Displacement as a Cultural Repertoire for Resilience in Chronic Crisis, in Burundi

Prior to a new outbreak of violence in Burundi in 2015, more than 10000 Burundians had already crossed borders in search of refuge. The anticipatory displacement signalled the need to rethink displacement as contextualised in the country's long history of conflict and decline. In this article, Lidewyde Berckmoes takes a life course perspective based on longitudinal ethnographic research. She shows that displacement has become deeply entangled with other forms of mobility, beyond dualities of forced versus voluntary migration or coping versus adapting. She proposes that past experiences have realised and transformed the collective meaning of displacement in Burundian culture. Today, displacement should be understood as a sedimented, cultural resource and framework. This conceptualisation enables situating displacement practices in lives and communities in chronic crisis. Rather than displacement being central to life projects, it is a rather ordinary cultural repertoire of action employed for resilience.

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This article was published in Population, Space and Place, 32: e70328. https://doi.org/10.1002/psp.70328.

Author(s) / editor(s)

Lidewyde Berckmoes

About the author(s) / editor(s)

Lidewyde Berckmoes, associate professor and senior researcher at the ASCL, investigates long-term and cyclical dynamics of conflict and peace in the Great Lakes Region, particularly Burundi and Rwanda. 
 
 
 
 
 

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