PUBLI : Nichola Khan et Johann Cailhol, « Are migration routes disease transmission routes ? Understanding Hepatitis and HIV transmission amongst undocumented Pakistani migrants and asylum seekers in a Parisian suburb », Anthropology & Medicine, Avril 2020

Abstract

Drawing on hospital-based inter­views and field­work in a deprived Pari­sian suburb, this paper analyses the spatio-temporal dyna­mics of risk, expo­sure, and mobi­li­ties in indi­vi­dual stories of undo­cu­mented Pakis­tani male migrants, and asylum seekers—receiving treat­ment for single and combined diag­noses of HIV, and Hepa­titis C and B. Invi­ting align­ments with the ‘sexual’ turn in mobi­lity studies, it prio­ri­tises the inter­face of all-male undo­cu­mented migra­tion, mobi­lity, sexua­lity, and homo­so­cia­lity in circum­scri­bing disease trans­mis­sion geneao­lo­gies. It ques­tions the extent to which illegal migra­tion routes are trans­mis­sion routes, and risk envi­ron­ments assume different levels of inten­sity in everyday life in Pakistan, during the journey, and in France. It empha­sises inade­qua­tely addressed epide­mics of HIV and hepa­titis in Pakistan, the signi­fi­cance of unequal routes to migrant heal­th­care in France, and the trans­na­tional adap­ta­tion of homo­so­cial and sexual beha­viours, inclu­ding MSM. These factors inter­play with inten­si­fied vulne­ra­bi­li­ties rela­ting to child­hood sexual abuse, family traumas, sexual risks related to illegal migra­tion and undo­cu­mented status in France, chronic stresses leading to depleted mental and physical health, and restric­tions on hete­ro­sexual sex facing margi­na­lised migrants. Further, temporal vulne­ra­bi­li­ties relate to the colo­nial crimi­na­li­sa­tion of homo­sexua­lity in Pakistan, wides­pread sexual violence—and forms of contem­po­rary exclu­sion and hosti­lity regar­ding Muslim migrants in Europe. Parti­cu­larly, we empha­sise the paradox, and need to sensi­ti­vely address, a complex confluence of hidden risks that are deeply embedded in ethnic commu­ni­ties of soli­da­rity and support. The findings trouble the tendency to parti­tion global hepa­titis and HIV preva­lence rates by ‘deve­loped’ and ‘deve­lo­ping’ country variation.

L’ar­ticle est à retrouver dans son inté­gra­lité sur le site de la revue ou ci-dessous :

Are_​migration_​routes_​disease_​transmission_​routes_​U