active trader and part of
a secure and relatively wealthy household. The boy was clearly developing his
neighbour, also a relative, as a potential patron, and the neighbour for his part
was encouraging the relationship, getting the boy to participate in his trading
58
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3 | Choosing to move
activities and rewarding him with gifts of sandals and small livestock. These
examples are reminiscent of Reynolds’s findings in the Zambezi valley regarding how: ‘[c]hildren without the buffer of a secure set of kinsmen spend more
time nurturing patron–client relations along kin lines’ (Reynolds 1991: 128).
What they show is that in complex family households, where relations are a
mix of dependence, independence and interdependence, when seniors fail or
are unable to support their juniors they risk them privileging the independent aspect of intra-household relations by seeking greater autonomy over their
labour, either within the village or outside it, by tying themselves to alternative
patrons. This underscores Schrauwers’s point that there is a political economy
of ‘parenting’, as economic inequalities constrain who may or may not attempt
to bind a child to their household, and that in these processes of negotiating
parentage (Schrauwers 1999: 312) children themselves are powerful agents.
The probability of this kind of conflict depends on the degree to which the
head of their household and/or their seniors support children and provide them
with the space in which to pursue their individual income-generating activities.
If feeling too restricted, children of the age when most of their friends engage
in individual income-generating activities may have an incentive to migrate, as
long as they believe this will create space for them to benefit directly from their
own labour by working for a wage or for an alternative patron. For girls, such as
sixteen-year-old Fostina referred to earlier, who preferred to have a rice field of
her own in the village rather than work for her aunt in a rural town, migration
may not lead to benefiting directly from their labour. Unless they are permitted
to do by-day labour, work for someone outside the family or farm their own
small plot of land, as they would be able to in rural areas, it might actually be
preferable to work under quite harsh conditions for a wage.
Heads of households need to ensure a balance between harnessing the labour
of their dependants, both adults and children, while permitting them the time
and resources to pursue their own private farming and/or income-generating
activities. Household dependants, including children, for their part need to ensure that their obligations to their elders are fulfilled, not least because in doing
so they make moral claims on household resources, including those necessary
for the private enterprises through which they earn an independent income
(Hashim 2004: 87; Thorsen 2005: 156–7). This goes some way to explaining
why one father in north-eastern Ghana said that he had built a zinc-roofed
room5 for his teenaged son to persuade him not to migrate. It also accounts for
why many adults qualified their explanations about their children’s migration
with comments such as this Ghanaian father’s regarding his son’s migration to
Côte d’Ivoire: ‘He went to search for money to marry. […] It’s not good for me,
because I have to work alone; but I can’t prevent him from going because I
have nothing for him here!’
The way in which poverty is reiterated in adults’ justifications of their
children’s migration is also common in Pays Bisa. However, Kanlou’s description in January 2005 of what her teenaged daughters gain from working with
a classificatory sister in a rural town some sixty miles away offers additional
insights into parents’ views on migration.
Aïcha has worked for her [classificatory] sister during the dry season for some
years. She works and then at the beginning of the rainy season her sister gives
her a bit of money so she can buy clothes and the bowls she collects for her
marriage. Not all fiancés have the means to give money to a girl to buy bowls, so
if she has collected, she can bring them with her when she marries. It’s better
when Aïcha is in Bittou because there she can earn some money, here there is
nothing. We don’t have a market where she can try to sell a little bit, in Bittou
it’s better. When the children leave, they earn more. […] I also think that when
the children leave they become much more awakened, but if they stay with
their mother they are not so open, but by leaving they start to develop. The girls
develop through their friends because if they see that a friend is well behaved,
she respects herself, she respects others, she dresses well, they will try to adopt
the same behaviour as their friend. This is the reason for Aïcha’s younger sister
to go to Bittou this year; I hope she will develop nicely like her sister.
The focus on earning money is almost omnipresent, as is the talk about
children’s marriage, but it is clear that the practices surrounding marriage are
also affected by the long-term economic circumstances. Another point emerging
in relation to children migrating from Pays Bisa is the emphasis on awakening
– ‘s’éveiller’ – which both parents and children see as immensely positive. Its
equivalent in the Kusasi vernacular was having one’s ‘eyes opened’, which was
also viewed very positively.
Negotiated moves: the gendered nature of children’s migratory
trajectories
In the Upper East Region and Pays Bisa, boys running away do not always
overly perturb their seniors. Despite their ‘dodging’ or ‘fleeing’, parents expect
boys to return, just as boys anticipate returning sooner or later. This is because
of the nature of work and household organization in these contexts. Children
belong to their father’s lineage and, as most young married couples live in the
household of the husband’s father, boys know it is to their agnatic kin that
they will need to look for support for land and inputs such as labour and seeds.
Among the Kusasi, boys rely on seniors to provide them with the cattle for their
bride-price. Boys’ connection with a place therefore involves investing labour
as a long-term resource strategy, both economic, such as in farming, and also
social and cultural, in terms of building the relations necessary to ensure the
ability to secure their own and their households’ livelihoods, since securing
livelihoods in this context requires cooperation among many. As noted in the
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previous section, their seniors, for their part, and particularly household heads,
need to harness the labour of their juniors in order to secure the household’s
welfare, and consequently must provide them with the means to pursue individual endeavours. The effect on familial relations is that both a boy and his
agnatic group have a stake in maintaining good relations (Hashim 2004: 91).
This means that boys have to negotiate harder to migrate, if there is insufficient
alternative labour in the household, but also that they can negotiate permission
to migrate with promises of return. Parents in particular felt unable to refuse
their children permission to migrate if they were unable to provide them with
the resources to enable them to gain income-generating or educational opportunities. As we have seen, sometimes the conflict over the use of boys’ labour
may result in some boys running away.
In contrast, Kusasi parents acquiesce more readily in daughters’ movements
because their attachment to the family and kin group is of a different order
than is boys’. On marriage, girls move away to their husband’s community and
become the responsibility of their husband’s patrilineal groups, although ties
to girls’ own family and kin groups remain relatively strong. This means that
as girls begin to reach puberty there is less commitment to keeping them in
the household than for boys, who are the core labour force and the core future
members of patrilineal households and lineages. This lack of attachment to
the girls means that parents more readily agree to them moving to relatives in
the south. As one Ghanaian father of an older teenaged migrant girl put it: ‘I
approved because she is a girl and so has to leave.’ Although girls are significant
labour assets for their mothers, the way in which decisions about marriage are
discussed shows that as they enter their late teens, they may begin to withhold
their labour to some degree, and it is expected that girls in their later teens
should start to disassociate themselves from their own households. This gradual
withdrawal is seen as an indicator that young women are ready to move on to
their next house (Hashim 2004: 93). The transitional nature of girls’ attitudes
to work is clear in the following statement: ‘When she is a child she will learn
from her mother, but as she reaches the age of marriage she will start to show
that she is able to do her own thing to demonstrate that she has learnt well
and that she is ready for marriage.’ It is even more overt in this next comment:
‘A girl will reach the age of marriage when her attitude changes, as she knows
this is no longer her house.’ This, in conjunction with the changes referred to
in the preceding chapter regarding the delaying of marriage in north-eastern
Ghana, probably accounts for the relative ease with which girls were able to
migrate. This does not mean that girls do not need to negotiate to move as well.
As illustrated in an interview in May 2004 with Atembe – whose twelve-year-old
daughter has become a migrant – concerns about their children’s welfare, safety
and morality are significant factors in parents’ calculations about their movements; consequently among the Kusasi they often moved with and/or to kin.
I don’t want her to stay too long because it’s not good because I’ve seen other
people’s children and they stay there too long and there they spoil. […] they can
follow men there and when they come home they continue these same practices
and then they fall pregnant. […] Girls have travelled and their fathers don’t know
where they are and they sell cows to find them and when they find them they
have delivered up to three and they don’t even know who the fathers are.
The increasing pressure on Kusasi girls to bring something to their marriage
in the form of both trousseaux items and some training with which to earn an
income appears to be having the effect of large numbers of girls migrating – to
the extent that a survey of the households in Tempane Natinga showed that
even more girls than boys had moved out of the village, forty-one girls being
absent as compared to thirty-six boys. Girls like seventeen-year-old Emina, whom
we interviewed in Kumasi City in June 2004, used stark arguments with their
relatives to get permission to migrate.
Me and my mother decided that I should come because there is a lot of poverty
there. Although some of my family agreed for me to come here my senior uncle
didn’t agree because some girls come south and find work and when they get
money they don’t go back. […] My senior uncle didn’t agree but I told him that if
I don’t go I will suffer. [I said] ‘You can’t get it for me, my mother can’t get it for
me, so I have to go; otherwise when I marry I will have nothing.’ In the end, he
agreed.
Emina is arguing that her relatives are unable to provide her with a foundation for adulthood, and appealing to the idea of what a child can expect from
guardians and parents. The clinching argument is a reference to providing for
the basis of her future marriage. The reference to ‘suffering’ is the phrase commonly used in the context to refer to deprivation that justifies independence.
The ability of boys and girls to migrate and remain migrants for some time
reveals just how different practices can be, despite the many similarities between
the Upper East Region and Pays Bisa. Among the Bisa, boys readily migrate
and, although their organization of farming is comparable with that of the
Kusasi, their investment in social relations is not tied to the ancestral land
but to the descendants of their ancestors, who live in many different locations.
Consolidating the relationships with kin of various degrees of proximity is not
something children mention as a reason for migrating (or for not migrating),
but they find much inspiration from the ways in which established migrants
embody being successful through clothing, gift-giving and commodities such
as bicycles, radios and, of more recent date, mobile phones. The value of these
commodities, then, is not just linked to materiality and their practical function,
it is also symbolic and may enable a child to position him- or herself differently
within the household or in the wider community.
62
Conclusion
This chapter has explored why children may wish or be encouraged to move.
The stories already beginning to emerge bear witness to the part children themselves play in influencing their life courses and in negotiating the often difficult
circumstances of their home communities. The discourse on poverty and lack of
opportunity to earn money in rural communities dominates the justification for
migration. However, the mentions of also wanting to be familiar with the city
or other places, to buy a bicycle, to help family members in other places and so
on, reveal the many layers of motivation underneath the poverty discourse. The
long histories of migration from areas of origin mean that children do know of
alternative labour markets where they can earn an income. Children may also
entertain a variety of educational aspirations that encourage them to move to
access formal, non-formal and informal learning opportunities. Parents’ and
children’s respective expectations and obligations to one another are significant
factors in the negotiations about children’s movements. Parents may encourage
such movements or children may have to negotiate hard with their seniors
to allow them to move. As an extreme measure, they may run away to pursue
alternative patronage relations or to further their autonomy over their labour,
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The connection between migration and marriage is different too. Cattle do
not figure in bride-wealth payments, although they do occur in lifelong obligations to offer a cow at funeral ceremonies. Much more important is the bride
service, where the groom and his friends work for the bride’s father and mother
and a little for her too. At the consummation of the marriage gifts to the woman’s
kin group ideally include a ram, a cock, kola nuts and items of clothing and
food for the visitors. In destitute families the sons may contribute to meeting
these expenses, but it is rarely the motivation for their migration. Quite the
contrary – fathers sometimes court a girl in their son’s name and call him
home to marry, even if this is against the boy’s wishes (Thorsen 2005: 84–7).
Marriage does not figure large in boys’ motivations for migrating, but it does
in their fathers’ efforts to tie them into the household.
Although Bisa girls, as indicated above in Kanlou’s account of her daughter’s
use of the money earned during dry-season migration, buy things for their trousseau and argue that it will eventually strengthen their position in the marital
household, they are not allowed to migrate to nearly the same extent as Kusasi
girls. Taboos around girls giving birth in their fathers’ compounds (the feared
outcome of migrant girls falling pregnant outside marriage) dramatically curtails
girls’ independent movement compared to boys’. Hence, when girls migrate
they do so with relatives. Yet, in interviews, Bisa girls expressed their aspiration
to become migrants, and their vivid accounts of what they could gain and how
they would distribute their earnings mirrored the way in which boys spoke of
these issues (Thorsen 2007a, 2010).
especially when faced with the inability or failure of their seniors to provide
them with the means to do so. Children’s gender and age are crucial factors
in the ability to migrate, and even within our very similar areas of origin, the
different gender regimes influence both the motivations girls and boys have to
move and the negotiations surrounding these. They also have an impact on how
children make their journeys, an issue to which we shall now turn.
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4 | Journeys and arrivals: introductions to new
social worlds
‘We met 18-year-old Amadou in January 2008 when he was working in the huge
area covered by small hand-irrigated vegetable gardens lining Abidjan’s airport,
where most of the growers are Burkinabé and Malian. We had started coming to
the gardens the previous year but this year we were lucky to meet a young man
who mediated the contact with some 50 children and youth working there, so
we spent many days doing interviews in a makeshift shelter in the midst of the
gardens. Amadou was a skilled narrator and recounted the following story.
‘“After my father died of a snake bite four years ago,1 I had to drop out of CE2
[fourth grade]. I’m the oldest of my mother’s and father’s four children but the
fifth son in the large family. As my mother was all alone and we had no money,
I decided to join my older brother here in Abidjan. He agreed to my coming but
couldn’t send money for the ticket because no one would agree that a junior like
me should receive money from him. Hence, I went to Bittou for five months and
the following dry season to Tenkodogo for six months to earn money for my bus
fare.
‘“When I was 14 years old, I left for Abidjan with 10,000 CFA francs [£10] in
my pocket and got stuck on the way [as a ticket all the way cost 25,000–28,000
CFA francs, equivalent to £26–29]. I got to Abengorou, where I stayed for ten
months. At first, I worked on the cocoa farm of a Mossi2 I met on the road and
explained that I’d arrived from Burkina and didn’t know anybody in this area. He
told me to come with him and I did, even though I didn’t know if he was going
to kill me or what. He promised to find work for me where I’d earn 50,000 CFA
francs [£53] in one year. I said, ‘If it’s like that, it’s proper!’ Meanwhile I worked
on his farm. After two months, I asked about the job that he was going to find
for me, but he wanted me to stay with him for another three months. I couldn’t
stay with him that long; he always insulted me and wanted me to work harder.
He wanted me to stay on, so in the end I fled without having had a penny for my
work!
‘“I then started walking. For three days I walked, then I met a kind woman,
a Boussanga [Bisa] from Bawku, who gave me some food and water, and even a
pair of sandals. I worked in her groundnut field for three months and was paid
5,000 CFA francs [£5]. She really didn’t want me to leave but I didn’t have any
relatives there; that’s why I wanted to leave. If I died there, who would know? So I
sneaked off but once I got to Abidjan, I phoned her to tell that I’d finally arrived.
65
‘“First, I stopped in Aboisso for five months to earn money for the last leg of
my journey. My father has a farm there – well, it’s an uncle from my extended
family – but I worked with him. After a while, I wanted to continue to Abidjan
and he gave me a little money to get by. He couldn’t give me more because he is
also poor but I made my way to my brother.”’
The nature of journeys and the circumstances at destinations impact on the
vulnerabilities children might face. Open discussions about their wish to
migrate may facilitate finding travelling companions, economic support for
tickets and relatives prepared to put up or employ newly arrived child migrants,
while journeys undertaken in secrecy may carry the risk of being cheated, lured
into dangerous places or ending up without support at the destination. While
there is a certain truth in this distinction between safe and risky journeys, this
chapter takes a closer look at who may be involved in planning the journey and
how concrete journeys unfold in order to examine whether it is a prerequisite
for child migrants’ security that their parents or guardians are involved in the
decision-making.
Both applied and academic research has focused on independent child
migrants in a short-term kind of way by foregrounding their immediate experiences. While this is important when trying to get a sense of children as a social
category – children’s being – it renders invisible the process of becoming and
being a migrant, and of children’s changing ideas over time and with experience
– children’s becoming. In this and the following chapters we aim therefore to
bring to the fore the progressive nature of children’s migration by distinguishing
between early and later experiences and by looking at how migration changes
the way in which children perceive themselves and construct particular identities in different situations. This chapter focuses on journeys and arrivals at
new destinations, and explores how migrant networks may facilitate and shape
children’s experience of migration, be it through premeditated arrangements
that ease the arrival, impromptu arrangements to help young migrants arriving
without contacts, or leaving them to find their own ways.
Social networks, kin and relatedness
Even though advocacy and policy institutions have broadened their work
from a narrow focus on risky journeys and trafficking to looking at household
strategies for risk minimization and to acknowledging children’s economic
roles, their conceptualization of adolescents’ active participation, and even selfdetermination, in migration decisions remain unexplored. This is linked with
a tendency to shroud African families, and especially rural African families, in
a lot of myth-making concerning the strength of rigid kinship systems, their
unchangeable nature, and thus as something that breaks down rather than
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4 | Journeys and arrivals
Map 4.1 Amadou’s travel route
Amadou’s route
Village of origin
Destination areas
where Amadou
worked
BURKINA
FA S O
Tenkodogo
Amadou’s
village
Bittou
Significant town
International
boundary
Tamale
TOGO
CÔTE
D’IVOIRE
GHANA
Abengourou
Kumasi
Lomé
Bianouan
Abidjan
Accra
Aboisso
Derrière
Wharf
0
G ulf of G uin ea
0
100km
50 miles
transforms. However, anthropologists have long argued that kinship systems
provide a flexible language for forging social ties both inside and across descent
groups (O’Laughlin 1995: 71), but the focus has been on adults primarily or,
where children were involved, on inter-generational relationships shaped by
adults’ preferences and decisions.
One precondition for beginning to unpack how children use kinship relations is to understand how broadly kinship terms are applied, even within the
67
official kinship terminology3 that is rooted in the social structure. Among the
Bisa, for example, ‘brothers’ and ‘sisters’ may be borne by the same mother or
have the same father but have different mothers or share paternal grandparents,
or belong to the same patrilineage, clan or ethnic group. All are categorized
as older brother/sister or younger brother/sister in Bisa vernacular. Children,
nevertheless, do make subtle distinctions between these siblings based on social
and affectionate closeness and the context in which the relationship is invoked.
Consequently, kinship categories, such as ‘brother’, ‘sister’, ‘aunt’, ‘father’ and
‘mother’, are not clearly defined in practical terms. Another issue that needs
to be taken into consideration is the strategic use of kinship terms by both
children and adults to conjure up particular kinds of relationships. Calling
someone a brother or sister, a father, father’s sister or mother’s brother invokes
the idea that a bundle of obligations and rights tie the two persons together,
but it also invokes affectionate ties that may be linked as much with day-to-day
relationships within a household as with blood ties. In short, there is a choice
involved as to when friends, siblings, kin or others of the parental generation
are called upon. That older children can be part of broader social networks in
their own right is rarely considered in the literature on child migration (Thorsen
2009b). In the following, we add new dimensions to child-centred analyses and
understandings by looking at children’s social ties within and across generations.
Peer networks facilitating adolescents’ migration
Terre des Hommes’ study of rural girls who migrate from north-western
Burkina Faso to Ouagadougou to work as domestics shows that this type of
migration is an old practice that has changed over the years. Where in the past
girls around the age of fourteen were accompanied by their future husband or a
brother when leaving their village to look for urban work to earn their trousseau
one year prior to their marriage, they now leave in groups of eight to ten girls.
The empirical material reveals that parents generally agree to their daughters’
migration and that around one quarter of them pay or help to pay for bus
tickets, both to protect and to encourage the child (Terre des Hommes 2003:
12–17). However, the report does not touch upon why this change has come
about, its implication for girls or, of key interest here, how the girls establish
connections with one another to travel in large groups; only that new child
migrants obtained information from their older sisters. Thus, it becomes easy to
fall into the trap of moral panic and simply explain girls’ increasing mobility as
an outcome of their unruliness and the breakdown of family structures, despite
the girls’ parents often agreeing to their migration. Refraining from examining
the underlying dynamics of changes also denies girls an active social role in
their community, and their peer networks are ignored. Similar explanations are
used to describe changes in boys’ migration.
A study on male children’s and youth’s rural–rural migration to the cotton
68
I will have been here two years in September. At home, there is no work and […]
all of us are sitting there. It’s meaningless so I decided I would try to find work
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4 | Journeys and arrivals
farms in northern Benin carried out by Plan WARO, Terre des Hommes and
Lasdel-Bénin4 hints at young people’s social networks when discussing how
child migrant workers are recruited. In the research report, a distinction
is made between ‘professional intermediaries’ who make money by bringing
young migrants to potential employers and ‘socially related intermediaries’
who usually facilitate placements of new migrants to attain symbolic status
rather than material gains. The latter category of intermediaries, it is argued,
are becoming younger, as is the pool of migrant workers willing to look for
low-paid employment in the declining cotton sector (Imorou 2008: 25). Along
the same lines, an IREWOC study in Burkina Faso of migrant boys aged ten to
seventeen who work in the cotton fields in eastern Burkina Faso or north-eastern
Benin adds information about ‘socially related intermediaries’. They are young
return migrants bringing new migrants along on their next journey, providing
names of good employers or facilitating contact between children and farmers
coming to their village to recruit migrant workers (de Lange 2004, 2007). How
the contact between young ‘socially related intermediaries’ and future child
migrants occurs remains an unresearched field, as do the reasons why children
and youth journey with age-mates.
Recent academic studies document the ways in which children combine work,
play and playful socializing with their peers when carrying out household tasks,
and work alongside parents or independently (Dyson 2008; Katz 2004; Punch
2001a; Robson 2004a). While these studies draw attention to the porous boundaries between various tasks, they also highlight children’s abilities to make space
for social activities with their peers in their everyday lives. Katz describes how
Sudanese boys in their early teens meet up with other boys shepherding in the
grazing areas outside their village to play, eat and chat together while tending
the animals (Katz 2004: 6). Similarly, Dyson illustrates adolescent girls’ frivolous
bantering among themselves while they collect lichen at wintertime in the forest
in the Indian Himalayas (Dyson 2008: 169–72). Along the same lines, young male
migrants in Ouagadougou and Abidjan explained their perpetual friendships
across destinations despite long-term separation through having herded smallstock together in childhood. Comparable bonds of friendship and solidarity
are developed among girls in the West African savannah when they giggle and
gossip while working together during rotational work parties, collecting firewood
or locust bean pods in the bush, or walking to nearby village markets. These
types of social relations emerging from shared childhood experiences have been
given little attention in relation to children’s independent migration. Talata, a
seventeen-year-old boy interviewed in the Central Region of Ghana in June 2004,
described how a schoolmate was key in facilitating his migration.
to get myself something and also something to send home. I was even attending
school but because of the lack of support, I stopped and came here. […] One of
my classmates directed me. I wanted to come [to find work] and he first came
here and advised me, so I followed him later. My classmate helped me small
[with the fare] and I added and came. […] My classmate comes during the school
vacations, works and then goes back. I’m staying with his sister’s husband but
I’m only helping with his farm on Fridays. I’m doing my own work [farming]
carrots and sweet pepper and onions […] If I want to go anyplace I have to tell
[my classmate’s brother-in-law] because if you travel and stay with someone that
person is now your father, so it means that if there is any problem they have to
take care of you.
Similar examples of the significance of peer networks are evident among
Burkinabé children and youth. In a conversation in early 2005 with four itinerant
shoeshiners in the age group fourteen to eighteen, it became clear that the two
oldest had come to Ouagadougou every dry season in the past five years, during
which time they had been in different types of jobs. Shoeshining was a tide-over
occupation before finding employment and between jobs. That year, the older
boys brought along two younger brothers – one from the same household and
one whose mother came from their household – and they spent the first couple
of days introducing the newcomers to the secrets of shoeshining, in particular
where to find customers and how to behave when awaiting payment. These
examples suggest that friendship and relations among siblings are interwoven
and peer groups are essential for information flows. The care with which young
migrants presented themselves on return to their village plays an important role
in spurring both girls’ and boys’ wish to migrate. Frequently bonds of friendship come into operation here. Our studies show that even if young migrants
boosted their status through conspicuous consumption of clothing, consumer
goods or being generous to friends on market days because they had cash at
hand, migration was often a double-sided experience. While children’s positive
and negative migration experiences will be dealt with in more detail later in
this chapter and in the next, here we focus explicitly on the implication of
young returnees’ production of a migrant identity through activities oriented
towards their peers and how that facilitates other children’s migration. Can
young return migrants, in fact, refuse or ignore friends and junior brothers
who ask to accompany them on the next journey?
Our studies suggest that young returnees get caught up in asserting themselves as successful. On the one hand, they enjoy the material and social outcome back home when they have succeeded in saving up some money, and they
may be keen to help their friends on to the same path and thereby gain social
recognition, as suggested by Imorou (2008). On the other hand, they may wish
to shield their friends and juniors from the hardships of migrant life that they
70
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have experienced themselves. However, de Lange (2004) notes that young nonmigrants tend to think about such warnings as migrants’ egoistic schemes to
safeguard their own fortune by excluding others from gaining access to the same
commodities. Such accusations would corrode returnees’ status among their
peers, reducing their ability to decline taking other juniors along on the next
journey. The practices of child and youth migrants disclose another issue that
minimizes the number of rejections of friends’ appeals for help in migrating:
the companionship does not cost young experienced migrants anything. This
is because the children who would like to migrate with their peers are rarely
young children but are in their mid or late teens. As this age group increasingly
engage in independent activities to earn an income for buying clothes and
other necessities and for multiplying their activities, these first-time migrants
are able to pay for their own transportation. Hence, peer-mediated migration
is mostly internal or over short distances of 100–125 miles for which the costs
of transportation are low and thus affordable for children and youth (Thorsen
2009b). However, it is important to remember, as noted earlier, that some also
receive money from one or more parents in the rural household to support their
trip and encourage them to keep in contact with the rural family (Castle and
Diarra 2003; Hashim 2005; Thorsen 2006).
Finally, among the Bisa, migration within peer networks is not based on labour
needs; these slightly older friends and siblings are in precarious economic circumstances themselves and cannot easily find work for junior migrants, let alone
employ them in their own enterprises. The relationships are therefore based
on wanting to give friends and siblings of a similar age the same opportunities
(Thorsen 2009b). The companionship of friends and siblings of a similar age
is characterized by short-term circular mobility, which enhances the chance
of parental approval since the young migrants can easily return to work on the
family farm if need be.
Although the preceding case study involving Talata shows similar strategies
in operation among the child migrants in the Ghanaian research, senior kin
networks appeared far more significant in children’s mobility. This might be
because of the younger age at which children in this research migrated, as well
as the gender profiles of these children, where boys and girls were interviewed
in equal numbers.
An interesting and somewhat unusual example here, though, is that of a
nineteen-year-old girl we happened upon when we visited a Kusasi chief in a
rural town in the Ashanti Region to see whether he could direct us to any child
in the vicinity who had migrated from the Upper East Region. Gifty was living in
his household but had lived in a couple of other places, before ending up there
seeking help. She had initially migrated with another girlfriend from the Bawku
East district of Ghana’s Upper East Region. She hailed originally from Bawku,
the district capital, and thus would have been more confident and competent
in navigating travel and more city savvy. She told me that four years earlier her
friend had decided they would come, and when I asked her why she had come
too, she explained.
Because we always moved together. I didn’t discuss it with my father [who
lives in another town] but I talked to my mother who wasn’t in agreement so I
dodged. I had written my [ JSS] exams and asked my mother if she was able to
support me [through senior secondary school] and her response made me think
that I should forget about education. [So] I took some of my things and I sold
them to pay the lorry fare. […] One of my friend’s brothers was staying in the
police station here so we stayed with him. One man had said they were looking
for children to work cooking rice for a woman who was selling it but the pay
wasn’t good; just ¢3,000 [£0.19] per day, so I left after a few months. Then I came
here as one man told me there was a Kusasi chief here. […] My friend moved
to a cousin in Sunyani and then I heard she moved back to Bolga [where she is
originally from] […] Here, I was making kenke [a local, corn-based food] and selling it at the local school but it was not selling so I stopped and now I am looking
for something. […] I made a call to my mother. She asked me where I am staying
but I didn’t direct them because if I tell her she will come and collect me and the
money that I mean to make before I return home I won’t be able to. […] If I go
home, I will send the creams that [ you] use on your hair and I will […] learn how
to be a hairdresser.
Getting in touch with established migrants
Children’s movements in the African contexts have, in the anthropological
and sociological literature, been associated with fostering practices and kin relations without necessarily being linked with migration. Summing up the points
we have made in the previous chapters: grandparents, classificatory parents and
older sisters and brothers recruit children to carry out age-specific work that
they do not have children for themselves, for company or to induce a childless
woman’s fertility.5 Alternatively, they take charge of a child whose family is in a
difficult situation, owing usually to illness or death, and they may take charge of
children’s school education. In many of these studies, children’s relocation to
live in the house of kin is presumed to be a matter primarily of adult decisions.
In this book we challenge such presumptions and advocate the importance of
examining children’s own role in mobility related to what is conventionally
labelled fostering. We argue that it is important to shed light on children’s
interests in being a ‘foster child’ and on the claims children make on senior kin.
For children originating in the Upper East Region, senior kin networks were
far more significant in children’s mobility than peer networks, which was also
the case for girls from Pays Bisa, whereas Bisa boys were as likely to journey with
siblings and friends of a similar age as with senior relatives. Children aspiring to
72
Ousman explained how, at the age of 19, he had come across a migrant visiting
from Côte d’Ivoire while selling water in a town on the border between Burkina
Faso, Ghana and Togo. ‘During our chat, I told him that I’d like to go to Côte
d’Ivoire to work but didn’t have enough money for the ticket. He explained the
wage system on his cocoa farm: if he gained 150,000 CFA francs [£158], another
youth and I would gain 50,000 CFA francs [£53] to share.6 He supplemented my
savings with 10,000 CFA francs [£11] for the bus ticket and then deducted the
money from my pay once I’d begun to work.’
Paul described how he, at the age of 15 or 16, negotiated his departure. ‘I
made friends with this older migrant who was visiting our village and by the end
of his stay, he agreed to bring me along to Ouagadougou to work on his brickmaking site.’
In the two cases of befriending established migrants, the young migrants
foregrounded their own resourcefulness in making the contact, and only in
subsequent conversations did it become clear that they were related in intricate
ways to the older migrants. In Ousman’s case, the link was distant and related
to marriage between the two extended families, while in Paul’s case the owner
of the brick-making site was perceived as an older brother because the young
migrant was the son of his mother’s sister. This additional perspective on the
stories highlights that young people too have strategic interests and a desire
to convey a particular image of themselves when recounting their story – in
these cases the image of being assertive social actors who took the initiative
to create an opportunity to migrate was important. However, their stories also
provide a window on their understanding and translation of the social context,
which lie beneath divergent perceptions of the relationship between junior and
senior migrants that may surface at later moments. While adolescents seek to
create themselves as autonomous individuals, established migrants may see
them as family members and as young dependants. We shall come back to
this point below, and just point out here that such divergences of perception
may underlie established migrants’ decision regarding whether or not to meet
a young person’s desire to accompany them.
The choice made by adolescents between approaching age-mates of a similar
economic and social standing as themselves and senior migrants who would
become their employer raises the question of why they make this choice and
how it impacts on their early migration experience.
Adolescent boys from Pays Bisa occasionally travelled to Côte d’Ivoire on their
own or with age-mates, but the higher costs of transportation entailed more planning. Amadou’s story opening this chapter, for example, showed that he worked
in rural towns during the dry season for two years before being able to set off
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migrate in Pays Bisa chat with visiting migrants to obtain information about various destinations and to strike up a relationship that will facilitate their migration.
on the journey that would eventually bring him to his older brother in Abidjan,
and his journey had many unforeseen legs. The higher costs of transportation
reduced children’s ability to travel independently unless they, like Ousman and
Paul, made arrangements with relatives or an employer to pay for their ticket,
often on the basis of later reimbursement. This limitation was partially offset by
the fact that children were not fussy about the kind of work they would do, which
in turn meant that they could approach all visiting migrants to try their luck.
An important point to reiterate here is the broad notion of relatedness, which
in the West African context of extensive mobility means that hopeful adolescents
may approach a range of close and distant kin to enhance the likelihood of
finding someone willing to pay for their journey. However, the age gap means
that children’s opinions are not important in determining older migrants’ social
standing and they may easily ignore the subtle requests put forward by hopeful
children. Migration with older established migrants, therefore, is characterized
by inequality. Established migrants agree to take youngsters along if they need
extra hands on their farm, in their business or at home, but sometimes also
when they do not need additional labour power (Thorsen 2009b). This is in part
because of the poverty and marginalization of rural areas, which provide few
opportunities for children and youth to make a living, and both rural parents and
established migrants may wish to help them overcome this limitation (Whitehead et al. 2007). It is also because of the importance of social relations and
networks in African economies (Morice 1987) and the migrants’ links with the
youngsters’ parents. The motivation of established migrants to bring children
and youth with them, therefore, is any combination of labour requirements,
wishing to help juniors to do well in their own right and to help their families.
This may be to the benefit of the child wishing to migrate but it may also result
in children and/or adults acquiescing in a child’s relocation, despite their better judgement. Moreover, the relationship could also work the other way. The
presence of one young migrant boy of about eight or nine from the Upper East
Region was explained by an adult in the house to which he had been moved
as being due to his father wishing to cement a distant relationship with this
household, which was of significant social standing and power. Children, then,
may move to other households to reinforce ties between adults (Hashim 2004:
107). As we shall discuss later, the nature of these relationships and motivations
for agreeing to take on a migrant child may have implications for the extent
to which youngsters’ migratory experiences are primarily positive or negative.
The way in which children use social networks to facilitate their independent migration by finding travel companions who can show them the route and
in some cases help finance the trip follows the logic of chain migration. This
concept has mostly been used in the context of migration into North America,
from the 1990s onwards, especially from Mexico (Wilson 1994), while the focus
in the African context has been the interlinking of rural and urban commun74
Children’s and youth’s journeys
Despite the focus on trafficking and measures to intercept child migrants
on the move, most studies underpinning international and national policies
are silent about how journeys are undertaken concretely. It is presumed that by
targeting drivers of long-distance buses and minibuses, as well as police officers
working at border posts, through information campaigns and control, children’s
movements can be contained. Awareness-raising at this level is perceived as
more efficient since rural parents are often seen as part of the problem; owing
either to their ignorance of the dangers to which child migrants are subjected
or to their reliance on children’s income. Again, children’s own ideas are overlooked, as is the context from which they start their journey.
The first journey
As discussed in Chapter 3, when children leave in secrecy it is frequently
seen by outsiders as a conflict creating or being the outcome of a rupture in
the relationship with their parents. To assume that this is always the case,
however, is to assume rather normative ideas of how families function and of
inter-generational relationships. As noted in the previous chapter, there may
be a variety of reasons why children leave without parental permission. In this
chapter we want to explore further what light secret departures shed on decisionmaking within a household. Moreover, we examine what the implications of
running away are – or not – for children’s actual journeys.
Sitting at the edge of his vegetable garden near Abidjan’s airport early in
January 2008, twenty-seven-year-old Gambile looked back at his first migration
to Ouagadougou. He had worked in a cafeteria where we had been regular visitors since 2005. At first he said he had left home in secret, but then went on
to describe his departure for Ouagadougou when he was sixteen or seventeen
years old, after he had had to drop out of secondary school because his father
did not have money for the school fees.
I’d prepared all my clothes, packed my bag and chosen the day I’d travel, but
I hadn’t said anything to my father. My mother had a hunch because she’d
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ities. The presence of a migrant community at the destination lowers the costs
and risks of movement and thereby promotes the migration of a broader set
of people (Massey et al. 1993). Children’s journeys are thus a product of many
earlier journeys by older migrants. The notion of chain migration brings to the
fore the question of how independent child migrants are. While this question
would not be raised for adults, who are theorized as individuals and complete
persons, children are conceptualized in much of the policy literature as personsin-the-becoming and dependants per se. This is why child migrants are so often
seen as victims or as passive elements in adult strategies.
washed my clothes. The day of my departure, I rose at four o’clock in the morning while everyone still slept, I woke an older brother who knew about my plans,
and he asked if I was ready. When I said yes, he wished me a safe journey. Then
I woke my younger brother who also knew my plans and he got up, carried the
bicycle outside our courtyard without waking our father and then pedalled me to
town to see me off at the bus station. Once my father found out, what could he
say? From that point, he would just wish me the best of luck!
Gambile’s story illustrates how various family members apart from the household head were aware of his plans to migrate. In so doing it challenges the image
of the family and the household as a utilitarian entity where all actions are in
the mutual interests of the family, but rather demonstrates that household members may have diverging interests. Power hierarchies within the household may
imply that other members become quiet accomplices in children and youth’s
strategies. Alternatively adults can assert their preferences by asking for a child,
recruiting a child without the household head’s and/or other adults’ knowledge,
or by declining to bring a child along on migration. Finally, both the head and
other family members may forgo their immediate labour needs for the sake
of longer-term interests in terms of children’s sustained incorporation in the
family (Hashim 2004: 109–10).
Second, the emphasis on inter-generational conflict and rupture does not sit
well with the importance of social relations and of children as social security
for ageing parents. No doubt conflicts do occur, some so serious that little
contact is maintained between a young migrant and his/her rural family, but
in most cases secret departures relate more to adults’ and children’s diverging
judgement of a child’s ability to withstand hardship at the migration destination.
As children can rarely tell a senior openly that they disagree with her or his
views because it would be considered disrespectful, they either bring up other
reasons for wanting to migrate without countering the senior, or they choose
to ‘flee’ home without the household head’s approval (Thorsen 2006). Parents
often empathize with children’s decision to ‘flee’ (Pays Bisa) or to ‘dodge’ (the
Upper East Region). They admit that this has been a common practice for a long
time, and they may indeed have ‘fled’ or ‘dodged’ themselves in their youth.
Moreover, they are acutely aware of the limited possibilities in the villages of
earning a comfortable living as a farmer or of finding alternative employment.
The outcome of leaving secretly is that parents worry about their children’s
well-being until they hear where they are and how they are doing, and that
children may miss out on help in paying for the ticket.
Safety mechanisms, trafficking and opportunistic journeys
Commissioned research to document different aspects of children’s migration for policy purposes has exposed that parents may help their children to
76
18-year-old male migrant: [My older brother] said he had heard on the radio that
we had been repatriated. I went to greet my mother and my father. My mother
was in tears saying that we didn’t listen to people and we had gone all that way
for nothing. […] [Our peers] laughed at us because we had been repatriated – we
couldn’t even set foot outside of our families (for fear of being teased).
18-year-old female migrant: Our friends teased us because we didn’t obtain
anything because we had been repatriated. […] [My parents] said that it was
because we did not ask permission to go to Abidjan that we were repatriated […]
Our peers say that we didn’t earn anything and that we didn’t even have our bus
tickets reimbursed when we were repatriated. We told them that it was because
of the intermediaries that we were repatriated and for no other reason. (Castle
and Diarra 2003: 118–19)
These accounts suggest that children and adults had similar views on migration and what it takes to be a successful migrant, but that they viewed the lack
of success through different prisms. The peer group focused squarely on the
lack of visible material outcomes, while the older generation scolded the young
repatriated migrants for having been too independent, indicating that success
could be achieved only by seeking their seniors’ advice and involvement. Peer
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leave. Around one quarter of the respondents in studies of independent child
migration in Mali (Castle and Diarra 2003) and Burkina Faso (Terre des Hommes
2003) were given money by parents to cover fully or partially the costs of transportation and the early stay at the destination. This is primarily a means of
protecting the child. According to one mother, she supplemented her daughter’s
savings ‘because I couldn’t see my child travel without giving her something’
(ibid.: 16). Another mother in south-eastern Burkina Faso, whose husband had
allowed their sixteen-year-old son to migrate, gave the proceeds from brewing
beer to her son to pay for the bus fare, though without her husband’s knowledge, as he might otherwise accuse her of having sent away his son if the boy
remained too long in Ouagadougou (Thorsen 2006: 102). It is important also
to note that fathers are equally interested in their children travelling safely and
they subsidize both daughters’ and sons’ journeys (Castle and Diarra 2003: 68).
While in some cases peer-mediated migration involves children running away
from home, the above findings make clear that this is far from always the case.
The effects of anti-trafficking measures such as regional vigilante and surveillance committees aiming to increase public awareness of the dangers awaiting
mobile children and to intercept children on the move are slowly emerging in
research findings. Castle and Diarra’s research with Malian child migrants,
for example, documents how older children repatriated in the spirit of child
protection often had a very different view on the effects of these well-intended
protective measures, as had their parents:
and/or family pressure encouraged repatriated children and youth to embark
on a second journey shortly after their return. So the assumed protection, in
reality, introduced an extra cost inasmuch as they had to pay the bus fare twice
and possibly also bribes, since the introduction of checks on young migrants’
identity cards and other documents might be exploited as a basis for bribery by
the police (ibid.: 120).
While these measures seem to have done little to decrease children’s migration, they have sparked off adaptations in travel practices. In Mali – and in other
contexts where anti-trafficking measures have been promoted insistently – they
have had the effect of making journeys more clandestine and dangerous because
honest drivers and intermediaries, who have often acted as children’s advocates
and protectors, fear being branded as traffickers. Children may thus be forced
into the hands of potentially unscrupulous drivers or intermediaries (ibid.). In
northern Benin, vigilante committees have had interesting effects. On the one
hand, they have led to diffused and covert journeys where children travel in pairs
or on their own and often break the journey into shorter legs to avoid interference.
Furthermore, they have resulted in some parents bringing their children to the
destination. On the other hand, parents and children also use the committees.
Some parents interact with professional intermediaries to send off their children,
then notify the local anti-trafficking committee, which stops the intermediaries and extracts money from them, whereas some children use anti-trafficking
committees to claim their payment from employers who default (Imorou 2008).
In spite of the significant advocacy and intervention programmes launched
by the ILO-IPEC and the LUTRENA programme, the impact of vigilante and
surveillance committees and anti-trafficking measures varies tremendously from
one region to another. In both our study areas, the impact has been negligible:
none of the children or youth interviewed had been intercepted and the theme
of trafficking rarely came up in conversations. Ibrahim’s account below reveals
that some of the migrants came into contact with malevolent intermediaries
whom they labelled (border) ‘crossers’. We have known Ibrahim and his family
for about ten years and have followed his migration from his village to a rural
town, to Ouagadougou and, in 2007, when he was twenty-three or twenty-four
years old, to Côte d’Ivoire. By the time he travelled to Côte d’Ivoire he was street
wise, but he nevertheless experienced difficulties.
The manner in which they tired us on the border, really it wasn’t for children! I
travelled to Côte d’Ivoire with a friend from my village. After having spent about
five years in Ouagadougou I know city life pretty well, he didn’t but he’d been at
school. We went via Ghana and crossed into Côte d’Ivoire at Noe. That was the
difficult part!
These bandits – one of them a Burkinabé, a Mossi, who approached us in the
bus station – told us that we would have to pay 10,000 CFA francs [£10] to cross
78
francs from my friend to the 5,000 CFA francs I’d already given them and paid
the police. Then they walked away from the border post with us, immediately
asking how much we had left. When we answered that we had nothing left, they
searched our pockets and took every single coin. After that, they tried to place us
with a cocoa farmer who would pay us 100,000 CFA francs [£105] at the end of
the year but I refused to work there. Then they wanted to place my friend alone
but I told them that we had come together and were going to stay together. They
threatened to bring my friend back to the Ghanaian side of the border but this
time he refused to budge. Ha! They stood there and I thought, ‘this is it’. But
they only said that we would have to phone our brothers to come and pick us up
because they would no longer try to help us.
Before they left, they phoned my friend’s uncle but he just said that since his
nephew hadn’t phoned ahead to tell him about the journey, he knew nothing
about this story, so his nephew would have to find work where he was and then
return to Burkina. ‘Well, if it’s like that’, I said, ‘I’ll try to phone my uncle in
Abidjan.’ He was a bit more positive but told us to stay put for two days since he
had a naming ceremony for his newborn son the next day, after that he would
come and pick us up. I’d kind of hoped for better news. I also have a brother
who has a cocoa farm in Sassandra and I was sure that he would want someone
to work on his farm. When we called him, he told us that if he travelled all the
way from Sassandra to Noe to pick us up, it would almost be as far as going to
Burkina! There we were, we didn’t have anything to eat and we slept outdoors!
We had to beg to eat!
We felt really, really miserable then. We had counted on our relatives […] but
then it was our own fault as well because we hadn’t phoned to confirm that we
were coming. That was the problem, you see, life here is not like in our village.
We knew that, but if we’d called they would have told us not to come, therefore
we were obliged to come without saying anything. Even if your relative is disappointed when you turn up, he can’t tell you to return home, well, some do but
most choose just to take you in.
Together with Amadou’s story opening the chapter, this detailed account of
a trip from the young migrants’ village of origin to Abidjan reveals a lot about
the optimism with which children and youth set off from home, the hazards
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the border unless we went with them. I didn’t trust them, especially because
they would take us one by one, so I refused to budge without my brother. I didn’t
want to get myself killed in the bush or let them kill my brother. We started
arguing and in the end, the police interfered and brought my friend and me
into a small house. They asked us to pay 5,000 CFA francs [£5] each but the
bandits had already taken my 5,000 CFA francs to get us over the border, all
I’d left was 2,000 [£2] something and my friend had 5,000 something. Now the
bandits turned up and began to negotiate with the police, they added 2,000 CFA
they encounter on the way and their strategies to make claims on kin at the
destination.
While travel costs on short journeys are usually fixed, it can be difficult to
estimate the amount of money needed for a longer journey involving several
buses, border crossings and the invariable roadblocks located on busy roads.
Under the guise of security, they are points of extortion of money from passengers, especially from those who do not have all the required documents or
are of foreign origin. Castle and Diarra (2003) note how Malian travellers of all
ages cross the border to Côte d’Ivoire on foot or motorcycle taxi on the back
roads to avoid the border police, who will ask money irrespective of whether
the travellers have the right documents or not. After the eruption of the civil
war in Côte d’Ivoire in 2002 and the subsequent partition of the country into
the rebel-controlled north and the government-controlled south, the number
of roadblocks increased drastically and many Burkinabé migrants began to
travel via Ghana to avoid them. However, underestimating the travel costs is
not always the reason for getting stuck. As Amadou’s story shows, adolescents
and youth know the approximate costs but still head out with much less money
than required in their pocket. They expect to find work along the way and are
not worried about working on plantations for a while, even if some of them
have aspirations of urban work. Some work in plantations for a few years before
continuing or heading home to visit the family. Others are lucky to encounter
a friendly driver who brings them to Abidjan for free, or a stranger who helps
them with a bit of money (ibid.: 71–2).
Young migrants may not be anxious about getting stuck at some point in
their journey since they rarely have a job lined up at their destination and a
delay does not matter. Their main objective is to earn money; whether they work
in rural or urban areas may not make much of a difference. However, different
payment schemes may appear more or less risky. The boys and youth from Pays
Bisa in Côte d’Ivoire worried more about being cheated of their wages than about
having to work for an employer they happened upon along the route. Although
many were remunerated on an annual basis, others preferred undertaking casual
contracts, whereby they would see the fruits of their labour more quickly and
have more flexibility to continue their journey. In contrast, children and youth
from the Upper East Region often stated a preference for annual payment as
they felt they were less likely to squander the money than if they were paid
monthly (Hashim 2005: 20). Second, young migrants emphasized the dangers
they encountered, stressing that they could have been killed, as illustrated in the
opening story and the account of meeting border ‘crossers’. The story recounted
by twelve-year-old Djamilla in Kumasi City in June 2004 highlights the fact that
hazards can also be of a more subtle but sustained character, where the danger
is not only of being killed but of suffering abuse and being exploited because
of a child’s social position.
80
I stayed one year and one month. […] The woman I am staying with now
used to come to the village to buy cassava and I was carrying the cassava for her
and crying, and she asked me why I was crying so I told her the whole story and
asked her if she could find me someone to work for. I just followed her straight
away; I didn’t know whether she would find me work or kill me.
Thus, children may recognize the potential dangers of travel, emphasizing
their courage and possibly exaggerating the dangers somewhat in the traditions
of storytelling. Finally, those adolescents and youth travelling with peers, and
thus not subjecting themselves to the inequalities of inter-generational kinship relations and to waiting for an established migrant to take them along,
strategically avoid making arrangements prior to their journey. If a relative at
their destination has discouraged them from travelling, it would be considered
very disrespectful to turn up asking for help, whereas getting there unexpectedly
may elicit assistance, as discussed above, although they also are aware that they
risk being disappointed, should their relative be unable to find them work. This
way of journeying is not just an outcome of youthful sanguinity and risk-taking.
Older migrants heading for Gabon and Equatorial Guinea journey in a similar
way and either work or rely on having money wired from relatives when they get
stuck in Nigeria or Cameroon. It also mirrors the way in which transnational
migrants travel from West Africa to Europe (Collyer 2007; Fall 2007).
Arriving in new spaces
Far from home or in a foreign country, trafficked children – disoriented, without
papers, and excluded from any protective environment – can be forced to endure
prostitution, domestic servitude, early and involuntary marriage, or hazardous
and punishing labour. (UNICEF 2003: 7)
The strong focus on trafficking and the worst forms of child labour in child
rights advocacy has framed the debates about independent child migration,
and many in-depth studies have centred on decision-making processes at home
and/or on working conditions and potential hazards at the destination, with the
aim of deepening our understanding of migrating and working children. The
representation of trafficked children in Africa in the quote above is in stark
contrast to the courage and resilience children and youth recounted to us in
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4 | Journeys and arrivals
When I first came here [south] I was staying at a village and they were punishing
me so I ran away. […] [I was in the village of] Sakora-Mapong [with] a Kusasi,
but not a relative. […] He saw me in my village and said that I was suffering so
he brought me here. I wasn’t getting food and I couldn’t get clothing to wear
because my parents aren’t there [i.e. deceased] […] but the suffering [in SakoraMapong] was worse. […] I would go early in the morning to fetch firewood, then
I would fetch water and prepare food, but I wouldn’t get enough to eat and I
haven’t seen him buy me anything for all this suffering.
their accounts of independent journeys. This may be the result of differences
between the profiles of trafficked children and children migrating voluntarily.
Nevertheless, we think it is important to explore a stage in children’s migration
process that we know little about – namely, children’s experiences of arrival in
new places.
The way in which children undertake a journey is often decisive in terms of
where they will live on first arrival. The literature focusing on fostering arrangements frequently assumes that children travelling with established migrants will
stay with and work for their senior travel companion. Our studies suggest that
such assumptions often hold true, but equally may only do so at the beginning.
Importantly, however, we aim to draw attention to the many children journeying with peers, siblings of their own age or on their own. Some of them set off
without prior arrangements with kin at the destination, while others are expected
and collected from the bus station. It is important to examine in each context
the outcome for such children in terms of the risks and difficulties they face.
In their study in north-western Burkina Faso, Terre des Hommes found that
rural girls journeying with peers frequently stayed with a ‘tuteur’ or ‘tutrice’ – a
male or female guardian – from their village when they first arrived in Ouagadougou. People interested in recruiting a domestic worker came to their households
to meet the newly arrived girls and only the older and more experienced female
migrants looked for work themselves by going from door to door. Once they were
employed, most girls moved to the employer’s house. From the girls’ perspective,
these guardians were an extra source of security because they could mediate if
conflicts arose with the employer, and most of them thanked the guardians by
bringing them gifts (Terre des Hommes 2003: 17–18).
The boys from Pays Bisa arrived in Ouagadougou in smaller groups or on
their own and, even if they rarely had one or two migrants from their village
who would accommodate all newcomers, they also found ‘tuteurs’.
Hamidou came to Ouagadougou in 1997 at the age of twelve. He was on his own
but knew the name of the neighbourhood where his father’s sister ( pugudba)
lived. Although he started asking around while on the bus to establish the precise location of her house, he ended up searching for her for almost two weeks
while staying in the house of a Bisa migrant he had met by chance. Eventually
after a lot of asking around, he found his pugudba and moved to her household.
Shortly after his arrival at his pugudba’s house, he overheard her complain to
her children that he did not want to work. As he said, ‘I worked as a domestic for
a week but had quit because my employer didn’t treat her children well. She’d
taken charge of many children from her village and although she was kind to
me, she always shouted at those children and I was afraid that she would eventually be malicious to me too. My pugudba didn’t understand that and now she was
telling her children that I was lazy and that if I didn’t want to work, I could go
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What is particularly interesting in this account are the claims children and
youth implicitly make on kin senior to them by boldly arriving prepared for
work without thinking of their own security. Their stories show that kin – in
the broadest sense – pick up these young boys and offer them food and accommodation temporarily or in the longer term. Such claims need not be articulated;
they go without saying since they are part of a shared habitus (Thorsen 2009b).
Amadou’s description of his journey also offers evidence of this practice but
shows that children who are given a roof over their head and food may be
treated as free family labour (the Mossi cocoa planter) or that remunerated
labour may be treated like a family member (the Boussanga groundnut farmer).
Likewise, Ibrahim and his friend, who got stuck on the border between Ghana
and Côte d’Ivoire, counted on being assisted and accommodated by kin. His
story illuminates the strength of juniors’ claims on membership in households
headed by matrilineal or patrilineal kin once they are at the destination, but
shows that they may be thwarted if they try to arrange accommodation prior
to arrival, but less easily so if already en route.
Equally interesting are the ways in which kin encourage or oblige children
to work by either acting as intermediaries in finding employment, or by disapproving of their choices, such as in the example of Hamidou’s aunt. The pressure under which kin put rural juniors to find work or accept the employment
presented to them is in part because of the fear that idle youth will become
delinquent and eventually end up in prison. It is also because they want to
help children along the path of eventually becoming successful migrants with
good earnings.
Conclusion: journeying as part of extensive migrant networks
Very few children travel alone when going to destinations beyond the rural
towns in their region, and even then they usually travel in pairs or in groups
to make it an amicable social event. The contemporary practices in the Upper
East Region and Pays Bisa reflect former practices of children travelling with kin
in a variety of fosterage arrangements, and of young men travelling with their
friends to cocoa-growing areas or the large market towns and cities such as
Kumasi, Accra and Abidjan. Many children travel with kin for whom they will
work in farming, the domestic sphere or in informal businesses. While some
of them replace school-going children in carrying out a range of tasks for their
relatives, this is not the only reason for their migration. The high population
density in many rural areas and the rate of urbanization in recent years mean
that labour could be recruited locally. Bringing children from rural communities
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4 | Journeys and arrivals
back to the village.’ His pugudba did not know that Hamidou had overheard the
conversation, but it pushed him to find another job in order to leave her house
as quickly as possible.
is a manifestation of the expansion of the social space from their rural community to the community of migrants from their region in which adult migrants
also generate social status.
What appears to have changed in recent years is that a number of children
in their early to mid teens are able to bypass fosterage arrangements or coming under the patronage of an established migrant by travelling with peers.
As a result, they are not obliged to continue working within the institution of
the family for the household head and/or the person who has brought them
into the household, but can take up waged work. However, the ability to travel
with peers is highly context specific; in Pays Bisa it is primarily boys who have
the option, in the Upper East Region children of both genders tend to travel
with or to kin, whereas girls from the Sourou province in Burkina Faso set
off to Ouagadougou with their friends. The interesting point about children’s
ability to migrate with age-mates is not so much that there is a market for
their labour but, first, that those who have migrated once or twice can begin to
establish their social status and network through acting as intermediaries and
as sources of information. A second interesting point is that older migrants at
the destination support peer-facilitated migration by taking upon themselves
the role of seniors providing accommodation and, sometimes, the mediating
of employment without necessarily benefiting from the children’s labour. This
suggests that they take their status as parents or older siblings seriously, but
also that transformations in the organization of extended families mean they
are not necessarily interested in having access to more children’s labour. Unable to keep the children away, since they do not advertise their intention of
coming, established migrants may try to send them to work in their own right.
This dynamic facilitates children’s and youth’s migration by keeping the risks of
suffering to a low level and therefore offers some latitude in deciding at which
point in their life they become migrants.
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5 | Navigating migrant life: processes of
constructing identities
‘Sitting in the shade of a wall outside the bar where shoe-shiners from two
neighbouring villages in Pays Bisa met every day to have a brief rest at midday,
we learned a lot about their struggles to earn a living and cope with misfortunes
and about their hopes for the near future. But their stories also revealed some
of the aspects that life in Ouagadougou added to their understanding of themselves and their relationships with others. Usually we stopped to greet the boys
when meeting them elsewhere in the city, but since March 2005, we have come
to the bar to do interviews in order not to hinder their work.
‘On this day, 19-year-old Rasmane, who first came to Ouagadougou when he
was 17, talked about what he had learned. At first, he had been a shoe-shiner but
now worked at a barbecue outside the bar. “As I’m not with my parents, I must
do everything to get by on my own, to have something to eat every day […] but if
you stay in the village, the only option is to farm and it will take ages to develop
your ideas because you awaken once you see things. Next time I visit [my family],
I’ll show my older brothers respect as if they were my father [his father had died]
and I’ll definitely show my mother much more respect. If you stay in the village,
you often lack respect for your seniors, but here in Ouaga, I’ve learned how to
show respect to those bigger [older and/or wealthier] than me and I’ve seen that
it’s really important. Before, if my mother asked me to run an errand, I would
just say ‘no’ without getting into trouble. But now I miss her, so whatever she
asks of me the next time I see her, I’ll do for her.
‘“I’ve also found out that it is best to manage on your own. I have some
brothers here in Ouaga but if they are no good and if they aren’t honest, it’s difficult. For example, if you work and you give your money to a brother for safekeeping, and the day you wish to leave you discover that he has eaten [spent] your
money, you can’t do a thing. When I first came to Ouaga two years ago, I worked
in a small restaurant and spent my wage buying some enamel food containers
but I also saved 7,500 CFA francs [£8] that I gave to my friend for safekeeping.
When I was ready to leave, I asked for my money but he didn’t know where it had
gone, all 7,500 CFA francs! That’s why I prefer to keep my savings myself.”
‘We were taken to the house of a Kusasi chief in Kumasi town who we were
told, with his wife, was actively trying to locate vulnerable children brought from
the north and place them in Kusasi households as foster children. We met three
children whom they’d placed like this. One child we spoke with was a slip of a
girl of about 11 years of age, who had been orphaned some years earlier.
85
‘“My parents are dead and I asked my brother [kinsman] who is staying in
this place [Kumasi] if I could find work here. He said yes. In the house, I was
getting no food to eat and [my grandfather’s wife] was always shouting at me, so
I didn’t tell anyone; I just escaped. I followed a woman from my place and she
brought me here but left me on the roadside. I was working for three months
as a head-porter and sleeping in the market sheds, and then I met the chief’s
wife and I was very happy. I asked her if I could follow her home so she could
find me work. She placed me in this man’s house. […] I am not doing any work,
I’m just staying with him and helping in the house [washing bowls, fetching
water, sweeping, and looking after his children]. […] They are treating me well,
except that when they prepare food they don’t prepare enough, so I don’t eat and
satisfy. […] I can’t leave because I don’t know the way. I want to stay small before
I go home, so I can get my things to send home. If I go home, I have no one to
care for me. If I knew I had someone there to care for me, I would prefer to go
home. […] Now, I want to learn work. If they bought me a sewing machine I will
do that, if they put me in hairdressing, I will do that.”’
This chapter is concerned with child migrants’ lives at their destinations. The
different motivations leading children to become migrants in the first place,
as well as the justifications placing their journeys within local perceptions of
mobility, shape children’s expectations of what they can gain through migration.
These expectations, in turn, translate into their practices and embodiment of
being migrants and make clear to us that children’s independent migration
is not just about earning money or pursuing formal education or vocational
training, although these issues are central to children’s narratives. Migration
is also a process of social learning through which the young migrants enact
different forms of self-realization and occupy multiple positions (de Boeck and
Honwana 2005: 3), as workers, students, junior kin, migrants and peers, to
mention but a few.
Much of the applied research documenting children’s work in the late 1990s
and early 2000s stresses their vulnerability, arising from what is perceived as a
too early introduction into working life or the risk of exploitation and maltreatment as workers because of their young age. However, children’s independent
migration inevitably involves work; because their journey is motivated by the
desire to earn money, established migrants agree to their coming because they
need the help of a girl or a boy, or they move to relatives with the hope of continuing formal education or entering an apprenticeship at the destination. For
children, being part of a relative’s household implies carrying out certain types
of work associated with their gender and age, not just because they are living
with people other than their birth parents but because that is what household
membership entails. In the documentation of child migrants’, and, in particular,
girl child migrants’, unpaid domestic work in the household of a relative, the
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Getting into migrant work at rural and urban destinations
It often is assumed that children migrating with relatives inevitably become
unpaid family labour. However, the following accounts by child migrants in
central Ghana indicate that gender and age differences may exist with regard to
working for relatives or taking on paid work. Akuka was eighteen when he was
interviewed in a village in the Ashanti Region of Ghana. Both his parents were
alive, and living and farming in their home village in the Upper East Region.
He had never attended school and had been a migrant since the age of fourteen, working always in rural areas in farming. He explained his migration as
being the result of the deep poverty in his home village and his wish to help
his parents, and he described how he had travelled with his brother, who also
paid his bus fare.
Before coming, I didn’t know what work I’d be doing but after one week at my
brother’s house, he asked me to work [for] an Ashanti man in a nearby village.
I stayed for one year and farmed maize, tomato and cocoa with him. He treated
me well, I had no problem with food or the place where I was staying and after
one year when my contract ended he paid me ¢250,000 [£16]. Since then I have
been working with my brother farming maize and tomatoes, I’ve also done
onions but didn’t get the money [to hire land] to do that this year. My brother
sometimes gives me ¢150,000 [£9] […] You can say that the work with my brother
is for us but I sometimes go by-day for me and get paid ¢10,000 [£0.63] per day.
Hawa had been somewhat younger when she migrated from the Upper East
Region to the Brong Ahafo Region of Ghana; aged seven, she had come to live
with her brother. Her account of the motivation behind this decision included
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5 | Navigating migrant life
analyses frequently are synchronic and narrowly focused on the vulnerabilities
the migrants face (Anti-Slavery International 2001; Erulkar and Mekbib 2007;
ILO 2004; Riisøen et al. 2004). The paths that these children and youth follow
in the course of their migration tend to vanish from view, thereby curtailing
our understanding of child migrants’ negotiations of work and, perhaps more
importantly, of selfhood.
This chapter documents a range of vulnerabilities young migrants from the
Upper East Region in Ghana and Pays Bisa in Burkina Faso are exposed to, and
shows that chronological age and even a certain level of street savviness do not
eliminate their exposure to deceit. However, our view of these child and youth
migrants as competent social beings pushes us to explore how they act upon
deception, how they apprehend their situation and what they do to fulfil their
ideas of what it means to be a migrant. The aim of the chapter, thus, is to shed
light on the interconnections between migration, vulnerability and children’s
and youth’s identity construction, to understand nuances in boys’ and girls’
navigation of the social and economic contexts at their migration destinations.
her birth parents’ deep poverty, the idea that her brother would send her to
school and her brother’s request that she come and take care of his wife’s child.
It was not clear from the account she gave aged fifteen whether the idea that
her brother would send her to school was wishful thinking.
I was helping my brother’s wife while she was farming. After three years of
being here they sent me to an Ashanti lady. I was sitting with a woman from this
village selling vegetables by the roadside and the Ashanti woman stopped and
asked her, won’t you give your sister to me. […] The woman used to come and
buy from our village […] I didn’t just go like that. At the time my brother wasn’t
there, but his wife agreed that I should go. I was staying with the Ashanti woman
in Kumasi selling soap, milo and that type of small thing from a table. After
working for her for four years, I decided myself to stop and she brought me back
here. […] When I left she bought me a sewing machine. […] Now I’ve entered
into apprenticeship work but I occasionally help my brother farming and I also
help his wife fetching water and cooking. I sometimes go by-day and collect my
¢10,000 [£0.63] but I’m only free on Saturdays and Sundays. I haven’t paid any
apprenticeship fees yet but I’m hoping my brother will help me.
Akuka’s and Hawa’s stories show that children migrating with relatives do
not necessarily remain unpaid family labour but may be allowed or encouraged
to engage in work for others that will earn them money and also increase their
skills. Aged fourteen, Akuka was considered old enough to work for a stranger,
and he was indeed pleased to earn an income. Although the amount he earns
is a pittance, this needs to be put into some context. In 2001 in the Upper
East Region of Ghana, one bag of staple crop would cost between ¢100,000
and ¢120,000 (£6.25–£7.50) depending on the time of year, and seven bags of
maize or millet are sufficient for a year for a family of ten. Prices had gone up
by 2004, but not significantly. Second, Akuka, like most rural workers,1 gets
his meals as part of his work within a household, along with his accommodation. Finally, the work that Akuka did would be similar to what he would be
doing in his own village, for his own household and for which he would not
be remunerated. As he himself put it, ‘In my life I have never seen ¢250,000
[£15.60]!’ His brother’s mediation of employment may well have been linked
with wanting to accommodate Akuka’s desire for an income, or with his own
farm being too small to require Akuka’s labour.
Other motivations for encouraging children to work for non-related individuals could be related to a perceived need for disciplining young workers.
As Rasmane’s story at the beginning of the chapter suggests, children and
youth who have only just left home and are used to working in a close familial
setting may refuse to do certain tasks, something that is considered as lacking
respect or laziness. This is a complex issue and relates to the conflicts between
seniors and juniors in terms of getting children to work to begin with, and then
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getting them to work for others when they may prefer to work for themselves,
as discussed in Chapter 3. In the Upper East Region, for example, parents’ role
is to get very young children ‘used to work’. Accusations of kba’ya or laziness
and a parent ‘not liking’ them appear to be the extent of any sanctions. As
children become older, they are taught about the importance of work, since this
is ‘food’, and either food is withheld from them if they have not pulled their
weight in its production by ‘escaping to play in the bush’, or in extreme cases
they may be beaten. However, around the age of fourteen children’s interests
become more separated from those of their parents, and conflicts arise as to
whom they work for, as they discover the growing possibilities of alternative
sources of support or income (Hashim 2004: 89). When children refuse work,
therefore, this may be related to wishing to work for themselves. In Ghana,
this is especially the case for boys, whose work is more highly valued and more
‘economically productive’, and thus more likely to bring them financial reward.
For girls, it is almost expected that they should start to disassociate from their
households, and their gradual withdrawal is seen as an indicator that young
women are ready to move on to their next house (ibid.: 93).
Many of the boys migrating to rural areas travelled with siblings and peers
of a similar age who already knew of employment possibilities on smallholder
farms and bigger plantations and simply entered into the same type of employment (de Lange 2006; Imorou 2008). However, not all chose such a secure path;
Castle and Diarra’s study of children migrating independently from two rural
regions in Mali indicated that boys migrating to rural areas of Côte d’Ivoire
were likely to be in a similar situation to Amadou, whose interrupted journey
from Pays Bisa to Abidjan we followed at the beginning of the previous chapter.
They arrived in cocoa-growing areas with only a vague idea of how to find work
and frequently ended up working for people whom they did not know prior to
their arrival, although many were originally from Mali (Castle and Diarra 2003).
Allegations have been made about child migrants working as slaves and being
locked up on cocoa farms in Côte d’Ivoire (Riisøen et al. 2004: 31–3). None of
the young Malian migrants interviewed by Castle and Diarra, the young Bisa
migrants who had worked in plantations before coming to Abidjan or the return migrants in Burkina Faso and Ghana, however, provided evidence of this
type of maltreatment.
Although girls also help in farming and, by their mid-teens, may do by-day
labour to earn an independent income, like Hawa, not all girls get into paid
employment. Interviewed by two child researchers from her village,2 a girl from
Pays Bisa in Burkina Faso rationalized the work she had done helping to farm
maize and cassava during a four-year stay in Côte d’Ivoire as a result of not finding paid work and, ultimately, of not having been to school. However, as most
employment in rural areas is in farming and urban work in domestic service
and small-scale trade, which do not require literacy, this kind of discourse is
more informative about child migrants’ production of identity than of their lived
realities at the migration destinations. It is clear that this girl felt that working
on a family farm raising crops with the ambiguous quality of being both food
and a commercial commodity was not prestigious. In terms of girls engaging
in migrant work outside the family, Hawa’s story appears to be an example of
a typical trajectory in contemporary West Africa, where female work is oriented
towards domestic work and trade and therefore tends to direct girls to rural
towns and urban areas. This tendency of girls moving towards urban work is
confirmed by Castle and Diarra’s study, which showed that most Malian girls
travelled to Bamako or neighbouring Côte d’Ivoire where established migrants
– usually their relatives – helped them find employment in domestic service,
street trade or small restaurants. Only one out of fifteen girls who had been
in Côte d’Ivoire had worked in agriculture (Castle and Diarra 2003: 49). Young
migrants from the Département de l’Atakora in north-western Benin also followed gendered routes, with a large number of boys going to the cotton fields
in north-eastern Benin and girls to rural towns and cities (Imorou 2008).
However, it may be that this typical trajectory is not so typical after all but
rather the outcome of either a methodological bias focusing on urban-based
migrants or a difference between the communities from which child migrants
originate. For example, the research in Ghana focused on rural-based children,
and among the children in this study, Hawa was more of an exception that the
rule, in her movement between urban and rural, and kin and non-kin households. In addition, in contrast to those who migrate from the Pays Bisa, the
adults who migrate from the Upper East Region frequently move primarily to
farm in the cocoa-growing areas of Ghana. Consequently, this is the children’s
frame of reference in terms of both their motivations for migrating and of where
they can move to, since many move with or to kin.
Another factor in where children go and what they end up doing at their
migration destination, and in what their aspirations are in migrating, is what
and where they come from to begin with, as the following interview extract
from sixteen-year-old Magid illustrates. Magid was originally from Garu in the
Upper East Region, which although only a village too was on an important route
for the export of produce and livestock, as well as having electricity, meaning
that it was rapidly urbanizing and transforming into a rural town. Magid was
also unusual in that he was a Mossi and not a Kusasi; and this may account
for the fact that he did not farm himself, only helped his father occasionally
on his farm, his main occupation being loading the trucks, buses, minibuses
and taxis, collectively known as cars, that passed through Garu. We found him
working in the bus station of Kumasi town, doing similar work.
In Garu, I was loading the cars to Bawku. I have a friend who is a driver and I
told him I wanted to come [south] and he said to enter [the car] free. I was in
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and he divides it between us. If he takes ¢40,000, I will take ¢20,000. It can be
¢20,000 [£1.26] or it can be ¢3,000 [£0.21] in a day […] I want to know the place
so my eyes will be open. If not this, the work has no money at all. Sometimes
food problems worry me; and even today, I had a problem. We brought some
people from the roadside [to load] but there was a fight with some of the other
loaders [for not waiting their turn to load] and one boy was beaten, so the people
dropped us and we didn’t get paid. If our cars come, we sleep in them but if
not we sleep on the benches. […] I want to go home but there is no money so
I decided to stay and work small to get money. Then I will just tell the leader
and he will allow me to board a car free. […] If I get my money I will take some
and buy my room furniture, because I have a room but no furniture now, and I
will buy my clothing. […] When I go home I will be a loading boy or will push the
[goods transport] cart my brother has.
This also shows how the ways in which child migrants find employment
outside the family when arriving at urban destinations depend on the situation
at that particular destination. Children from the Upper East Region in Ghana
primarily found work through kin or other social networks, including their
peers, whereas children from the Pays Bisa in Burkina Faso also found work by
going from door to door in Ouagadougou. Jacquemin (2009: 63) draws attention to a new practice in Abidjan of placement agencies for domestic workers,
which have grown in popularity since the late 1980s, especially for girls over
fourteen years of age. However, for newly arrived migrants from Burkina Faso,
the increased distrust of migrants after the beginning of the civil war meant that
they were completely dependent on their social network to mediate employment
in Abidjan (Thorsen 2009a).
Rural children and youth who have come to the city to work cannot afford
to be idle. Not only do they need money for food and accommodation, earning
money is also the principal motivation behind their migration. They are also
obliged to work even if they live with kin in order not to be labelled as lazy and
sent home (Chauveau 1998). The range of possible jobs may seem immense
at first glance, but the young migrants quickly discover the different types of
constraints they face. Often they enter occupational niches through friends and
relatives and, thereby, join scores of child migrants in a similar situation to
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Ghana Station in Adoboné but there was a confusion there so they brought
us here. The confusion was that I was working with a friend’s brother and he
always grew angry with us and he said he would tell the elders to sack us so we
packed and came back to Garu after two weeks, because I anyway was sick, and
then I came here. When I came here, I have [classificatory] brothers staying
with the leader [at the transport park] and he told me I could enter this work.
There are about 22 who work here in groups and they give the money to the first
employed and he divides it among us according to our rank. My friend takes it
themselves. In Ouagadougou, this mechanism has given rise to the stereotype
that all shoeshiners come from Pays Bisa, in Accra and Kumasi that girls working as head porters – kayayei – are from the Northern Region, and in Abidjan
that boys collecting metal for recycling on small carts are from Mali. Another
pigeonhole into which girl migrants are placed is that of domestic service, if
they are young, and prostitution if they are slightly older. In fact, occupational
opportunities for child and youth migrants are much more wide-ranging.
Fourteen-year-old Yacou, who left home with a friend in 2005 without his
parents’ knowledge, described how children migrating independently could
find work on their own account in Ouagadougou. He was a good storyteller,
and during an interview in the courtyard behind the cafeteria where he worked
five months into his migration, he stressed his ingenious choices rather than
the hardships he had experienced, which had led him to change jobs six times
during his first five months.
When we arrived, we knew that a distant relative was selling bread at the bus
station. He bought us food and took us to his house where we could sleep. My
friend and I walked around the streets together, like we were joined at the hip,
in search of work and when someone wanted to employ my friend but not me,
I thought, ‘Oh no, I don’t know Ouagadougou, I’ll get lost’ and I said to those
choosing my friend that they should not take him because he was a thief. I
pushed my own case because they wanted to employ my friend but thought I was
too little, and my friend would have stayed there selling cakes. My friend doesn’t
understand French so I chatted with them in French and I didn’t say directly
that he was a thief […] but afterwards he was a bit angry with me and only cooled
down after I had promised to give him 700 CFA francs [£0.74] and a bicycle.
We then met a woman who took us on to sell tamarind juice for her. In the
morning we picked up the juice and then walked around in the streets to sell
and when we came back she only would give us 75 CFA francs [£0.08] to eat with.
After a while, an older brother summoned us and said he would help us find
work because we were suffering. My friend was anxious and didn’t know how to
quit the job, but I said, ‘Leave it to me, I can do it!’ The next morning I picked up
the juice and went off with the ice box, found a tree, lay down and drank a lot of
tamarind juice. If someone came to buy, I said, ‘No, don’t buy this, it’s warm!’
Someone came by, opened the ice box himself and picked a bag of juice for 50
CFA francs [£0.05], this was the only money I brought back to the woman and I
told her, ‘Really, it hasn’t worked today!’ Then she chased us away.
Many of the boys arriving in Ouagadougou from Pays Bisa, especially the
younger ones, began their labour migration as street vendors of cold drinks
as Yacou and his friend did. This was a common, but highly seasonal, occupation in rural towns and cities in Burkina Faso, where women and a few men
needed boys and girls to sell their home-fabricated juices or snacks from trays
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carried on the head or in iceboxes on a small two-wheeled cart, known as a
‘pousse-pousse’. Usually, the young street vendors worked on a contractual basis;
in Ouagadougou they earned a 20 per cent commission of their actual sale
and in rural towns between 15 and 20 per cent. Once the rains began and
temperatures cooled, the trade became unprofitable, and if the employer did
not switch off her or his freezer, the child vendors earned too little and looked
for other employment. Indeed, employers often switched off their equipment
unless their selling location was near a hospital, bus station or a police barrier
with a constant level of sale. If the children could not find a job, they became
itinerant shoeshiners; otherwise they primarily worked as dishwashers, kitchen
hands and waiters in small informal restaurants, or made bricks or collected
sand for brick-making. Children migrating independently from the Upper East
Region in Ghana found employment through networks of kin and friends to
work minding a small store, street-vending food items and water, selling kola
nuts, moulding concrete bricks, processing chickens and other food items,
selling vegetables, working in a bar, shining shoes, helping to brew millet beer
and herding, and as head porters.
Street vending is usually presented in the literature as an example of selfemployment or micro-enterprise, where traders may draw on the labour of their
own children. However, as Schildkrout (2002 [1978]) illustrated in her study of
children’s work and gender relations in Muslim households in Kano, northern
Nigeria, urban children’s increased enrolment in school has led to a shift in the
division of labour. In Kano, women often keep purdah3 and can only sustain
income-generating activities such as street vending, which requires interaction
with people of both genders, if they are able to foster or employ children to
do the work (ibid.: 352). Women’s reliance on the labour of children other
than their own is not only an issue for women in purdah but for all women
whose businesses have a small profit margin, whose income-generating activities decrease the time available for domestic work or whose children attend
formal education ( Jacquemin 2007; Boursin 2002 and Kobiané 1999, cited in
Pilon 2003: 22).
With the rise of informal economies, an increased stratification has taken
place, and new forms of employment have emerged outside the formal structures of a regulated labour market which are far from being typified by selfemployment and small businesses run by unpaid family labour. Frequently, such
forms of employment are ambiguously defined because employers seek to cast
doubt on the legal nature of the relationship, on the existence of an employment
relationship and on the respective terms of reference for the employer and the
employees (Chen 2004: 22). According to Roy and Wheeler (2006: 454) more
than 80 per cent of all enterprises in West Africa in the early 2000s operated
informally, and they provided jobs for around 50 per cent of all workers. Most
children find work in the informal labour market, where regulatory labour laws
are rarely observed (Bourdillon 2006: 155). In the advocacy literature addressing
the exploitation of children or the low enrolment rates of girls in formal education, women’s reliance on children’s labour has primarily been linked with girls’
domestic work, often without reflecting on the recruitment process. As a result,
women’s recruitment of boys and girls to do different types of work has been
overlooked, as has the relationship between employers and employees in the
informal economy, which is located anywhere on a continuum between a child
worker being an integrated part of a relative’s household and being employed
and paid an agreed wage.
Work like shoeshining and being a head porter involves only a minimal investment, such as buying a little wooden stool, a shoe horn and some shoe cream,
buying or hiring a large basin in which goods can be carried, or hiring a cart.
The low entry costs enable children to set up as marginal independent actors in
the informal economy (Awumbila and Ardayfio-Schandorf 2008; Kwankye et al.
2007; Ofosu-Kusi and Mizen 2005). While this type of lowly paid work may not
be their first choice, children are often obliged to earn an income to manage
on their own, as Rasmane’s account at the beginning of the chapter shows.
One sixteen-year-old boy, who had spent seven years in Accra, for example,
complained that ‘sometimes the market women refuse to let us carry their loads
because they claim we are too small to carry the load. On a bad day, I will make
no money, and that means no food. I sometimes go to bed with no food and
I cry’ (Boakye-Boaten 2008: 82). Younger children who have only just arrived
experience particular difficulty because they have not yet established relationships with regular customers (Kwankye et al. 2007) or with shop owners who
will allow them to carry goods for their customers (Payne 2004). This illustrates
how norms in a specific location regarding what constitutes appropriate work
for children of a certain age and build may protect children from very hard
physical or harmful work but render them vulnerable in another sense, by not
allowing them to earn money to buy food and other necessities. These norms
may not conform to those set by international standards and, as is the case with
other social norms, variations exist in the way people interpret them and in the
degree to which people adhere to them. Middle-class urban dwellers and poor
rural farmers, for example, may differ in the way they think about children’s
work for the family, as well as in the way they think about children other than
their own living in their household, and about how children living in relatives’
households should be treated. Children and youth, on the other hand, also have
different ideas about their position in the household in which they live and
about their capacity and need to work. These ideas reflect the economic status
of the household, their family and at what age they are expected to provide
some of their own necessities, and perhaps also assist their family. In settings
where the enforcement of labour market and child protection legislation is
ineffective, it is particularly important to explore how social norms regarding
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Striving for autonomy
Whether children migrating to relatives at rural or urban destinations become unpaid family labour or are encouraged to become wage labourers or
independent actors in the informal economy can be an arena of negotiation
and outright disagreement. Boureima, whose trajectory in Ouagadougou we
have followed between 2005 and 2008, provides an example of how children
negotiate in a social context where they are considered disrespectful if speaking
up to a senior. His story also shows the scurrilous remarks and vulnerabilities
children experience when insisting on navigating their own path. Boureima is
an orphan; his mother died when he was only eight months old and his father
when he was around ten. When we first met him at a brick-making site on the
outskirts of Ouagadougou in March 2005, he was fifteen years old, skinny and,
on that particular day, really disheartened because he had just found out that
he had been cheated of 15,000 CFA francs (£16). He had come to Ouagadougou
in 2004 with his mother’s younger sister (na puure – literally ‘little mother’) but
left her house over a disagreement about his remuneration.
I walked around the neighbourhood selling iced water and also helped her sell
water and cakes in front of the hospital. Her children are still too small to work,
so I was the one who worked while her children went to school. At one point, I
asked her to pay me; not much, just buy me some clothes, but she said she had
no money for clothes, so for that reason I left. I’d come to Ouagadougou to work!
I went to the Sankariaré market but the only work I could find was to sell water.
I got 100 CFA francs [£0.11] when I had sold for 500 CFA francs [£0.53] and they
gave me food and I slept in their house. I could make more than 3,000 CFA
francs [£3] per month because sometimes I sold for 2,000 CFA francs [£2] in one
day and that gives 400 CFA francs [£0.12]. I did this job for less than a month,
then my brother told me that I could find a job where I would dig up sand, load
it on a donkey cart and make bricks and I could earn 6,000 CFA francs [£6] per
month.
What is difficult about this job is that my boss asks me to dig enough sand
to fill four carts per day and I find it really difficult and tiring. Also, I had earned
25,000 CFA francs [£26], taken out 10,000 CFA francs [£11] to buy a pair of
trousers and left the rest with my boss. As me and my brother had decided to go
back to our village to work, I wanted to collect my money but because the brick
market doesn’t work at the moment, my boss had spent my 15,000 CFA francs
[£16] and told me to wait until the market took off again and he would give me
my money and whatever I earned in the meanwhile. My brother left for the village yesterday, while I’m waiting for my money and it isn’t sure that I’ll be going.
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children’s work are negotiated and transformed through adults’ activities and
through children’s and youth’s activities.
Boureima’s account brings to the fore how different individuals involved in
the relationship may have diverging ideas about the status of the work relationship and the way in which deep social relations shape the informal labour
market. Where Boureima’s understanding of the relationship with his na puure
hinged on the idea of an employer and an employee, although he did not care
much whether he was paid in kind or in cash, in her view, the fourteen-yearold boy could, and should, be incorporated into her household as a son on
whose help she could count. It was a clash over the labelling of Boureima as a
dependent child or as a youth who could provide some of his personal necessities himself because he was working, relating to the different conflicts around
work between juniors and seniors discussed earlier in the chapter. However, the
conflict was also over his being an independent-minded boy with a yearning to
experience life in Ouagadougou. From people around Boureima in Ouagadougou
and in his mother’s village we learned that he had worked for a number of
brick-makers and had changed jobs frequently. His brother had mediated the
first employment with a brick-maker who, owing to Boureima’s slight build,
let him drive the donkey cart without having to dig and load sand, and who
provided housing and invited Boureima to come to his house in the evenings
to watch television. Mostly, Boureima wandered off, buying a cold yogurt drink
with fermented millet called dèggè, and went to the video clubs to watch films,
much to the regret of his older brother and the brick-maker, who both talked
about the boy’s squandering of money despite their attempts to inculcate in
him the need to save.
Boys, and in some localities also girls, who assert themselves as capable of
coping on their own and as wanting to discover for themselves what it means
to be a migrant make themselves more likely to be constantly criticized by the
adults around them for doing the wrong thing, as well as more vulnerable to
harmful work and exploitation. On the one hand, this is part of their enactment of self. Through proving to others that they have the resilience of youth
to endure hardship and the capacity to earn an income, or through resisting
being treated like children, they negotiate their social position. As such, their
activities and behaviour represent their interpretation of what it takes to be a
youth in the social context (Thorsen 2006). In other words, they draw on the
discourses about youth and migrants, as well as youth’s and migrants’ practices,
in their village in their initial positioning and gradually add new elements to this
interpretation as they absorb impressions and ideas in the localities where they
live. On the other hand, their practices demonstrate that children’s and youth’s
actions are neither oriented towards adults all the time nor always towards
some form of life-course transition. Sometimes their activities are primarily
a manifestation of being children or being youth, and the peer group is as
important as, if not more important than, adults in shaping youth’s social and
cultural practices (Bucholtz 2002). Boureima’s evening wanders, for example,
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were not an outcome of the attraction of bright city lights; his village had two
video clubs drawing electricity from car batteries, and young and old women
earned an income from selling snacks. For Boureima and many other young
migrants, leisure activities outside the scrutiny of adult relatives or employers
were about the liberty to experience and observe, and thus about – as they said
– ‘opening their minds’ to other practices and possibilities than those of their
village, and thereby ‘becoming civilized’. However, through leisure and work
they also became familiar with the other side of the coin; that is, with practices
of exclusion and marginalization, when being exploited by employers, treated
condescendingly in the streets because they were young and poorly dressed,
barred from certain localities, and unable to afford all pastimes.
Although eighteen-year-old Adiara, who worked in her older brother’s café in
Ouagadougou, enjoyed the social life around the café and constantly joked with
the young men hanging out in the café when they were between jobs or had a
day off, she complained that her brother never gave her any gifts. ‘My brother
will buy a new pair of shoes for his wife or a dress without ever buying anything
for me, despite my working in the café every day and never having any time off.
For a short while I worked as a domestic elsewhere but then my brother’s wife
fell ill and he called me back.’ Unlike Boureima, who just walked off, Adiara
felt obliged to help her brother, even if it meant putting aside her own wish
to earn an income. They were full siblings and he was her only brother, so in
the long term he would be the one to support her and support her case in the
patrilineage. In fact, he had already travelled back to the village to find out
why she had come to Ouagadougou, and had refrained from sending her back,
despite the fact that the head of the family constantly demanded that she return
to marry. We regularly chatted with Adiara at her brother’s café between 2005
and 2008, when she finally went back to her village. Every year she complained
about not being remunerated for her work and said she would soon return
home. Nevertheless, she stayed for around three years, at the end of which her
brother bought her several pieces of cloth, which were to be sewn into beautiful
sets of clothes, possibly just before she married.
Reynolds’s research on children’s work in the Zambezi river valley found
too that girls performed more work than boys and frequently worked for their
brothers. She suggests that girls work for their brothers not only because they
are obliged to, but also because this suits their strategies for securing care and
protection, since girls recognize that in adulthood brothers are a means of support (Reynolds 1991: 124–5). These sorts of relations thus continue in the places
to which children migrate, as Adiara’s example shows. Thus the extent to which
children dispense with their aspirations to earn an income as migrants and to
gain autonomy is rooted in the cultural discourses and practices surrounding
their gendered identities and their migration. Girls like Adiara, who come from
a region where few girls migrate independently, have fewer peers to look to
for inspiration to resist being family labour without a regular wage that they
can control. Moreover, they are less likely to have the encouragement of other
relatives to take a position as a wage earner, as, for example, Boureima had
in his brother’s mediation of employment outside his na puure’s household.
Girls from the Upper East Region in Ghana, on the other hand, are afforded a
relatively more autonomous position at the migration destination, as Hawa’s
account above shows. Relatives mediate employment for girls as well as boys,
though girls’ remuneration is often in kind rather than in cash. Nevertheless,
even though girls from the Upper East Region may aspire to earning an independent income, they are more likely to work for related households. This
is partly because their roles and identities are tied up with caring for others.
Another pertinent point is that as education is more highly valued in the south,
girls may end up substituting for the domestic labour of their relatives’ own
children, who are being sent to school while they are not (Hashim 2007). The
relative wealth of the households to which they move, compared to the poverty
of their villages (and the lack of opportunity to earn an income from farming, in
contrast to girls in Pays Bisa), means that they are more able to move, but more
likely to move to related households in the hope that they will be rewarded for
their ‘help’. Thus, migration practices are an outcome of children’s and their
relatives’ perception of age-appropriate behaviour outlining when children of
either gender should have more autonomy and earn an income to meet some
of their personal needs and – as must be reiterated – are an arena of negotiation. Relatives may evaluate a child’s readiness to take on certain types of
work differently from the outset (Thorsen 2006), but it is also important to
remember that children’s self-perception changes in the course of their migration. Being subjected to a broader range of cultural discourses and practices
through meeting other people, gaining social resources and having to deal with
new situations inevitably shapes how young migrants perceive themselves and
determines their behaviour. For children, migration is in itself a form of learning, and they develop a new sense of themselves and their capacities through
their experiences at the destination.
Persons develop more or less conscious conceptions of themselves as actors in
socially and culturally constructed worlds, and these senses of themselves, these
identities, to the degree that they are conscious and objectified, permit these
persons […] at least a modicum of agency or control over their own behaviour.
(Holland et al. 1998: 40)
Of course, children who are not migrants also pick up different conceptions
of themselves in their encounters with various people and situations but, as
Rasmane’s account opening the chapter suggests, migration adds new dimensions to this process. Jacquemin’s study of girl domestic workers in Abidjan
illustrates well that girls migrating from rural areas to the city not only learn
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Mobility at the destination
The continuum of informal employment relationships – from feeling part
of a household without equating this with being of the same standing as the
employer’s children to being paid an agreed wage or a fixed commission – shapes
children’s migration experiences and enables or circumscribes their ability to
realize their dreams. Children’s recruitment into various jobs is often less about
their skills than about their introduction by a mediator or their comportment
when approaching a potential employer or their age if an employer requests
a child, as was the case when Hawa went to work for the Ashanti woman in
Kumasi.4 Understanding where on the continuum a child places his or her employment relationship will allow us to better apprehend their perception of being
exploited and the events that bring about actions of acceptance or resistance.
Madi, who did not know his exact age but had lived in the rural compound
of an Islamic master for around seven years and, probably, was fifteen or sixteen
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urban domestic work but also to negotiate with the sisters, aunts and strangers
who mediate their work placements. Through a case study presenting the trajectory of a domestic worker named Assana, we learn that the girl was brought
to Abidjan by an older sister to help and learn the domestic work of urban
households. Once she knew the basics of the work, but refused to do some of
the tasks her sister assigned to her, she was placed with her sister’s friend ‘to
learn to work properly’. After some time, an aunt made claims on her labour
temporarily because she needed a conscientious girl to look after her young
children while she was away on a journey. Then Assana again joined her sister
before being placed as a domestic in the household of an acquaintance of her
sister. Finally, she found a job through the mediation of a friend of a similar
age, where she received her wage directly. The case study offers valuable insights
into the way in which Assana increasingly had a say in these moves, and even
travelled back to her village to involve her mother in important decisions to
secure a mediator if conflicts arose with her sister or aunts ( Jacquemin 2007:
274–81).
Two important points underpin young migrants’ striving to be autonomous,
whether they are boys or girls. First, they do not remain in the same position
throughout their migration; the negotiation of the social positions of being a
child, youth or any other social category that a child seeks to claim impacts
on how they see themselves, as well as on what the people around them think
are appropriate activities for them. Second, young migrants’ performance of
migrant practices and their self-understanding is embedded in social relations.
The multiplicity of relatives and other adults who may have different ideas of
what a child or youth can and should do creates an uneven field of power and
authority, which, in turn, allows girls and boys to shape their own trajectories to
some degree by turning to those who are likely to support their own aspirations.
years old, had come upon different types of employment relationships during
his first three months in Ouagadougou. When we interviewed him in May 2005,
he worked as a dishwasher in the same cafeteria as Yacou, and we talked with
him during a quiet moment of the day.
First I sold iced water from a pousse-pousse but as the trade no longer worked
after the rains began, I left and looked for another employment. At first, I had
worked for a woman in Dapoya [a neighbourhood in central Ouagadougou]. I
lived in her household and usually started work at 7 am, after having had breakfast and finished around 9 pm, when I had dinner. When the temperature began
to cool, after the first rains, I sometimes only sold for 350 CFA francs [£0.37] in
a day and when I sat down to eat she wouldn’t serve any food. Also, she talked a
lot [argued]. Afterwards, I sold iced water for a man in the same neighbourhood
for about a month. I moved to his house when I changed job and I ate my meals
there but I couldn’t make enough money to save anything. A few weeks ago, I
came to this cafeteria, where I will be paid a monthly wage. I don’t know how
much yet – my older sister is married to my boss’s younger brother so I didn’t
like to ask how much he would pay. I now live in a house in the non-titled neighbourhood5 with three other boys employed here; two of them are here today and
the last one is tending to the sheep and cattle belonging to our boss.
Madi perceived all his jobs as employment relationships, as did his employers,
despite the fact that he lived in the employer’s household and food was part
of the pay. Indeed, one of the reasons for his first change of job was the dwindling pay resulting from declining sales, further exacerbated by his employer’s
intermittent withdrawal of food. It is impossible to know whether the woman
thought he was not working hard enough and, thus, was reducing her profits by
his laziness or whether she tried to make him leave without directly telling him
to do so. Madi was certainly not the only one to experience a decrease in the
income he expected. In Ouagadougou, it was common practice for employers
to pick on the slightest mistake to cut wages to cover imagined or real losses,
and delays in payment of up to several months were frequent. This aspect of
informal employment is most discouraging for children and youth who are
prepared to work hard, but also an indication of the negotiations surrounding
what exactly is perceived as hard work. Furthermore, it is an indication of the
actual exploitation in contemporary West African economies of the low-skilled
labour force, which to a large degree consists of children and youth. Although
most children migrating independently are at the bottom of the economic and
social hierarchy when they first arrive at a destination, they quickly learn how
the informal labour market operates through trial and error and the tales shared
among friends and family, and they move within this social field.
When Madi wanted more security, for example, he made use of his social
network; the fact that he was connected distantly with his new boss through
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ethnicity, area of origin and marital ties was an important asset in a setting
where deep social relations are the fabric of society. Moreover, Madi had friends
working in the cafeteria and he probably had a good idea of the level of wage
his boss was likely to offer and the regularity with which he paid his employees.
He is also likely to have known about his boss’s bad temper, which added to the
complaints the ten employees made about a range of issues, from cuts in their
wages when they broke crockery to their workload. Many of them had worked
as street vendors or shoeshiners before coming to the cafeteria, and they found
it hard to work from 7/7.30 a.m. until 10 p.m. every day without breaks. An
important point here is that although long working hours are frequently used
as a measure of exploitation, child migrants do not always perceive them as
such. Madi had worked just as long hours when selling iced water, but being
on the streets was as much an opportunity for the children to meet and chat
with their friends, to see different parts of the city and participate in cultural
events, as it was about work. In this sense, the circumstances of street working children resemble those of rural children, for whom play and work are
frequently intertwined (Katz 2004: 60). For the workers in small food places
in Ouagadougou, the feeling of working too hard was linked with the manner
in which their everyday mobility was curbed owing to their long working day.
Between peak hours, it was common to see kitchen hands and waiters asleep
behind the counter or chatting among themselves or with friends passing by, but
the fact that they had to be present even if there was no work to be carried out
frustrated them. One employee pointed out that the worst thing about working
such long hours was that they had no time for themselves. This was not because
they wanted to use all their spare time to explore the city, hang out with friends
or partake in sport or cultural activities, but because they wanted to supplement
their meagre income by diversifying their income-generating activities. Such
economic strategies have mainly been described as adult migrants’ strategies
(Hart 1973), but with the recent focus on urban youth in Africa, evidence is
emerging of the flexible ways in which they seek to secure an income – for
example, in Accra by picking up trade items in one part of the city and selling
them in another (Langevang 2008), or by trading fruit and food items that sell
well at that particular moment (Payne 2004).
A burdensome workload may result in children changing job, as may a badtempered employer, but the most frequent justification given in interviews was
of a financial nature; either children sought better-paid jobs or independent
trade and service activities which they thought would produce a higher income,
or they had been deceived by their employers. This justification for changing
jobs – sometimes very frequently, as revealed in Yacou’s trajectory of six occupations within five months – reflected the importance of material wealth in the
construction of success, as well as poor youth’s real desires for clothing, radios
and bicycles. In 2006, nineteen-year-old David6 worked at a barbecue for a non-
related employer. When we met him the previous year he had been a shoeshiner
and had also briefly held a job in a bar. Although his paternal uncle and his
older brother lived in Ouagadougou, he moved to his employer’s household
because it was too far to walk from his relatives’ house every day and the cost
of shared taxis would make inroads into his wage. His boss had offered a wage
almost double the amount that Yacou and Madi earned, but whereas they ate
at the cafeteria, money was deducted from David’s wages for food; except the
employer rarely paid David his full wage.
Apart from the first month, my boss never paid the 15,000 CFA francs [£16]
that he’d promised me per month. At least, I convinced him that if he didn’t
have enough money at the end of the month, it was better to give me 500 CFA
francs [£0.53] per day and subtract 200 CFA francs [£0.21] for food. I bought a
little notebook and asked a friend who knows how to write to help me keep my
records because my boss frequently ran out of money before the end of the day.
[…] His wife was very kind to me. At a time when he hadn’t paid me for a while,
she advised me to run away with the revenues of one day.7 I hadn’t thought about
this option and, in fact, I thought about it for a long time before following her
advice. What finally made me do it was a phone call from home to let me know
that my father had fallen ill. When I told my boss that I’d like to go home to help
farm, he asked me to wait a little, as he didn’t have money right now. At the end
of that day, I took the revenues – 25,000 CFA francs [£26] – and I gave 5,000 CFA
francs [£5] to his wife before leaving. My boss owed me 35,000 CFA francs [£37].
Employers took advantage of children and youth being used to interdependencies within their rural households. Hence, when the young employees asked
for their wage or savings, employers were able to draw on their understanding
of the need to collect larger sums of money from several sources or to delay the
payment for other reasons. Sometimes, as in Boureima’s case above, they waited
in vain, even when their relatives interfered and put pressure on employers
to pay their arrears. Others, like Rahid, who had worked as a domestic for a
man from Pays Bisa with whom he was not related, were paid eventually. Rahid
explained that he had worked for five months without receiving any pay and
finally in the sixth month was paid 25,000 CFA frances (£26). Even though the
money did not cover what he felt he was owed given his workload, Rahid chose
to leave the employment, not to be cheated further. It was indeed rare that the
young migrants took the extreme measure of emptying the cash drawer, though
several were accused – rightly or not – of stealing small amounts of money.
Stereotypical representations of male youth as delinquent and entangled
in illegal activities have further light shed on them when we consider David’s
story from his perspective. We first heard of his ‘theft’ from his infuriated
employer in April 2006; additional information was provided by his paternal
uncle and finally the details were filled in by David in November 2006. We are
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Educational dreams and dilemmas
The provision of education is very often identified as among those measures
necessary to abolish child labour8 (Hashim 2004: 21). Programmes targeting
working children, consequently, tend to promote schooling and/or vocational
training, and especially the placing of street-working children in non-formal
apprenticeships (Diouf et al. 2001; cf. Beauchemin 1999). The importance
ascribed to different forms of education is mirrored in the frequent references to
youth unemployment in Africa as being an outcome of skills deficiency or youth
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not promoting a romantic notion of the innocent child here, merely stressing
the structural inequalities that lead to children and youth being labelled as
criminals when they react to deception. Employers exploit the high demand
for work among youth, the informality of employment relationships and the
inability of youth effectively to oppose exploitation, except by changing job or
becoming an independent actor in the informal economy. A group of youth from
Pays Bisa taking a break from itinerant street work in Ouagadougou pointed
out that it was not worthwhile to take cases of non-payment to the police. The
costs of making a claim – paying stamps, slipping a few extra notes into the file
to persuade the police officer to open a case and forgoing income for several
days when pursuing the case – would outweigh the amount of money owed to
them. Additionally, they were afraid the boss might know someone at the police
station, who would be more likely to believe him than a poor youth from a village if he turned the complaint around and accused the youth of having stolen
(Thorsen 2009c: 17). Structural inequalities therefore exacerbate the exploitation
of children and youth in several ways, and undermine their opportunities to
earn the income that is crucial for success as a migrant.
The dynamics at rural destinations are similar, except payment usually happens on an annual basis, reflecting the payment of farmers by cocoa traders
and the large cotton companies some time after the harvest. As a consequence,
children and youth may work for a full year before finding out whether their
employer has the intention of paying them or not. Although two migrants in
Ghana had reported problems with this system, most preferred it as ‘that way
it stays’, meaning children would not be tempted to squander the money.
For young migrants from Pays Bisa working on cocoa farms in central Côte
d’Ivoire, non-payment led to a change of employment after one or two years, and
sometimes to engaging in by-piece contracts to earn money for a ticket home
or onwards to other rural areas or to Abidjan. A study of children and youth
working on the cotton farms of north-eastern Benin reveals that they counter
this type of exploitation by increasingly rejecting annual contracts to work on
shorter contracts to secure their payment. Another security measure for young
workers is to join employers with a good reputation and, thus, to find work
through intermediaries (Imorou 2008).
having the wrong skills (UNOWA 2006). Although opportunities for school education and vocational training may be present in some rural settings, children’s
migration is often motivated by desire to access better schools and training
facilities for non-farm occupations, and/or to acquire money to cover their costs.
Empirical findings, however, suggest that different categories of children and
youth have different aspirations and expectations. Lachaud (1994), for example,
notes how youth with no formal education are rarely unemployed because they
orientate themselves towards non-formal apprenticeships or begin to work in
the informal sector. In contrast, those who have completed secondary education
often have higher expectations when it comes to wages and working conditions
(Chauveau 1998: 28). Studies from Ghana suggest that children from among
the poorest areas of the country are the least interested in formal schooling
(GSS and World Bank 1998: 26) and the most likely to be interested in pursuing
vocational training of some kind (GSS 2003: 43). Ethnographic research, though,
suggests that those children from families with a historical accumulation of
human capital based on formal education appear more likely both to pursue
this strategy and to succeed in its pursuit (Hashim forthcoming). Thus, it is
not merely that different categories of children and youth of both genders have
different aspirations, but that adults and children evaluate how the benefits
of formal and non-formal education compare with informal learning through
working. Moreover, they look at the extent to which these forms of education
will guarantee a viable livelihood for a child in the future (Moore 2001: 8; Punch
2002a: 126). Moreover, how we consider different activities that children undertake may contrast with the manner in which they themselves view them. In other
words, the very dichotomy between learning and work that is evident in the
Western model, where the former is seen as an age-appropriate behaviour and
the latter not, may inform the ways in which we look at children’s activities. In
contexts such as those in which we work, education is not implicated in childhood in the same way. Rather, it may be seen as a new form of recruitment to
work, representing, as it does, possibilities for alternative livelihoods (Hashim
2004: 170). This accounts for why many of the children in the Ghanaian study
referred to their apprenticeships as ‘entering work’. Whether or not they are paid
as apprentices is irrelevant to their description of it as work, and it is important
to highlight this, as work is very much part of children’s identities and others’
perceptions of them as a ‘good child’ (ibid.: 82–3). While such considerations
may lie beneath the decisions leading to a child’s migration in the first place,
they do not end with the journey. Part of children’s construction of self reflects
their impressions and experiences at the destination and may form their views
on education and learning once they discover other possibilities and obstacles.
Some of the children in our studies had migrated to acquire money for their
school fees, either through older siblings or from paid work. The discourses
on formal education locally in their villages and nationally determined the
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significance of this motivation as a justification for children’s migration. Even
though migration did not guarantee that they could pursue their educational
aspirations, the accounts of children who migrated from the Upper East Region
in Ghana showed that in some cases formal education was an important element
in their construction of identity, and their migration was often synchronized with
the school year (Hashim 2007). That children’s return to their village may be
timed to fit in with the school year was also found by Kwankye et al. (2008: 19),
who, in a survey of around three hundred return migrants aged fifteen to thirty
in the Northern Region of Ghana, found that 26.6 per cent of the interviewed
boys and 40.8 per cent of the girls had migrated and subsequently returned
to their village to continue education. Children migrating from Pays Bisa in
Burkina Faso more often justified their migration by the fact that they had
dropped out of school, and those who tried to earn enough for their secondary
school fees by working in small restaurants while doing evening classes were
reticent about stressing their schooling. For them, having to combine classes
and struggling to pay their fees with a constant threat of being barred from
school without having achieved was not part of the image of being successful, and was therefore something they did not volunteer in conversation. Their
perception of what constituted achievement mirrored the current structure of
the labour market in Burkina Faso; statistics show that the difference in job
opportunities in 2003 was insignificant for those who had completed primary
education compared with those without any formal education. More than 97
per cent found employment in a private business or started their own microbusiness, as did 67.9 per cent of the women and 69.3 per cent of the men who
had completed secondary education (Bourdet et al. 2006). Continued education
at secondary level increased youth’s employment prospects only marginally.
Canagarajah and Pörtner’s analysis of the Ghana Living Standards Survey, for
example, suggests that ‘the effect from having some middle school education
is not that large’ (Canagarajah and Pörtner 2002: 59).
Although a minority, some of the children from Pays Bisa who had never
attended school entered the formal education system through evening classes
in Ouagadougou, as did children who had to drop out of school because their
parents could not pay the fees. Seventeen-year-old shoeshiner Jean-Paul was
one of them, and he explained that the difficulties he experienced were an outcome of not having been to school. In his view, his parents had not understood
the importance of school education, but to resolve the problem he enrolled in
evening school in 2004 to learn to write and paid 8,500 CFA francs (£9) in two
instalments. In 2005, he progressed to CP2 (second year) but had to leave school
and Ouagadougou because a brother returning from Côte d’Ivoire called upon
his help to build a house for their parents. In Burkina Faso, the possibility of
entering formal education exists only in larger cities. Since the 1970s, when
evening classes of two hours’ duration were set up in Ouagadougou and Bobo-
Dioulasso to help poor students complete secondary school, the scheme has
spread to most larger rural towns (Pilon 2002), as well as to primary education,
where it enables a range of poor people – from the most vulnerable children to
adults – to attain basic literacy (Konkobo 2008). Many children from Pays Bisa
believed that they would have more job opportunities if they were literate, and
in that sense formal education was a means of ameliorating their economic
situation. In contrast, most of the rural children from the Upper East Region in
Ghana did not value literacy as much as having the skills necessary to pursue a
vocation or a trade; either in addition to farming or instead of farming.
Lamissi was about eighteen years old when interviewed in her home village
in May 2004. She had had a variety of migrant experiences, moving south first
when she was a young child of about four with her parents. On her parents’
return to the north a couple of years later, she stayed on with her brother and
embarked on a number of different experiences which can be described as
formal, informal and non-formal training, although Lamissi herself did not
put it in those terms.
I stayed with my brother to attend school but when he stopped supporting me
in the second year of primary school, I dropped out. I lived with the brother for
some time and found [bread-making] work interesting so I asked him [whether]
I could enter work. I then went to live and work for a [non-related] woman
selling beaufruit [a pastry snack] as I wanted to earn money in order to learn
the work. After one year, I had earned sufficient money and left the woman,
despite liking the work and being treated well, but I wanted to learn to bake
bread. Once I’d learnt I sold bread for one year before I returned home. I can’t
work here though, as the travel to the nearest town where there are ovens would
cost more than I would be able to make selling the bread. I’m hoping to enter a
weaving apprenticeship at a centre in Garu, but I have no money for the fees. […]
Life here is not interesting because there is nothing to do [meaning no work by
which to earn any money] so I might go to the south again to find money.
It is clear from Lamisi’s account that learning work was an important part of
her childhood and of her mobility. In her discourse, learning the skills to make
and sell snacks by working with a female trader was just the start of a trajectory
of different attempts at ‘learning work’. For many girls and boys across West
Africa, the engagement in small-scale trade gradually informally teaches them
to become traders in their own right in a progression from the status of free
or lowly paid labourers to eventually having their own goods (Fréchette and
Aduayi-Diop 2005; Ly 1985). In Ghana, however, the discourses and practices concerning education are both gendered and geographically located. In the Upper
East Region apprenticeships were seen as a more suitable form of learning for
girls than secondary schooling, and girls who had their own income-generating
activity, such as being a seamstress, could expect to make better marriages,
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as well as secure some independent income and respect (Hashim 2004: 135,
2005). Although poverty probably played a determining role in shaping Lamissi’s
trajectory, entering an apprenticeship was also a way to position herself as
someone who had diverse capacities to earn an income, even if not in her village. Furthermore, her account reinforces the fact that the opportunities for
learning a trade are far more numerous in the southern areas of Ghana than
in the rural villages of the north, which encourages migrant children to aspire
to achieve some form of training for a livelihood.
Across West Africa, opportunities for non-formal apprenticeships have
proliferated, in part because states fail to provide more formal structures to
accommodate the demand for technical training. The cost of attending technical college, in addition to their lack of a primary education, means that many
poorer children and youth are excluded from pursuing formal training (Chauveau 1998; Diouf et al. 2001; Kielland and Tovo 2006). In their book Children at
Work, Kielland and Tovo suggest that children’s entry into an apprenticeship is
first and foremost a parental decision based on a simple cost–benefit analysis.
Here the costs consist of the indirect or direct costs arising from forgoing the
income from the child’s labour and the investment when paying a mentor’s
fee. The benefits in the longer term, according to Kielland and Tovo, are rooted
in risk-averse behaviour, in that parents spread income potentials by sending
their children into different forms of education and reduce expenses by having
skilled juniors on whose services they can call for free (ibid.: 75–7). This representation of decision-making within a family underplays the possibility that
parents may forgo their own interests to enable their children to explore new
experiences (Hashim 2006: 29). It also does not take into account the fact that
children make strategic life choices, including about education, and negotiate
with adults to do so.
The importance of social networks in entering an apprenticeship in the
Sahelian countries is a significant difference from the situation in the coastal
countries, where it is common to pay a substantial fee to the mentor (Chauveau
1998; Guichaoua 2006; Riisøen et al. 2004). In both cases, however, it is difficult
for children migrating independently to negotiate an apprenticeship on their
own. Diouf et al. (2001) raise the question of whether youth’s entry into this
type of non-formal training is a ‘forced’ choice and discuss both youth’s and
their parents’ views on apprenticeships. Drawing from a study in Senegal, they
point out that most parents claim that they decided to enlist their children in
skills training, while 42 per cent of youth claimed to have made the decision
themselves, though 39 per cent of them acknowledged their parents’ influence.
That only 3 per cent of youth decided to become apprentices without their
parents’ or siblings’ intervention gives an indication of just how difficult it is
for children to find an apprenticeship on their own. They nevertheless do find
alternative ways of influencing the skills they learn, for example by moving on
to another job that allows them to acquire skills informally, or by approaching
older relatives who may mediate an apprenticeship.
After working as a shoeshiner in Ouagadougou for three years, twenty-year-old
Adama finally entered into an apprenticeship. We have known Adama and his
rural family since early 2005, when he had just run away from home to become a
shoeshiner in Ouagadougou. His father is deceased but he comes from a well-off
and well-functioning family, where his father’s younger brother (baba puure – literally ‘little father’) has taken responsibility for him, together with his mother. In
fact, his baba puure had encouraged him to start the apprenticeship to improve
his future possibilities and had made contact with a friend of his who was a tilelayer. Adama’s account in March 2008 did not include this piece of information;
his aim was to establish his ability to make wise and forward-looking choices.
I began this apprenticeship in tiling when I came back from the village four
months ago and saw that I no longer earned enough as a shoe-shiner. I’d
returned to visit my family and help farming but came back to Ouagadougou
after ridging the millet. With the little rain we’ve had this year, there was no
point in staying for the harvest. It’s good to visit your family who brought you
into this world, but it’s difficult to stay in the village. Unless it’s market day,
there is nothing to do. Here it’s better and my boss treats me as an employee,
giving me 1,000–1,500 CFA francs [£1.20–1.80] per day. Nevertheless, I’d like to
find another job because he makes us work too hard. Several of my friends have
gone to Côte d’Ivoire, one even left yesterday. […] If I earn a bit extra, I might go
abroad. I’ll do whatever job. As long as I earn some money, I can apply myself to
the work but I don’t know what kind of work I can find. It depends. […] Someone
can be in Côte d’Ivoire and find it interesting and when you finally get there
yourself, you might find it interesting too but you might also find it very difficult.
Adama’s desire to go to Côte d’Ivoire indicates that he was perhaps not seeking an apprenticeship actively and on his own account but rather to please his
parents until something better came up. Adama’s and other independent child
migrants’ trajectories show that children from Pays Bisa often stuck with lowly
paid work for a few years in spite of their parents’ encouragement to think
ahead. The parents overlooked their sons’ wish for immediate incomes to buy
clothes and small commodities, and only when the boys at the age of nineteen
or twenty years had satisfied some of their yearning for money were they ready
to pursue strategies that would equip them better in the longer term. Delaying
vocational training can, however, also be linked with difficulties finding a mentor
or, in contexts where fees are paid, finding the required money. In other words,
social and economic inequalities impact in different ways on child migrants’
choices and on their ability to choose.
These trajectories introduce a new dimension to the discussion of non-formal
education; as training is rarely available in small villages, many children depend
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Navigating identities and social contexts as migrants
At the observable level, following the prominence children and youth ascribe
to earning money immediately through working or in the future through pursuing
formal education or vocational training, their identity as migrants is rooted in
return migrants’ degree of success in their village and circumscribed by structural
inequalities. These inequalities make it difficult for them to obtain the wealth
necessary to radiate success through conspicuous clothing, the purchase of a
bicycle or bringing home gifts, as was the case in Pays Bisa of Burkina Faso, or
obtaining those items associated with their progression into adulthood in the
Upper East Region of Ghana. In both areas, it was difficult for child migrants to be
able to support the older generation. Moreover, these inequalities impede young
migrants’ ability to fully participate in life at their destination – for example, by
partaking in youth and street cultures – because they are obliged to work long
hours, they are barred from certain public places and they are poor. However, looking at their pride in broadening their horizons through living away from home,
schooling and apprenticeships, and the way they link this with understanding how
to cope with misfortunes, how to manage economically and socially, and how to
deal with hierarchical relations, suggests that the construction of success is also
an inner process of apprehending social values. Depending on their degree of
success, their length of stay and their gender, the process can profoundly change
their self-perception and, thus, the way they position themselves vis-à-vis relatives,
friends, employers, clients and others in a reiterative process of constructing
their identity and being assessed by others.
Following the lead of the contributors to Werbner’s (2002) Postcolonial Subjectivities in Africa and Honwana and de Boeck’s (2005) Makers and Breakers, a
key element in theorizing youth’s actions and strategies is to scrutinize how
young people’s identities are shaped by a number of factors. These include
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on urban relatives or linkages between rural parents and urban artisans to enter
apprenticeships with or without fees (Morice 1982). Second, Adama’s account
reveals that apprentices may desert their placement, a fact that may add to the
difficulties for young migrants in finding a mentor without an intermediary
acting as guarantor. The decision to abandon their training may be the outcome of not seeing the value of the skills, of not learning enough or of being
impatient to have an income, but it may also relate to the way in which the
non-formal apprenticeship system works. When relatives find a placement for a
child, they rarely consider what the child finds interesting but either choose
a trade they hope will bring the child most opportunities and income security
in the future or a trade in which they have friends willing to mentor the child.
Hence, when apprentices choose to end a learning relationship, they need to
consider their other options as well as the intermediary’s reaction, but if the
transfer of skills is negligible, their choice may be deemed sensible.
others’ perceptions of them, their resistance to or acknowledgement of such
perceptions and the concrete constraints they experience owing to marginalization and exclusion. Children and youth migrating independently are construed,
and construe themselves, as ‘children’ irrespective of whether they are indeed
classificatory children or have a kin-like relationship with the household head
or a senior household member (Robertson 1984; Bledsoe 1990). Sometimes this
construction contradicts the fact that they left home to prove that they were old
enough to gain more autonomy and, at some point, they inevitably strived to
pursue what they considered important attributes of being youth, and preferably
successful youth. For youngsters wanting more autonomy to pursue their ideas
about urban youth identities and to indulge in leisure activities, moving away
from kin does not necessarily solve the problem. Employers often manipulate
the employer–employee relationship to get around the issue of payment. At
other times, children’s movements may not be about achieving more autonomy
but about fulfilling seniors’ expectations of them, merely in a different spatial
locality, and thus rather than being in contradiction their actions are in conformity with their role as ‘good’ children. For example, as we saw in Adiara’s case,
compliance is more likely to secure current and future well-being, as well as
the well-being of those with whom she has an affective relationship. Irrespective of whether their movement is about conformity or about an assertion of
their autonomy, their choices must be considered from the perspective of the
different subject positions available to them – as dependants or independents
– which may carry more or less social reward than others, while some may be
more or less negatively sanctioned (Moore 1994: 65; Kabeer 1999: 457–8). In
the concluding chapter of this book, we will explore these different subject
positions to return to our discussion of children’s agency in their movement
and thus to understand better their choices in migration.
In line with Miles’s discussion of how adolescent girls in Ecuador gradually
discover the constraints imposed on their ability to pursue professional careers
promoted in the national school curriculum and the media by everyday practices
of local gender models and class-based inequalities (Miles 2000), we argue that
children settling in as migrants progressively come to an understanding of
their possibilities and constraints. Focusing on young rural migrants in the city,
Ly (1985) argued that the city played a profound role in their socialization by
teaching them to adapt to constantly changing situations and introducing them
to a social system based on competition, initiative and ‘la débrouillardise’ – the
necessity of being astute and resourceful. Although rural destinations may have
other dynamics, children learn, in our view, similar social skills of adaptation,
ingenuity and perspicacity. The knowledge and skills acquired through migration may transform children’s ideas of what being a good child or a successful
migrant means, and they may shape their ideas about how they can possibly
attain their objectives.
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Until recently, most of the engagement with the subject of children who move
without their parents has been at the level of policy and/or advocacy on behalf
of children. Much of this literature has perceived child migration, at worst,
as an example of child trafficking and at best as fostering, although this has
also often been apprehended from a negative perspective and seen to be the
outcome of familial poverty and the inability of parents to properly care for their
children. We have argued that at the heart of these types of explanations is a
particular conceptualization of childhood. As we shall come to a little later in
the chapter, this is the case even where children’s movement is viewed in the
more positive sense as a ‘rite of passage’.
In contrast to these understandings of children’s movement without their
parents, in this book we have illustrated how for children in the West African
savannah, the motivations, negotiations and decision-making surrounding their
independent migration are far more complex and are frequently an outgrowth
of economic and social processes in children’s home areas, as well as at their
destinations. In this final chapter, we explore in more detail what our empirical work can contribute to explaining children’s migration in a more nuanced
way that includes both negative and positive elements in the mobility of which
their migration is part. This in turn will lead us to the key question of how we
conceptualize children’s agency. Much of the time children’s lack of agency is
foregrounded in universalized approaches to childhood. However, we cannot
help be struck by how at odds to the reality this is. Through their many activities,
within the framework of the family and outside it, children, as well as youth,
‘seek to become a part of the given social structures, either formal or informal’ (Diouf 2005: 229). While societal arrangements concerning age frequently
mean that young people’s agency is curtailed, it is not necessarily curtailed in
the same way and to the same extent in all areas of their lives. Moreover, as
Foucault famously wrote, ‘Where there is power, there is resistance’ (Foucault
1978: 95–6). As any parent is acutely aware, children, even small ones, can be
very effective at exercising their agency, at resisting parents or at negotiating.
Children can make key decisions and can have a wide range of responsibilities,
such as helping to support younger siblings and heading households (Leinaweaver 2007; Lund 2007). Why are we then constantly confronted with images
of children as vulnerable victims in need of adults’ protection? That children
exercise choice – or assert their own agency – appears to be a particularly challenging issue for many adults.
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Clearly, notions of children’s agencylessness are tied to ideas about childhood as a period of dependence, growth and nurturance; in other words to
universalized ideals of childhood, where adults are assumed to know best and
children’s position in society is related to their being perceived as immature
physiologically, physically and mentally. Nevertheless, and somewhat ironically,
adults are instrumental in creating degrees of powerlessness for children, with
the result that some of children’s vulnerabilities relate not to their various ways
of being young persons, but to the restriction of freedoms associated with adult
paternalism. Therefore, the language of child protection itself, the very idea that
children need protection, opens the door to vulnerability (Nieuwenhuys 1996).
For example, ideologies of children’s dependency and vulnerability contribute to
the subordinated position of children in the labour market (Elson 1982), while
child labour laws circumvent children’s abilities to organize or negotiate with
employers. Even rights enshrined within international conventions that aim to
empower children can be instrumental in this. Article 12(1) of the Convention
on the Rights of the Child (CRC), for example, guarantees children the right to
express their views and to have them be given due consideration in accordance
with the age and maturity of the child (UN 1989). However, it is adults who
determine whether children are sufficiently mature, and thus to what extent
their views will be followed; especially since Article 3 declares that ‘the best
interests of the child shall be a primary consideration’ (ibid.), rather, therefore,
than the child’s own views (Pupavac 2003: 4).
The reason we foreground these issues here is related to a feature we referred
to at the very beginning of this book; namely, that when presenting the findings
of our research, we often invoke very strong responses from our audiences. These
responses relate to the challenging issues we deal with in two senses. First in
how strongly held ideas about childhood are, ideas which our material often
challenges, by demonstrating, for example, how some children initiate their own
migration, pay for their own schooling and/or change jobs with, or without, the
mediation of someone in their social network. Second is the fact that we do
encounter young people who are paid minuscule wages, are cheated or treated
badly in other ways, and thus the material, in some senses, reinforces the idea
of child migrants as vulnerable and victims. The challenge to us has been how
we address both aspects; that the children with whom we work are constrained
in many respects but that they also do not conform to the universalized model
of childhood as vulnerable and dependent.
We are fortunate in that the different groups of children we each have
worked with bring to the fore these opposing aspects. In Ghana, for example,
the research was 50 per cent with girls, and involved some work with quite young
children (some as young as nine); indeed, the whole cohort was slightly younger
at the time of migration than were the Burkinabé children taking part in the
research. These children, thus, were constrained in different ways by gender and
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age hierarchies, and their experience of these constraints sometimes emerged
in interviews as a negative assessment of their migration. Also significant was
that much of the research in Ghana was with rural-based children, and thus
children who remained within the more hierarchical household-based relations. In contrast, the research with Bisa children in both Burkina Faso and
Côte d’Ivoire mainly included boys, as very few girls in Pays Bisa were allowed
to migrate independently, unless to kin, and this was limited owing to the
conflict in Côte d’Ivoire, where the majority of adult migrants from that region
live. This research therefore included some girls in rural towns, but principally
was with urban-based boys and male youth. Household-based relations also
confine them, especially if living with and working for kin, but, by virtue of
being male, they were less constrained in their movements owing to fears for
their personal safety. Another factor in allowing Bisa boys more freedom to
explore the city was that they frequently shared a small house with siblings and
friends of a similar age. The fact that labour markets traditionally provide more
opportunities for employment for males than for females may also be significant,
since boys may be more confident that they can find work at their destinations,
albeit poorly paid and insecure work. The research with these young people was
also conducted over a longer time period; consequently, it captured changing
aspirations and young people’s responses to being cheated or treated harshly,
sometimes recounted by the young people themselves and sometimes by their
parents, siblings or friends. By its nature, therefore, the research portrayed a
longer-term perspective, including children’s tactics and strategizing in the face
of the many constraints under which they operate. This was in contrast to the
more snapshot view of the lives of children in the Ghanaian research, which,
although it sought information regarding past events and experiences, tended to
foreground more immediate negative experiences. Also relevant was that on the
relatively rare occasions (four) where children in Ghana were traced following
interviews with birth parents or other significant adults, we found that children
were much more critical of their treatment than were the adults involved, as
did Notermans’s examination of children’s accounts of their movement between
households in East Cameroon (Notermans 2008). Thus, both our methodology
and the profiles of the children we worked with were relevant to which aspect
of experience we tended to privilege, and this was mirrored in the conversations
and debates we had during the process of writing the book.
In this final chapter, therefore, we take up the theme of children’s agency
in their migration in order to challenge representations of child migrants as
passive victims of exploitation, lacking an active role in decision-making and
migration processes. However, we also caution against taking this position too
far, as we do not want to represent children as completely autonomous agents.
Instead we stress the need to understand that their choices are an outcome of
numerous and changing aspirations and opportunities, and that they are made
within a variety of constraints and limitations. These larger questions concern
the degree to which children can make choices, the nature of children’s agency
and how that agency has a bearing on other people’s practices; themes that until
now have been under-researched (Bluebond-Langner and Korbin 2007: 242).
Although charting children’s agency is notoriously complicated because of
their subaltern status, their role in moving between different houses and places
offers a unique insight. This is because considering matters of residence where
children are actively making decisions or articulating preferences regarding
whether they move and to where enables an investigation of children’s decisionmaking capabilities, the constraints under which they operate, and how much
room there is for them to strategize or negotiate (Leinaweaver 2007: 376–7).
Our empirical findings include further insights owing to the additional focus
on mobilities at home and at migration destinations. This allowed us to extend
the investigation into more complex aspects of decision-making processes and
power hierarchies in multiple locations, as well as the influences of children’s
changing self-perception and aspirations due to their experience of new social
worlds. Before we come to the question of choice and agency, however, we wish
to explore the notion of children’s movement as a transition to adulthood, as
this example serves to illustrate further the implications that universal ideals
of childhood have for understanding childhood in other places.
Revisiting the universalized ideals
At the beginning of this book, we noted how universalizing ideals regarding what childhood should properly consist of frequently inform approaches
to children in other places, despite the fact that childhood is lived and experienced contextually. An emerging critique of these approaches in the West
African context has presented children’s and youth’s independent migration
as a rite of passage (Castle and Diarra 2003) or as a practice perceived as a
means for boys to become adult men, either in place of initiation ceremonies
or by exerting some control over the timing of initiation or marriage through
meeting indispensable expenses themselves (Boutillier et al. 1985; Piot 1999).
For girls, on the other hand, migration is perceived as a means to delay marriage, resist patriarchal norms or, eventually, boost their status within marriage
(Casely-Hayford 1999; Castle and Diarra 2003; Lambert 2007; Lesclingand 2004).
Although these explanations have served as a starting point for conceptualizing
West African children and youth as social actors, little attention has been paid
to how transition metaphors are frequently used differently for boys and girls. A
more detailed interrogation of these metaphors reveals how such explanations
may be underpinned by universalized ideals of childhood.
The linking of migration with the transition to adulthood and thus as a rite of
passage is premised on two tendencies within many contemporary approaches to
childhood, which we began to unpick in Chapter 1: the internationally dominant
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model of childhood and its inherent notion of universality, and the sedentarism
underpinning much social analysis. The notion that childhood has a universal
cut-off age of eighteen is premised on the idea of life cycles and, as pointed
out by Johnson-Hanks, assumes that everyone in all societies goes through the
same coherent life stages in an ordered sequence of becoming. This assumption
precludes the possibility of reverting to an earlier stage, as well as of transitions
happening in some spheres of life and not in others ( Johnson-Hanks 2002:
866). In the analysis of West African migration practices, transition metaphors
frequently and implicitly are equated with a non-gendered (boy) child’s transition to adulthood. When linked with youth, this is seen as positive and a sign of
their capacity to take some control over their life, but when linked with young
boys, their independent migration is presented as premature and damaging
to them because they are perceived as becoming adults too early. However, as
argued in Chapter 1, different forms of transitions marking a variety of social
categories and statuses intersect with one another and blur the boundaries
of any model of childhood. The resulting multiplicity of possible transitions
induced us to explore the aspirations that motivate children to do particular
things, as well as the constraints and enabling factors that have an effect on
their ability to actually do what they intend to do.
When migration is presented as a rite-of-passage metaphor, van Gennep’s
proposition comes to mind – that every rite of passage is constituted by three
stages; separation, liminality and incorporation (van Gennep 1960). The first
stage of separation, then, would be consistent with child migrants’ leaving home
and possibly seeing this as a rupture in family relations. The second stage of
liminality would be presented as children being uprooted because they were
away from their family. Additionally, their liminal position would imply that
they were in the process of becoming while living at the migration destination.
Finally, the third stage of incorporation would be linked with children’s and
youth’s reintegration into the rural community upon return. In this model,
the family is seen as a sedentary unit, which migrants leave and to which they
return. Seeing migration as a rite of passage in this light ignores two important
aspects of West African children’s migration. First, the stretching of families
and homes to multiple locations and the fact that many adults have, or take,
some sort of parental role in child migrants’ lives imply that they are actually
not outside the family. Second, an overemphasis on liminality and becoming
tends to overshadow the fact that children are ‘social actors in the present, with
a marked role and presence in the very heart of the social context’ (de Boeck
2005: 199). These aspects of children’s being prompted us to explore how migration affects different spheres of boys’ and girls’ lives, and how they themselves
influence the making and breaking of family and family-like relationships.
The institution of the family is the one shaping children’s lives most significantly, and the one we are compelled to reconceptualize because the word
‘parents’ tends to invoke a strong image of a birth mother and father in a
nuclear family, which is inadequate for understanding children’s involvement
in decision-making in West Africa. Although the household is a site of hierarchical relations that place children at the bottom of the pecking order, it is also
a site of diverse interests where several family members within and outside
the rural household may interfere in decisions and advocate their preferences
in direct or indirect ways (Guyer 1988; Whitehead 1994, 1998). The important
point is that decision-making is not an issue narrowly between children and
their birth parents but between a range of family members living in the rural
household and elsewhere. Consequently, when making decisions, attempts are
made to accommodate a plethora of individuals with whom children have a
social relationship, of whom some are of a similar age, some are older and
some are younger. What children, and adults, choose to do, therefore, must be
seen in light of such considerations, a point we shall turn to next.
Evaluating children’s choices
In Chapter 3, where we talked about the motivations behind decisions for
children to move, we discussed those children who moved ‘to help’ relatives. We
referred to the fact that, among these mainly younger and/or female children,
there appeared to be a picture developing of them as pawns in relation to the
various requirements adults have for their labour or for wider social needs. We
suggested, though, that these issues are context specific and that the degree of
compulsion to move needs to be established, not assumed. We also noted that
it is only by accessing the views of children themselves that it is possible to
assess this, and that the vast majority of child migrants we worked with viewed
their mobility as their own choice. In this section, we explore in more depth the
question of children’s choices, as this issue is intrinsic to how interventions
aimed at supporting children can end up creating vulnerabilities or exacerbate
children’s difficult circumstances, as Castle and Diarra’s (2003) study, discussed
in Chapter 4, illustrated. At the heart of these issues is a question we are often
confronted with, both when analysing our data and when presenting it. This question fundamentally relates to how one evaluates a child’s choice when it results
in an action that on the face of it appears not to be in her or his best interest.
Useful to such an inquiry is feminist theorists’ work, which has explored the
choices women make that appear detrimental to women’s health and welfare,
or which accommodate forms of gender inequality, such as bearing children
beyond one’s capacity or aborting female fetuses. However, ‘if these choices are
likely to give women greater respect within their communities for conforming
to its norms, or to penalize them if they do not, their own values and behaviour
are likely to reflect those of the wider community and to reproduce its injustices’
(Kabeer 1999: 457–8). In other words, the context in which individuals are living
shapes their interests, so that how people define their goals and what they value
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will reflect their social positioning (ibid.: 461). When evaluating what action an
individual chooses to make, therefore, it is necessary to examine the extent to
which action itself is framed by this. This is because the ‘rules of the game’
implicit in different systems of kinship, inheritance, and so on, inform both
rational choices and the less conscious aspects of subjectivities, predisposing
individuals to favour differing strategies in different contexts (Kandiyoti 1988,
1998). In other words, when trying to explore individuals’ choices, attention
needs to be paid to the conditions in which choice is presumed to have been
exercised, which includes not only an assessment of individuals’ material conditions but their subject position.
Considering this from the perspective of a child, if a subject position, such
as being a ‘good child’, carries much more reward than others, and some are
negatively sanctioned, then clearly that is relevant to any assessment of choice.
Consequently, the children with whom we work may choose to migrate because
they wish to help their parents. Given the manner in which childhood is constructed in the local context as involving work as an age-appropriate behaviour
for children, and the impoverishment of communities, this makes a great deal
of sense. At the ideological level, it is a choice that reflects the value attached
to work in this context and the value attached to a child’s adoption of a work
ethic. At the material level, it reflects the necessity of a child’s contribution to
their households, the ability of a child to pursue his or her own livelihood activities, so he or she can buy things, and the potential rewards for such behaviour.
Moreover, these issues are not inseparable, as is clearly alluded to by a young
Kusasi boy, who said of the sanctions imposed if he refused to do work that
‘then, if they are eating you cannot go near them’, referring to both aspects of
reward for work.
To explore the implications of this in more detail it is useful to consider the
issue of children’s formal education. This is because one of the problematic
aspects of children’s migration frequently raised in the literature is that it is
detrimental to children’s education as children drop out of school in order to
migrate for work. It is on this basis that many interventions aimed at preventing
children from migrating are justified, in addition to the assumed inherent dangers associated with children’s movement away from their immediate families.
We should point out at this stage that children rarely dropped out of school to
migrate in the contexts in which we work (only three children in the Ghanaian
study and none in the Burkinabé study), and, as we have shown, migration
may also be positively implicated in children’s learning (see Hashim 2007).
Nevertheless, this example serves well to explore the issue of children’s best
interest because of the persuasive evidence suggesting that educational levels
are an important determinant of longer-term life prospects (Kabeer 2000: 464).
The effect of making a choice to give up schooling to migrate can thus be seen
as potentially detrimental to a child’s long-term welfare. The question then
becomes: is a child’s individual choice to give up school to ‘help’ a relative the
extent of one’s assessment of the matter, or should the fact that these choices
both stem from and serve to reinforce juniors’ subordinate status be a cause
for concern? In other words, because childhood is subject to strong contextspecific doxa, or those aspects of culture or tradition that are so normalized
or naturalized that they are not a subject for negotiation (Bourdieu 1977), one
has to question whether a child’s choice to drop out of school can be taken at
face value. Do they indeed know what is in their best interest? As both Fierlbeck
(1994) and Jackson (1997) warn, there are significant dangers associated with
placing emphasis on consent or cultural norms instead of the achievement of
more objective and concrete standards, since these can be utilized to validate
and to entrench the status quo. Utilitarian arguments that a choice has been
voiced and that is sufficient may not be valid if one is to adopt a moral stance
(Glover 1995: 123), and these types of arguments are frequently invoked by
child welfare activists when we present them with evidence that children are
choosing to migrate.
In evaluating choices, however, if, as has been discussed, choice reflects individuals’ subjective interests, as well as objective ones, then ‘the political force
of consent, based as it is upon choosing one particular alternative rather than
any other within a range of choice […] requires a “situated” account of values’
(Fierlbeck 1997: 40). In other words, it is very difficult to prescribe whether
or not a choice is a ‘good one’, since any assessment of individuals’ choices
necessarily entails bringing in an alternative normative standpoint, a set of
values other than the child’s. A key question, then, is to what extent does this
normative standpoint express values that are relevant to the reality it seeks to
evaluate (Kabeer 1999: 458)?
As a result, from a normative standpoint, the choice to give up schooling
might be perceived as detrimental to a child’s welfare. However, it is difficult
to claim this, not only because not giving up schooling might mean not having
sufficient funds to cover a household member’s medical bill or to pay for food
during the hungry season, but because it would be damaging to children’s sense
of themselves as a ‘good child’. These considerations in any case are interrelated
since it is not individual autonomy and self-realization which is valued in these
contexts, but relatedness and relationality (Hashim 2004: 185–9). Any separation
of the material conditions of individuals’ existence from the influence of such
factors in the shaping of their beliefs and behaviour ends up being not only
artificial but also analytically constraining. The implication of this is that if we
wish to go beyond simple assertions that children are not passive victims in
their migration or alternatively that they are fully self-determining individuals
able to choose from a range of real choices, we need to explore how children
exercise agency within particular sets of social relations. In the final part of this
chapter, we shall consider some examples of this both in children’s originating
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Strategies in moving and the multiplicity of possible transitions
The decisions made by children, parents, siblings or other relatives before
and during a child’s migration are layered and not all are equally important.
Decisions about bigger events such as the first journey or subsequent ones to
other destinations or back to the village, changes to employment, schooling,
non-formal education and so forth, are subject to interference by more people
concerned about a child’s welfare, prospects for the future and/or benefiting
from this child’s migration materially or symbolically. Johnson-Hank’s notion
of vital conjunctures is useful for thinking about these fundamentally strategic
decisions from a child’s point of view. Following de Certeau, strategies refer to
an individual’s ability to reinforce his or her power by combining social positions
of power, by using the social orders and their dominant discourses to his or her
own end and by drawing on material resources to do so (de Certeau 1984: 37–8).
In decision-making, strategic choices depend on having the power to carry them
out (Cornwall 2007: 28). Vital conjunctures, for their part, refer to influential
moments of change in a person’s life when expectations structured by the local
context blend with hopes for the future, despite its uncertainty ( Johnson-Hanks
2002: 868–9). For children and youth in West Africa, changing jobs or entering
and ending school or an apprenticeship are vital conjunctures, as are having
children, marriage, constructing a house for a parent, and the death of the
father or mother, to mention but a few. Children’s migratory journeys can also
be such a vital conjuncture. The multiplicity of conjunctures highlights the
fact that life transitions are non-synchronous and that growing up is not a
uniform process, but rather one that involves multiple and variable paths (ibid.).
The relevance of thinking about migratory experiences from this perspective
lies in the refocusing of attention from specific life stages and transitions (to
adulthood) or an event (migration) to the variety of alternatives that children
can imagine, hope and strive for – their aspirations. As we have noted, these
aspirations in turn are framed by the terms or the rules of the already existing
social construct or social institutions, such as the different systems of kinship
or household organization, and so on. The object of analysis thus becomes
focused on variations in life experience and the choices enabled or constrained
by these social institutions and norms, rather than the differences in expected
life stages and or associated behaviours, which subsequently become perceived
as deviant (ibid.: 878).
The way in which children (and adults) speak about the reasons underlying
children’s migration reveals much about the deep-felt poverty and the emotional
work invested in the incorporation of children into the extended family. Such
work aims to get children to consider the interdependencies within the domestic
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villages and at destination, in order to consider some of the strategies and
tactics children adopt in negotiating their social worlds.
economy, and balance the need for their labour and help at home with their
desire to play, have adventures, pursue formal education or earn money. In other
words, they are encouraged to balance the collective interests of the household
with their individual desires in a manner that reflects the increasing expectations of them, as they grow older, but also their changing desires (Hashim
2004: 82–9; Hashim 2006: 6–7). However, this work may also have a longerterm perspective of incorporating both boys and girls into the web of kin to
ameliorate the future possibilities for the children and to ensure their eventual
support of their parents and other significant adults (Thorsen 2005: 145–51).
In Pays Bisa, for example, many married migrant women send small gifts to
their parents, in particular to their mother, which have huge symbolic value.
Additionally, the link between married daughters and a household is sustained
through the kinship structure, which attributes importance to a child’s donno
ko – the mother’s place – but requires emotional work to turn it into practical
kinship relations. Women also are key figures in care work and may spend
several years in their natal household to care for an elderly parent. Similarly, in
the Bawku East district, girls rarely move very far away from their natal villages
when they marry and often continue to farm the land that they have farmed
privately before marriage, relying on the support of kin in their home village
to do so. Women also rely on their families for support at times of crisis, and
might even return home permanently. It is also common for young women to
come home for a few weeks after the birth of their first child, returning to help
their mothers with their farming and provide other forms of support. Marriage,
then, does not sever women’s ties with their natal household but transforms
them, and the ways in which children (both old and young) are linked with their
households is relevant to how decisions are made regarding their migration.
If we return to the example of wanting to be a ‘good child’ and how that
may be linked with the vital conjuncture of the very first journey as a migrant,
temporality comes into the picture. One child’s choice may be linked to the
immediate reward of being considered a ‘good child’ there and then, while
another child’s choice may be associated with the hope of eventually being
deemed a ‘good child’ some time in the future. A child joining the household of
a relative as part of an arrangement principally agreed by adults is an example
of the former. In reality, very few children are uninterested in migrating as
mobility is so engrained in their society that living in multiple locations is the
rule rather than the exception. Hence, the practice of migration is as normal
for the children in our studies as farming, trading and, for some, going to
school, and yet it is not an everyday activity. For boys and girls alike migration
is part of the social fabric of their lives because so many adult members of their
families and/or communities are migrants, and because the prospect of moving
to live with a relative or, depending on the practices surrounding migration in
their particular context, migrating independently is always present. If children
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of either gender diverge from this common practice of privileging migration,
they are rarely forced to leave or sent away against their will but instead are
enticed by promises of formal or non-formal education, paid work and so on,
which may or may not be met. This may make them feel obliged to leave, but
children may also behave strategically in ways that convince the adults around
them that they are not old or sensible enough to move anywhere or to do what
would be required of them (cf. Johnson-Hanks 2002: 868; Valentine 2003: 38).
When such behaviour falls within the common conceptualization of age- and
gender-appropriate behaviour, children can influence decisions about their own
lives without the perception of them as ‘good children’ changing; there is thus
some scope for navigating within the social context of the family. This issue of
negotiating to which social categories a young person belongs is one we discuss
in detail below.
In the cases where a child is concerned about being a ‘good child’ some day in
the future, the underlying motivations are often intertwined with what children
feel is expected of them and how they believe it best to justify their migration
to get the approval of parents and other significant adults before migrating or
ex post when having left secretly. Thus, the motivations which young migrants
mention when asked about them in interviews are along the lines of being a
‘good child’ who returns to the village at the beginning of every rainy season
to work on the household head’s farm. This, for example, was very common
among the itinerant shoeshiners in Ouagadougou, but subsequent interviews
in the following years and visits to their families revealed that few went home
if their labour was not needed and their families generally agreed to, and were
even involved in, this decision. In contrast, the children in the Ghanaian research
who had been living away from their originating communities for some years
rarely reported returning home. The fact that children decided and/or were encouraged to continue working where they were is perhaps not surprising. Being
a ‘good child’ incorporates within it aspects of independence and degrees of
self-reliance, which their migratory experiences enabled them to perform. Thus,
children could fulfil their aspirations for an independent income or pursue an
apprenticeship, i.e. not return home, while also not challenging notions of them
as a ‘good child’. Alternatively young migrants alluded to being a ‘successful
migrant’, where a ‘good (male) child’ constructs a new house for his father and
one for his mother and a ‘good (female) child’ prepares for her marriage but also
brings home gifts for her mother and siblings. These longer-term perspectives
are thus associated with a series of vital conjunctures, of journeying, changing
occupation, constructing houses and marrying, which are circumscribed by the
opportunities available to young migrants at their destination, but which also
reinforce how the trajectories of being and of becoming are multiple and varied.
Achieving the aspirations associated with some conjunctures, however, is
determined as much by income levels as decisions that are necessarily within
the child’s capacities or capabilities. One such example is that of constructing
a house for a parent and thus being able to give a highly symbolic gift that
shows every passer-by that this senior person has a successful child and is well
looked after, as, for example, Bisa boys aspired to do. Children earning minuscule wages, as do most of the children in our studies, are not in a position to
buy all the wood, corrugated iron sheets and possibly windows and a door, in
addition to paying a mason and remunerating additional labour power to build
a new house. Although Bisa boys frequently spoke of their wish to construct
a house, and Bisa girls occasionally did, their parents did not expect them to
do so in the early years of their migration. What was important to parents was
the expression of consideration and affection. In Pays Bisa, some of the boys
in Ouagadougou and Abidjan contributed to constructing a house by pooling
resources with older brothers, but more often their contribution was in returning
to the village to provide labour power. Among the Kasena, who originate in the
Upper East Region of Ghana, it also is common for male migrants to construct
a room in their father’s household to physically and symbolically assert their
belonging, and thus their place in the inter-generational hierarchy (Cassiman
2009: 31). In contrast, among the Kusasi, who were the majority ethnic group
we worked with in the Upper East Region of Ghana, the building of rooms was
of a different nature. The arrangement of living space within compounds is
culturally significant, and while there is a wide variation in household size and
composition, the arrangement of rooms and yards within each compound is
highly conventional and reflects the relationship between household members
(Whitehead 1996: 91). Children share their mothers’ room, until boys are considered too old, when they move into a general room shared by all unmarried
male household members. It is usually not until they are married that males
will have their own room, and these are built during the dry season using the
labour of household members and neighbours. Thus, building their room did
represent a transition into a particular social category – adult – but did not
usually require a migratory journey to earn the income to achieve this. However,
getting the income to furnish a room did because ‘a woman will not agree to
marry unless you have your furniture – a good bed and living room furniture’.
These practices focus on young male migrants and suggest that it is a gendered conjuncture, especially in societies where girls move to their husband’s
household upon marriage. This, however, is not necessarily the case; residential
practices upon marriage did not deter the desire of young married Bisa women
in their late teens and twenties to contribute to their parents’, and especially
their mother’s, physical and symbolic well-being. However, they were impeded
in doing so by their income levels, resulting from constraints imposed by their
husbands on their taking up employment (Thorsen 2010). Kusasi women were
also concerned with their mothers’ welfare (as well as siblings’, especially
females), but were not so much constrained by their husbands as by the lack
122
Negotiating social statuses
The aspirations that motivate children to take up a variety of subject positions
are closely linked with their imaginings of self and, thus, to the way in which
their identities develop in and through participating in social, economic and
political activities (de Boeck and Honwana 2005: 1; Holland et al. 1998: 5). The
young migrants in our studies were not just focusing on their status within their
family; they were just as interested in positioning themselves vis-à-vis their peers
and in creating and re-creating their identities as migrants, children, youth,
boys, girls, and so on; among others, through visible markers such as clothing,
hairstyles and behaviour. The variety of subject positions available has the effect
of making social categories, such as children and youth, heterogeneous. Moreover, as Johnson-Hanks’s (2002) notion of vital conjunctures underscores, these
social categories are also elastic, because there is no single trajectory to ‘adulthood’; rather, transitions are non-synchronous and reversible. The time at which
children go through different vital conjunctures varies, as does the number of
times they go through them. Although passing through them is subject to a
child’s capacities and competence in navigating her or his social contexts and
in positioning her- or himself in these contexts, it is also contingent upon other
people’s actions and activities. In other words, as young people experience obligations and restrictions in their daily lives but also actively define and produce these
lives (Robson et al. 2007: 135), they are both acted upon and acting in the spaces
they occupy. One aspect of the heterogeneity of social categories, such as child
or youth, derives from the negotiation of what these entail at the collective and
individual levels, and another aspect from the variety in children’s experiences
that shape what they want of life and what they expect of others.
Both aspects have an impact on children’s migration, as becomes clear if we
consider the strategic decisions surrounding children’s first and subsequent
journeys, important to which is the evaluation of a child’s ability to endure the
hardships that adults assume they may face because they themselves have been
migrants in the past. This issue is of lesser importance when children migrate
with or to adults who are expected to take on the parental role of providing food,
care and other necessities for the children and guide them on to a path that
will increase their possibilities in the future. Negotiations become important
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6 | Moving on
of opportunities to earn an income. Although constructing a house or buying furniture for a room is vital to being perceived as a successful migrant,
and thus represents one vital conjuncture, it is clear that for child migrants
it is a future possibility and something that figures in the aspirations shaping
their strategic decisions, but also in their justifications for migrating. Thus, by
considering these vital conjunctures, our focus is drawn not to specific events
but to the variety of imagined alternatives shaping children’s choices, among
which migration may be one.
when children’s and adults’ views differ, as we alluded to above in the example
of children being coaxed into relocating by promises of education or paid work.
The adult perception of children being too young to migrate without, or at least
to, another parent figure is not just an extension of universalized ideals of childhood and their insistence on children’s proper place being within the bosom
of the family. It can relate to the necessity of their labour in their home village.
Alternatively, it may underlie the request from anxious parents and relatives in
West Africa that a child should wait a year or two before migrating, based on
evaluations of an individual child’s capacity to cope with migrant life. It may also
mirror how the child’s everyday activities are perceived as the doings of a small
child, an older child, a conscientious child, a rogue and a range of other possible
subject positions, and how parents and other significant adults think about
the child’s best interests. Moreover, evaluations reflect material and emotional
relationships between the child and the adult and the balance they each strike
between their own and the other’s needs and desires. In short, a mixture of concerns and considerations shapes how the wish of a child to migrate is assessed.
At the general level, negotiations aim at characterizing children and youth as
social categories; they shape and are shaped by the discourses surrounding who
fits in and who does not, as well as what is appropriate behaviour for smaller and
bigger children and for boys and girls. Although everyone brings into play the
same discourses, the fact that they are constantly moulded by outside influences
and people’s actions means that the norms to which children and adults may
point when justifying actions and opinions are ambiguous. Another important
aspect of the broad negotiations, of which evaluations are part, is that they are
not between two persons, or between a child and her or his parents who act as
one. Rather they involve a host of persons who play, or would like to play, a role
in the child’s life, and who have different views of what is best for the child,
the family or the household. Accordingly, evaluations, whether they concern
individuals or general social categories, are rarely identical because they do not
necessarily focus on the same aspects of how self is constructed and practised
and, thus, of children’s positioning within the given context. Not all adults
necessarily come to the same conclusion, and children are not always focused
on becoming but just as often on being children or being youth. Evaluations
are an essential part of negotiations over meaning, practices and individual
strategies (Thorsen 2006: 90–94). This means that while children encounter
constraints when opposing some seniors in their family, they may have the
backing of others. As our studies and a number of other studies show, many
children in West Africa migrate independently with the approval and support
of their parents. However, when a child sets off from home without informing
those members of the family who have the power to hinder the journey, the
child challenges how he or she imagines these adults will evaluate his or her
capacities and competence. This is because, had the child discussed the issue
124
Child migrants’ tactical choices
When children and youth either acquiesce to a move at the behest of a relative
or establish relationships with migrants to facilitate their migration, they place
themselves in a hierarchical relationship where they are the juniors and frequently
seen as children, which in turn has implications for how their work is thought
about and rewarded. As these children become older they may begin to engage in
the types of negotiations we considered earlier in their attempts to resist efforts
to position them as unpaid family labour. In addition to the limitations placed
on them by adults’ evaluations of them as children, children encounter a number
of constraints and vulnerabilities. These may be triggered, among other factors,
by socially defined norms regarding gender roles, local practices in the labour
market, stark competition with other children and youth in a similar situation,
and other limiting factors. Children’s experience in the informal labour market
is one example of the vulnerabilities often pointed to in discussions of children’s
work and children’s independent migration, and thus we shall focus on this here.
However, it is only one among many limitations children experience, and our
aim in looking at this is not to provide formulaic conceptualizations of vulnerability but to help us in exploring how children navigate their social worlds and
challenge or conform to the constraints under which they operate.
The way in which the economy and the labour market function in West Africa
was described as early as the 1970s by Hart, who coined the idea of an informal
sector in a study of Frafra migrants’ economic activities in Accra and the precariousness of their incomes, which necessitated them diversifying their incomegenerating activities (Hart 1973). In the 1980s, a number of studies in francophone
Africa described the economic activities of poor people as ‘la débrouillardise’ – the
need to be astute, resourceful and flexible to get by (Ly 1985; Morice 1987). Today,
the level of informalization is likely to be even higher, with only a small proportion
of employment for those with little or no education being formal, and most small
businesses operating without any form of registration. These sorts of practices
and the norms arising from them, therefore, fundamentally regulate how the
labour market for informal employment operates. Although the outcomes are
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6 | Moving on
of migration openly and been told to wait, he or she would have shown lack
of respect if leaving in spite of advice. The same strategy is used when a child
seeks to decrease the likelihood of being told not to come by not phoning a
relative at destination to announce his or her plans. Yet the other side of the
coin, which is often forgotten because adults – and parents in particular – are
usually presented as authoritative figures vis-à-vis children, is that parents’
request to wait is also part of the negotiation, and it challenges the child’s
self-perception of what they are capable of. Even though the notion of respect
constrains children’s ability to discuss and counter openly adults’ views, the
secret departures demonstrate that not all children are equally constrained.
primarily to the advantage of employers, young employees also interpret their
social environment and adopt tactics to navigate it. In contrast to the strategies
outlined by de Certeau, tactics are calculated actions which are only effective if
taken at the right moment (de Certeau 1984: 37–8). Employers frequently demand
that their employees work long hours or decrease their wages, if paying them at all.
These practices inhibit children’s accumulation of economic resources through
work and the diversification of their sources of income, and in turn their ability to
build up symbolic capital through gift-giving and investments in their village or at
the destination, as well as their engagement in social and cultural activities with
young people outside their immediate group of co-workers and friends. Young
people negotiate and resist by testing the boundaries of what they can do without
being chased away by their employer or by moving on to other jobs, occupations
or destinations, on occasion helping themselves to compensation from the cash
drawer. By employing tactics such as these, in which they simultaneously comply
with hierarchical pecking orders or demands on them in the labour market and
resist excessive ones by moving on to new jobs, or new destinations, or take their
due when it is withheld, young migrants navigate their social contexts. Although
children’s tactical choices rarely affect an employer significantly, given the large
number of children and youth willing to work should one employee leave without
giving notice, they are examples of young people’s active engagement with their
social contexts and their attempts at overcoming institutional limitations, such
as those created by the informal labour market.
Tactical choices aim primarily at meeting individual aspirations and do not
amount to a collective transformative action. In fact, they may even support the
informalization and fragmented nature of the economy because the best route
out of susceptibility to bad employment conditions or deception by employers
is to become an independent entrepreneur in the market. Nevertheless, the
exercising of tactical choices, of acting upon opportunities when they arise, is
part and parcel of the way in which the informal economy operates for those at
the bottom, those who are subject to multiple forms of exclusions owing to their
being young, poor, newcomers and so forth. Across francophone Africa, they summarize the aim of their manifold activities as ‘Je me débrouille’ – I get by – which
epitomizes their endeavours to be successful in attaining their objectives, their
willingness to engage in new opportunities and their cultural repertoire in making
their lives (Waage 2006). Although children who have not migrated may also use
the terminology of ‘se débrouiller’, the migratory experience teaches children the
ability and necessity of navigating the economic context at the destinations in
a much more profound way, which is equally useful to a migrant as to a nonmigrant. These constraints can thus serve to empower young migrants, providing
them with a greater repertoire of strategies, tactics and coping mechanisms.
Several accounts given by child migrants from the Upper East Region and
Pays Bisa showed that the complexity of households and the links to established
126
Postscript
As this book goes to press, we note that a new issue of a leading journal devoted to considering children’s social relations and culture in global society has
been published under the title of Childhood and Migration: Mobilities, homes and
belongings. According to its editors, who point out how surprisingly little attention
has been paid to childhoods that are characterized by migrancy and mobility,
the purpose of the special edition is to illuminate different aspects of children’s
migrations and mobile lives (Ni Laoire et al. 2010: 156). We wholly endorse such
attempts, and our objective has been to make a similar contribution. However,
when first discussing this collaboration, our initial impetus was to respond to
the ways in which powerful ideas about childhood have resulted in assumptions
that children’s migration represents deviance and danger, with children’s parents
frequently viewed as complicit. Spurring us on were the reactions to our work
from policy-makers and children’s advocates, whom we frequently had to convince
of our genuine concern for the welfare of children. Throughout the course of
writing the book, we have come to focus less on countering these representations
of children. Indeed, it occurred to us that by simply reacting and responding to
these adults, whom we do not doubt have children’s best interests at heart, we
were contributing to the construction of children as passive objects. Our focus,
subsequently, has transformed into one that aims to contribute to the body of
research that explores children’s lived experiences, and how young persons are
actively involved in their worlds; in shaping them, in negotiating them and in
challenging them. We hope to have represented the most burning concerns of
the children with whom we worked, about their role in the construction of their
worlds in ways that others may learn from and utilize to best support and assist
young migrants and those around them who have their best interests at heart.
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6 | Moving on
migrants in other locations, who are still considered household members, give
some scope for young people to create new relationships of the child–parent
or sibling type in different places. While strategic decisions may have landed
a child with particular kin, such an arrangement is almost always a temporary
one, which may last many years or only a brief period of time, depending on the
expectations the child has of kin and vice versa, as well as on other available
alternatives. Some children actively pursue alternative parents or seek opportunities outside those offered by kin, if they think that it will place them in a
better position to earn money, learn new skills or develop social relationships
that will facilitate journeys to other destinations or create better learning and/
or earning prospects. While the decision to move between different kin or to
others is strategic, the opportunity actually to do so often rests on a tactical
choice to move if the chance arises. Children’s social position may inhibit them
from planning ahead and in realizing all the things they would like to or can
attain, but they do find room to make and enact choices within these limitations.
Notes
1 Introduction
1 We use the terms ‘developing world’,
‘Third World’, ‘majority world’ and ‘global
South’ interchangeably, although we
do recognize that none of these terms
captures the diversity of cultures and
economies encompassed by them and so
use them purely as shorthand to refer to
societies that share broadly similar socioeconomic profiles. The same applies to
the terms ‘the West’, ‘the industrialized
world’ and/or ‘the developed world’.
2 Children’s cognitive development is
theorized along the lines of two models;
one formulated by Piaget and the other by
Vygotsky. In Piaget’s conceptualization,
children progress through a universal set
of stages, gradually increasing their ability
to think analytically until they reach the
completeness of the rational adult. As a
contrast, in Vygotsky’s model, children’s
learning is active and they become skilled
at thinking analytically through contact
with the people around them who are
already adept. The context, therefore, is
much more important than in Piaget’s
universal model, but the end result is perceived as the same: becoming a complete
and rational adult (Ansell 2005: 16–17).
3 This is in contrast to the experiences
of children in African societies, where even
when legislation exists and prescribes
certain elements of childhood, it is rarely
enforced and therefore plays an insignificant role in defining children’s lives.
4 For examples, see Samuelsen (1999)
on the Bisa, Bonnet (1981) on the Mossi
and Cartry (1982) on the Gourmantché
in Burkina Faso, Piot (1999) on the Kabre
in northern Togo, Gottlieb (1998) on the
Beng in Côte d’Ivoire, Ferme (2001) on the
Mende in Sierra Leone and Journet (1981)
on the Dioula in Senegal.
5 Until recently, care-giving has not
been on the research agenda for Africa
but has become an issue with the AIDS
pandemic and the increased need to
provide care for terminally ill people,
orphans and old people left without ablebodied producers (Kesby et al. 2006). The
situation of orphans has been picked up
in the emerging research on childhoods
in Africa, and evidence of the inability of
extended families to carry the burden of
social security and the appearance of new
concepts such as child-headed households
have caused unintended moral panic
about the breakdown of families and
unprotected children (Evans 2010; Nyambedha and Aagaard-Hansen 2003). The
strong focus on AIDS-related changes in
eastern and southern Africa in particular
has shifted attention away from the dynamics of care-giving in families that are
not hit by the pandemic. In West Africa,
the infection rate is much lower, and the
pandemic has not had the same impact
on social relations; thus it is important to
explore practices and expectations related
to care-giving.
6 We use the term ‘education’ in the
broadest sense – that is, as learning;
while ‘schooling’ or ‘formal education’ is
used to refer to the institutionalization of
learning, including vocational training.
Apprenticeships are regarded as nonformal education, although it is important
to note that those participating in our
research did not always differentiate between formal vocational training provided
by private or state institutions, and more
informal apprenticeship opportunities.
For a definition of the various terms associated with education, see Leach (2003).
7 The truth of the matter, of course, is
that far from being a sanctuary, the home
is the place where children are most likely
128
2 Contexts of migration
1 Kusasi children dominated the
research in Ghana; however, Mossi and
Busanga (another ethnonym for Bisa)
children were also interviewed.
2 Since both phases of research were
carried out in Ghana, the Bawku East
district has been divided into the districts
of Bawku Municipal and Garu-Tempane.
3 Iman Hashim’s work benefited
greatly from having access to Ann Whitehead’s 1975 and 1989 research and
baseline data in the same village of Tempane Natinga, which showed remarkable
stability in many aspects of household
organization and community life.
4 The division of work and dependants’ – wives, married sons and unmarried
children of both genders – rights to
engage in own-account farming, trade
or other income-generating activities is
highly institutionalized and reflected in
Bisa vernacular. Dɔcta hɔ, which is the
household head’s farms, literally means
morning activities, while yile hɔ literally
means afternoon activities and encompasses all the things that children, youth
and women do.
5 Owing to the nature of the kinship
structure, anyone who has an agnatic link
in previous generations may be thought of
as being a household member. However,
until they return one does not know which
household they will return to, whether
they will build a new household, or indeed
whether they will in fact return. It is very
difficult, therefore, to make claims regarding the exact numbers of migrants from
a specific household (Whitehead 1996).
However, these numbers reflect individuals who heads considered to be part of
their household and who, at the time of
the survey, were living elsewhere.
6 These numbers derive from a questionnaire focusing on the household composition and reflect the whereabouts of
village women’s children and/or married
women’s absent husbands. Consequently,
the numbers may not include long-term
migrants whose mother or wife does not
live in the household.
7 Although children exercised a great
degree of autonomy over their income,
this is not as straightforward as it would
appear in the Ghanaian case as the
landlord or household head, theoretically, owned any assets in his household.
Consequently, if income is converted to
livestock, in theory at least, the landlord
has the ultimate say over its disposal,
although he may choose not to exercise
this control.
8 http://www.meba.gov.bf, especially
the sector programme for developing the
educational system at the level of primary
education and alphabetization (PDDEB).
9 This refers to the number of children
enrolled in primary school who are of
official primary school age, expressed as a
percentage of the total number of children
of official primary school age.
10 This system of farm Koranic
schools was described in the early 1980s
by the anthropologist Mahir Şaul (1984).
3 Choosing to move
1 At the time of both periods of
fieldwork, the education system in Ghana
consisted of nine years of free, compulsory
schooling – six years of primary school
and three years of junior secondary school
(JSS). Following this, students who qualify
can proceed into senior secondary school
(SSS). Students who pass the SSS Certificate Examination at the end of three years
of SSS can then pursue a degree course at
university, or a diploma course at some
other tertiary institution (GME 2000). NB:
The education system was again reformed
in 2007.
129
Notes
to be abused or harmed. For example, in
the UK the vast majority of children who
are killed are killed by a parent or close
relative (Moore 2004: 739). This serves
further to underscore how this model of
childhood is an idealized version, and one
that is far from the reality in much of the
world.
8 See Van Hear (1984) for an exceptional early example of the inclusion of
children in a study of migration.
2 At the time, 16,000 Ghanaian cedis
(¢) were worth £1.
3 This is a generic term for the area
surrounding Kumasi, so can be a rural
area, not the urban capital of the Ashanti
region.
4 In the same manner, Qvortrup (1985)
notes how schooling is work but has been
reframed as education, and is dealt with
within non-work/labour frameworks.
5 As well as being more durable and
labour efficient than the grass roofing
more commonly used, these corrugated
metal roofs serve as a sign of prestige and
wealth.
4 Journeys and arrivals
1 The timeline in Amadou’s story is
not chronologically consistent, owing
probably to his not knowing his exact
age and to the fact that people in Pays
Bisa ascribe little value to being exact
about age and time. In Burkinabé lingo,
the common way of delineating time is
to speak of ‘two days’, which may mean
anything from a couple of days to several
months.
2 The Mossi is the largest ethnic group
in Burkina Faso and, as the boundary between the Bisa region and communities of
Mossi runs through Tenkodogo, many of
the young Bisa who have worked in Tenkodogo during one or more dry seasons are
familiar with Moré, the vernacular.
3 Bourdieu distinguishes between
official and practical kinship; official
descriptions of kinship relations represent
the social structure embodied during
ceremonies where people have particular
roles because of their position in the
lineage or in relation to the person(s)
at the centre of the ceremony. Practical
aspects of kin relationships are, on the
other hand, ‘something people make, and
with which they do something’ (Bourdieu
1977: 35). In day-to-day transactions blood
ties are therefore not necessarily the most
important (Bouquet 1993; cf. Holy 1996).
4 Both Plan International and Terre des
Hommes are international NGOs working
with child rights. Plan’s West Africa Re-
gional Office has commissioned research
on children and youth’s mobility in West
Africa, in which the applied research institute Laboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherche
sur les Dynamiques Sociales et le Développement Local (Lasdel) takes part.
5 There is a belief among the Bisa that
caring for a child may enhance the chance
of a woman conceiving; hence, after some
years of trying to conceive and of undergoing indigenous treatment, a childless
woman may demand, or be offered, the
small child of one of her brothers, a
co-wife or another woman in the marital
household. If she subsequently becomes
pregnant, the fostered child is perceived
to have brought her luck. She has, in other
words, proved her maternal capability,
and this to a degree where ancestral spirits
accept her as a host for their coming back
in the form of a baby.
6 This system of remunerating
labourers on a one-third share system
is common on smallholder plantations
throughout Côte d’Ivoire unless the
labourers choose to work on a piecemeal
contractual basis, in which case they are
given a fixed sum for clearing, weeding
or harvesting a piece of land. The system
is similar to the abusa system on cocoa
farms in southern Ghana (Amanor 2001).
This farmer’s innovation was to have two
young employees who would share one
third despite the fact that such an agreement would usually be between the farmer
and one worker only.
5 Navigating migrant life
1 In 2004, the cost of a basic meal
bought on the street in Ghana was about
¢1,000 (6 pence) and urban-based children
normally got about ¢2,500 (16 pence) per
day for street meals. In Burkina Faso, a
meal of rice and sauce could be bought for
75 CFA francs (8 pence) on the streets of
cities and rural towns in 2005. Most child
migrants doing physical work, such as
itinerant trading and shoeshining, spend
250–300 CFA francs (26–32 pence) on food
per day, unless they are eating with an
employer.
130
where many migrants from their region
had settled. Alternatively, their employers
put them up in one of the mud-brick
houses they had constructed when bidding for several plots in the hope that at
least one would become theirs.
6 David’s paternal uncle, a salt trader
at the Katré Yaar market in Ouagadougou,
has since early 2005 mediated the contact
between many youth and Thorsen. Several
times, we have spent a Sunday in his
household interviewing youth from Pays
Bisa or having a meeting with the Association des Enfants et Jeunes Travailleurs
to see whether the young migrants could
benefit from membership. We followed
David’s migrant life closely between 2005
and 2008, bringing us into contact with
several employers and also helping us to
keep in touch with some of his friends,
whom we interviewed in 2005.
7 In West Africa, wives and husbands
usually have separate purses and discrete
responsibilities within the household,
while at the same time having a shared
interest in the well-being of household
members. In a case like this, several issues
may have led the boss’s wife to give advice
to her husband’s economic detriment.
First, she may have felt that he was neglecting his moral responsibilities towards
a young, hard-working and respectful
household member. Second, she may have
felt equally uncared for in her husband’s
economic dispositions and therefore had
little stake in his economic gains.
8 The latest ILO Convention on child
labour, the Worst Forms of Child Labour
Convention, is just one among others that
includes education among the measures
stipulated to address child labour.
131
Notes
2 In Zéké village, we trained six girls
and six boys to carry out interviews with
their peer group to explore how children
spoke about their migration aspirations
and experiences. Although this material is
a thin description of current practices, it
provides valuable insights.
3 Purdah is a practice among some
Muslims in which married women keep
themselves secluded and therefore do not
leave their houses and courtyards except
to visit relatives or female friends, attend
religious ceremonies on the occasion of
births, marriages or funerals, visit the
sick or seek healthcare for themselves or
their children. Generally, married women
in non-poor families comply with purdah
while poor, widowed and divorced women
are unable to do so because the restrictions on their mobility undermine their
livelihoods (Schildkrout 2002 [1978]).
4 Requesting a child is not something
that happens at random; usually such
requests are made within social networks
of kin, friends, trading partners, religious
communities or other institutions connecting people. Children are not passive
in such requests; they may have discussed
the possibility of living with someone to
work for them or to pursue education
before an actual request is made, as may
one or more parents or siblings. In other
words, requests for children are embedded in local ideas of mobility.
5 Young migrants in Ouagadougou
could access cheap housing on the
margins of the city where temporary
mud-brick houses constantly sprang up to
make claims on plots as the urban titling
process slowly progressed. They primarily
found such houses in the neighbourhoods
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(2007) ‘Child migration, child agency and
inter-generational relations in Africa and
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Wilson, T. D. (1994) ‘What determines where
transnational labor migrants go? Modifications in migration theories’, Human
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Zelizer, V. (1994) Pricing the Priceless Child:
The Changing Social Value of Children,
revised paperback edn, Princeton, NJ:
Princeton University Press.
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9(4): 375–96.
Zongo, M. (2003) ‘La diaspora Burkinabè en
Côte d’Ivoire: trajectoire historique, recomposition des dynamiques migratoires
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144
Index
Abidjan, 65–6, 69, 74, 79, 89, 98–9, 122
Accra, 94, 101; street-children’s programme
in, 42–3; studies of, 56, 125
Adiara, 97, 110
adult/child dualism, 18
adulthood, transition to, 114, 122, 123
Aduma, 21
African Union (AU) Charter on the Rights
and Welfare of the Child, 5, 6, 12
age: chronological, not central to childhood,
8; of majority (for sexual relations, 7; for
voting, 7)
age-appropriate behaviour, 104
agency, of children, 96, 110, 113–14
(conceptualization of, 19; lack of, 111,
112); related to age, 18
agriculture see farming
Aïcha, 60
AIDS orphans, 13
Akuka, 42
Ama, 58
Amadou, 65, 73, 79, 80, 83
ancestors, 62
animist traditions, 50
apprenticeships, 1, 38, 51, 52, 55, 88, 103,
104, 106, 107, 108, 109
Aries, P., 3
armed conflict, children’s involvement in, 4
Ashanti region (Ghana), 42, 87
Ashikoba, 51
Assana, 99
Atembe, 61
autonomy, 118; striving for, 95–9
awakening of children to new realities, 60,
85, 97
Awintim’e, 51
Awpwaka, 55, 56
Baatomba, notions of childhood, 16
baba puure (uncle), 108
Bangladesh, child migrants in, 43
Barakeso, 48
begging, training in, 38
Benedict, Ruth, 2
Benin, 90; cotton farming in, 103; vigilante
committees in, 78
bicycles, buying of, 42, 47–8, 62, 92
birth rates, drop in, 3
Bisa ethnic group, 9, 22–5, 32, 35, 37, 40, 53,
63, 68, 71, 113, 122
Bobo-Dioulasso, 105
Bolivia, migration of children in, 43
Boureima, 95–7, 102
boys: activities of, in Sudan, 69; migration
of, 26–7; work of, more highly valued, 89
bribery of police, 78–9
brick making, children’s work in, 95, 96
bride price, 41, 60
British colonialism, 26
brothers, as means of support for girls, 97
Burkina Faso, viii, 22–5, 26, 65, 87, 92, 113;
attitudes to schooling in, 105; child
migration in, 42, 77; education in,
33; female migration in, 26, 68; rural
children’s migration in, 14; school nonattendance in, 49; study of migration in,
69, 82
Cameroon, schooling in, 50
carers, children’s work as, 29
Catholic Action for Street Children, 42
cattle: herding of see herding, of cattle;
sacrifice of, 63
Central Region (Ghana), 47, 53–4
cheating of wages see wages, cheating over
child fostering see fostering
child labour, 2, 29, 81; campaigns against, 3,
103; legislation against, 4 (resistance to,
4) see also children’s work
child mortality, 56
child protection legislation, 94
child refugees, 13
child rights advocacy, 81
child soldiers, 13
child trafficking see trafficking of children
child-centred research approach, viii, 16, 17,
18, 43, 46
childhood: concept of, ix, 1–19 (African,
145
16, 18; history of, 3); ideal of, in African
Union, 5; ideas and practices that
constitute childhood, 21; indigenous
conceptions of, 57; ‘modern’, 10;
multiplicity of, 2; rural, 20; universalized
ideals of, 2–6, 20, 44, 111, 114, 115;
Western model of, 7
Childhood and Migration, 127
childless women, 72
children: as emotional and affective assets,
3; as human capital assets, 15; as
primary carers, 2; as research category,
45; aspirations of, in migrating, 90;
becomings of, 66; belonging to everyone,
9; classificatory, 110; definition of, vii,
7; mobility of, as own choice, 116; selfdecisions of, 63; self-initiating migration,
54; viewed as pawns, 54; viewed as
persons-in-the-becoming, 75; viewed as
victims, ix; see also ‘good’ child
children’s rights, African model of, 6
children’s work, 10, 21, 28–32, 38, 125;
combines with play, 69; gendered
nature of, 24–5; lack of statistics for, 29;
necessity of, 124; social norms of, 94–5;
varied nature of, 34
children’s worlds, 33–8
city, role in socialization, 110
clothing: as conspicuous consumption, 70;
as status marker, 123; buying of, 91, 95
cocoa farming, 26, 73, 90; children’s work in,
79, 89, 103
context, importance of, 38–41
Côte d’Ivoire, viii, 26, 30, 48, 52, 59, 73,
78, 80, 83, 89, 90, 103, 105, 108, 113;
migration in, 27, 43
cotton farming, 69
cultural relativism, 6
dangers of migration, recognized by
children, 81
David, 34–5, 101, 102
débrouillardise, la, 110, 125, 126
dependency of children, 3, 5, 21, 75, 112
destination: children’s lives at, 19; mobility
at, 99–103
distrust of migrants, 91
Djamilla, 80
domestic work, of children, unpaid, 86–7
domestic workers, children’s work as, 15, 29,
68, 82, 90, 92, 94, 97, 98–9
donno ko (mother’s place), 120
drinks, vending of, 92
East Cameroon, children’s inter-household
movement, 113
Ecuador, gender issues in, 110
education, 121, 125; dreams and dilemmas
of, 103–9; finding fees for, 75; formal,
1, 7, 10, 14, 33–6, 49–53, 72, 93, 117 (as
diversification strategy, 37); migration
in search of, 104–5; of girls, 88; primary,
50, 105, 107; secondary, 105, 106; seen
as commensurate with schooling, 10;
valuing of, 98 see also schooling
eighteen, as cut-off age of childhood, 115
electricity: access to, 90; lack of, 50
Emina, 62
entry costs into labour market, 94
epilepsy, treatment of, 28
Equatorial Guinea, 81
ethnographic research, 45, 57, 104; mobile,
45
evaluation of children’s choices, 116–19
exclusion and marginalization, 97; from
education, 107; from public places, 109
family: African, myth-making about, 66;
as analytical black box, 15; as multispatial group, ix, 16, 115; children’s
work for, 94; development of, 9;
fluidity of, 11; included in decision to
migrate, 76; nuclear, 10, 57 (breakdown
of, 56); reconceptualization of, 115;
state intervention in, 3, 5; support
for migrating children, 47; Western,
complicated patterns of, 9
family crisis, motive for migration, 55–7
farming: children’s work in, 28, 34, 35, 37,
48, 58, 70, 79, 85, 87, 89, 90, 120, 121;
in Benin, study of, 69; problem of soil
depletion in, 25; women’s work in, 40
feminist theory, viii–ix, 116–17
fishing, children’s work in, 28
flexibility of children’s employment choices,
101, 125
food, lack of, 91, 94
forced/voluntary dualism, 18
fostering, 14, 72, 85, 93, 111; bypassing of,
84; facilitates schooling, 50; traditional,
15
Fostina, 59
Foucault, Michel, 111
franco-arabe school, in Tenkodogo, 37–8
146
Gabon, 81
Gambile, 75–6
garbage collectors, children’s work as, 29
Garu, Upper East region, 90–1
gender issues, ix, 8, 89, 110, 116, 125;
affecting ability to migrate, 64; impacting
decisions to move, 46; in children’s
migration trajectories, 60–3
gender-appropriate behaviour, 121
gendered nature of children’s work, 24–5
getting in touch with established migrants,
72–5
Ghana, viii, 22–5, 26, 39, 80, 87, 89, 106,
112–13; child labour in, 29; education in,
33 (valuing of, 49, 104, 106); migration
in, 27 (of children, 54; of rural children,
14; study of, 90); school non-attendance
in, 49
Ghana Living Standards Survey, 51, 105
gift economy, 47
Gifty, 71
girls: activities in work parties, 30; as labour
assets, 61; as migrants, under-reporting
of, 28; aspiration to migration, 63;
benefit from migration, 60; by-day labour
of, 89; dissociation from households,
89; expected to work for kin, 48; lack
of peer groups, 97–8; migration of, 27,
72 (in Burkina Faso, 68; limitations on,
40; opportunities of, 39); move towards
urban work, 90; research with, 112–13;
stay with guardians, 82; work of, 25, 106
(for brothers, 97)
‘good’ child, 117, 120, 121
grandparents, 57, 86
hairdressing: as girls’ work, 38; children’s
work in, 55, 72, 86
Hamidou, 82, 83
hardship, ideology of, 50, 56
harvesting activities, 20, 30, 32
Hawa, 87–8, 90, 98, 99
hawkers, children’s work as, 28
head-porters, children’s work as, 39–40, 86,
92, 93, 94
heads of household, 59, 76, 97
healthcare, 23
helping relatives, 53–5
herding, of cattle, 28, 30, 69, 100
home see households
household heads, 23, 24, 50
household surveys, 1
households: children’s position in, 94;
children’s work in, 29; fluidity of, vii;
interdependencies in, 102; multi-sited,
115, 120; site of hierarchical relations,
116
Ibrahim, 78–9, 83
identities of migrants, 123; construction of,
85–100; factors shaping, 109–10
independent migration of children see
migration, of children, independent
Indonesia, study of fostering in, 16
informal economies, 93–4, 96
informal labour market, 99, 104, 125–6;
children’s experience in, 125
ingenuity in choices of work, 92
inter-generational conflict, 57–60
intermediaries, 83; professional, 69, 78;
socially related, 69
International Labour Organization (ILO),
78; Convention Concerning Minimum
Age for Admission to Employment,
4; Convention on Minimum Ages in
Industry, 4; International Programme
on the Elimination of Child Labour,
14; Worst Forms of Child Labour
Convention, 4
International Organization for Migration
(IOM), 14
IREWOC study of Burkina Faso, 69
Islam, 99
Jola, women of, 27; study of, 40
journeys: and arrivals, 65–84; first journey,
75–6; modalities of, 82; opportunistic,
76–81; planning of, 66; rendered
clandestine, 78
Kanlou, 63
Kano, 93
Kasena people, 122
kayayoos (head porters), 39–40
kin groups, importance of, 57
kinship, 120; categories not clear, 68;
children members of relatives’ households, 86, 120; inequalities of relations,
81; multiplicity of interested relatives,
99; networks, of children, 66–8;
reinforced by children’s moving, 74;
relatives as patrons, 58; relatives mediate
147
Index
French colonialism, 26
employment possibilities, 98; reliance
on relatives for support, 79, 80, 83, 91;
systems, among Bisa, 9; unpaid work for
relatives, 86–7; work-finding networks of,
93; working for relatives, 88, 97
Koranic schools, 37–8
Kumasi, 90, 99
Kusasi ethnic group, 22–5, 27, 32, 40, 41, 48,
51, 60, 61, 62, 71, 85, 122
Laadi, 1
labour conscription, 26
labour migration, 2
Lamissi, 32, 106, 107
laziness, accusation of, 31, 82, 88, 89, 100
learning, 33–8; by doing, 36; migration as a
process of, 86, 98, 126
learning work, 52–3
leisure time of working children, 101
literacy, 48, 89, 106
livelihoods, diversification of, 37
Luke, 30
Lutte contre le Trafic des Enfants en Afrique
de l’Ouest (LUTRENA), 14, 78
Madi, 99–100, 101
Magid, 90–1
Mali: child migration in, 77; migration in,
89 (of children, 43, 77); school nonattendance in, 49
maltreatment of children at home, 43, 86
marriage, 39, 60, 61, 62, 97, 106, 121,
122; connection with migration, 63;
consummation of, 63; delaying of, 61;
good, facilitation of, 23; exogamy, 23;
factor in boys’ movement, 40
maturity of children, 8
Mbilla, Ayaraga, 20
Mead, Margaret, Coming of Age in Samoa, 2
Mende ethnic group, belief in learning, 50
metal recycling, children’s work in, 92
methodologies of research, 44–6
migrant identity, production of, 70–1
migrant life, navigation of, 85–100
migration: as learning experience, 98, 126;
as part of social fabric of lives, 120; as
process of social learning, 86; as vital
conjuncture, 119; chain migration, logic
of, 74–5; concept of, vii, 1–19; contexts of,
20–41; educational need as driver of,
104–5; histories of, 25–8; initiated by
children, 54, 112; models of, 11–13; of
children (as understood by children,
viii; independent, 25, 92 (use of term,
vii); of rural children, reasons for, 42–6;
prevention of, 117; viewed as deviance
and danger, 127; viewed negatively, 49);
to cities, 26; viewed as rite of passage,
114 see also poverty, as driving factor in
migration
Millennium Development Goals, 33
minimum age for admission into
employment, 4
mobile phones, 62
mobilities paradigm, 44
mobility: and education, 49–53; and
family crisis, 55–7; at destination,
99–103; central to West Africans’
welfare strategies, 2; compulsion to, 54;
concept of, vii, 11; inter-household, 18;
negotiated, 60–3; offered to children,
10–11; to find work, 46–8; to ‘help’, 53–5
mobility–migration nexus, 11–13
money: extorted from migrants, 80; given by
parents, 77; given for safekeeping, 85; of
children, 32
moral panic about child welfare, 68
Moses, 1
Mossi, 90
mothers, children’s concern for welfare of,
122
moving see mobility
na puure (aunt), 95, 96
negotiation, 95, 114; of social position of
child, 99; of status, 123–5
networks of migrants, journeying within,
83–4
new social worlds, introductions to, 65–84
new spaces, arrival in, 81–3
Nokwende, 35, 50
non-payment of work, of girls, 97
Northern Region (Ghana), 105
orphans, 56, 85, 95
Ouagadougou, 39, 42, 47, 50, 68, 69, 70, 75,
78, 82, 84, 85, 91, 92, 93, 96, 97, 100, 101,
102, 103, 105, 108, 122; evening classes
in, 105
Ousman, 73
parent–child relations, 3
parental migration, impact of, 13
parenthood, negotiation of, 10
148
Rahid, 102
Rasmane, 88, 94, 98
relatedness, breadth of notion, 74
repatriation of children, 77
return to villages, 105
ricefields, of children, 32, 59
risk minimization, strategies for, 66
rites of passage, constitution of, 115
running away of children, 58, 60, 75, 77 (of
boys, 61)
rural children, 91
safety mechanisms in migration, 76–81
Sakora-Mapong, village, 81
Savannah, West African, 23, migration
patterns in, 27, 47
school uniform, wearing of, 20
schooling, 70; children doubt value of, 35;
children’s own role in pursuit of, 35;
combined with work, 51; drop-out from,
49, 105, 106, 117–18; enrolment in,
33, 34; in village, 50; involves multiple
considerations, 36; self-paid by children,
112; under-resourcing of schools, 50
seamstresses, girls’ work as, 106
secrecy of departure of children, 75, 124–5
sedentarism, 11, 12
Sedu, 53–4
selfhood, construction of, 96, 98, 123, 124
Senegal: education in, 107; migration of
children in, 43; women’s migration in, 27
Seni, 48
separated children, 17–18
Separated Children in Europe programme, 17
sewing machine, buying of, 52, 55, 86, 88
sex industry, children’s work in, 29
sexual exploitation of children, 4, 13
shoe shiners, children’s work as, 28, 42, 70,
85, 92, 93, 94, 101, 102, 108
Sibo, 47, 48
Sierra Leone, 16
significant adults, 46
slavery, 89
social contexts of migrants, navigation of,
109–10
social networks of children, 66–8, 74; as
way of finding work, 91; important in
establishing apprenticeships, 107
socialization of children, 6
Solange, 53, 56
Sourou province, migration of girls from, 84
spirits, world of, 8
status, negotiation of, 123–5
strategies of children, 107, 114, 119–23, 127
street children, 2; in Accra, 56
street vending, children’s work in, 93, 101
structural functionalism, 16
success, construction of, 109
successful migration, 121
Sudan, boys, activities in, 69
tactical choices of child migrants, 125–7
tailoring: as girls’ work, 38; children’s work
in, 52
149
Index
parenting: multi-sited, 9–10; political
economy of, 59
parents, ix, 21; acting in children’s best
interests, 61, 124; alternative, 127; ask
children to delay migration, 125; birth
parents, 16, 44, 113, 116; building houses
for, 121–2; children’s concern for welfare
of, 122; classificatory, 57; definition of,
8–9; disagree with migration decisions,
72; get children ‘used to work’, 89; missed
by children, 85; permission not sought for
leaving, 75; permit children’s migration,
61; relations with, 127; social, 14; support
of children’s decisions, 76, 120, 124
participation of children, 6; in welfare
programmes, 46
Pascal, 31
patron–client relations, 59
Paul, 28, 73
Pays Bisa, 27, 30, 32, 38, 39, 40, 46, 47, 60,
62, 72–3, 80, 82, 83, 89, 90, 91, 92, 98,
103, 105, 108, 109, 120; attitudes to
education in, 105, 106
peer networks, facilitate migration, 68–72
peers: importance of peer groups, 96;
travelling with, 84, 89
Plan WARO, 69
police, 103; bribery of, 78–9
porters, children’s work as, 28, 39
pousse-pousse, 93, 100
poverty, 23, 25, 32, 42, 44, 63, 88, 98, 119; as
driving factor in migration, 42, 47, 59,
87, 107
powerlessness of the young, 45, 112
pregnancy, 62; out of marriage, taboo, 40–1,
63
privileging voice of young people, 45–6
prostitution, 4, 92
pugudba (aunt), 82–3
purdah, women’s maintenance of, 93
Talata, 69–70
tamarind juice, selling of, 92
Tempane Natinga village, Upper East region,
27, 32, 48, 50, 58, 62; school enrolment
in, 33, 34; secondary education in, 38
temporality, issue of, 120
Tenkodogo, 35, 37–8
Terre des Hommes, 69, 82; migration study,
68
theft, of employer’s money, 102–3
timber logging, illegal, 52
Topka, 53
trafficking of children, ix, x, 4, 13–14, 29,
54, 66, 75, 76–81, 81–2, 111; measures
against, 77
transition metaphors, 115; gendered nature
of, 114
transitions, possible, multiplicity of, 119–23
trousseau, acquisition of, 39–40, 48, 62, 63,
97
tuteur/tutrice, 82
unaccompanied children, seeking asylum,
17
unemployment, of youth, 103
United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF),
42
United Nations Convention on the Rights of
the Child (UNCRC), vii, 4, 112; criticism
of, 5
United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization (UNESCO), 33;
Education for All initiative, 33
unremunerated work of children, 29
Upper East region (Ghana), 27, 46, 51, 53,
56, 60, 62, 71, 74, 83, 84, 87, 88, 89, 90,
91, 98, 105, 106, 109, 122; attitudes to
education in, 106
urbanization, 83
video clubs, 97
vigilante committees against trafficking, in
Benin, 78
vital conjunctures, concept of, 119, 123
vocational training, 51, 103; abandonment
of, 109; delaying of, 108
vulnerability of children, 125
wages, 101, 102; cheating over, 80, 95, 102,
112; cutting of, 100; delayed payment of,
100; non-payment of, not actionable, 103;
paid annually, 80; paid directly, 99
water: collection of, 24; iced, selling of, 100,
101
witchcraft, fear of, 15
women: as secondary to primary male
migrants, 13; elderly, interest in
fostering arrangements, 16; involvement
in agriculture, 40; migration of, 26–7
(limitations on, 40); reliance on
children’s labour, 94; reliance on family
for support, 120; role in providing food
security, 24; strategies of, viii, work of,
25, 90 (as carers, 120)
work: central part of children’s lives, 31;
migrant, process of children’s entry into,
87–95 see also child labour and children’s
work
working hours of children, 101
Yacou, 92, 100, 102; job-switching of, 101
Yarassou, 1
youth, category of, x; as labour assets, 25
Zambezi valley, 59, 97
Zéké village (Pays Bisa), 27; schooling in, 34
150