This Place Will Become Home: Refugee Repatriation to Ethiopia

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Cornell University Press, 2004 - 257 pages

How do communities grapple with the challenges of reconstruction after conflicts? In one of the first in-depth ethnographic accounts of refugee repatriation anywhere in the world, Laura C. Hammond follows the story of Ada Bai, a returnee settlement with a population of some 7,500 people. In the days when refugees first arrived, Ada Bai was an empty field along Ethiopia's northwest border, but it is now a viable--arguably thriving--community.

For the former refugees who fled from northern Ethiopia to eastern Sudan to escape war and famine in 1984 and returned to their country of birth in 1993, "coming home" really meant creating a new home out of an empty space. Settling in a new area, establishing social and kin ties, and inventing social practices, returnees gradually invested their environment with meaning and began to consider their settlement home. Hammond outlines the roles that gender and generational differences played in this process and how the residents came to define the symbolic and geographical boundaries of Ada Bai.

Drawing on her fieldwork from 1993 to 1995 and regular shorter periods since, Hammond describes the process by which a place is made meaningful through everyday practice and social interaction. This Place Will Become Home provides insight into how people cope with extreme economic hardship, food insecurity, and limited access to international humanitarian or development assistance in their struggle to attain economic self-sufficiency.

 

Contents

Narratives of Displacement
29
Life in the Sudan Camps
56
A Patchwork of Emplacements
78
The Household Food Economy
108
Birth Death
144
Ada Bais Place in the Wider World
176
The EthiopiaEritrea War in Ada Bai
222
Tigrinya and Amharic Glossary
235
Index
249
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About the author (2004)

Laura C. Hammond is Assistant Professor of International Development and Anthropology at Clark University.

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