Recent trends in irregular maritime immigration to the Canary Islands
Date
2020Abstract
The recent intensification in irregular maritime migrations
in the Atlantic route through the Canary Islands, which is
employed to reach the European mainland from Africa,
coincides in time with the presence of the coronavirus
pandemic and incorporates some novelties involving a flow
that has been present in the archipelago’s evolution for
almost three decades. It also exhibits many similarities with
the permanent manifestation of this influx, even though the
scant planning and weak response initially implemented in an
effort to comprehensively manage this migration has placed
the phenomenon at the forefront of the current affairs and
debate in the region. As a result, a social context of enormous
uncertainty due to the health and economic crisis, the direct
and almost real-time knowledge of the outcome of many
crossings thanks to social media, together with the confusion
sown by how this mobility is being managed, all raise the
need to reconsider its analysis in order to ascertain its current
characteristics and keys to its understanding.