posted on 2021-09-24, 08:10authored byPaul Darby, James Esson, Christian Ungruhe
Book abstract: Africans have long graced football fields around the world. The success of icons such as Samuel Eto'o, Didier Drogba and Mohamed Salah has fueled the migratory projects of countless male youth across the continent. Using over a decade of ethnographic research, African football migration traces the historical, geographical and regulatory features of this migratory process.While a fortunate few do forge a successful career overseas, the book reveals how the vast majority experience involuntary immobility. Meanwhile others who are able to 'go outside' encounter truncated careers at the margins of the industry followed by precarious post-playing career lives. In unpacking these issues, African football migration offers fresh perspectives on the transnational strategies deployed by youth and young men striving to improve their life chances in post-colonial Africa, and the role that mobility, imagined and enacted, plays in these struggles.
History
School
Social Sciences and Humanities
Department
Geography and Environment
Published in
African football migration: aspirations, experiences and trajectories
This book chapter was published in the book African football migration: aspirations, experiences and trajectories. The publication is available on the publisher's website at: https://manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk/9781526120267/african-football-migration/