"Hewan Girma's book is an exciting, timely, and pioneering work on the experiences of Ethiopian non-migrants, returnees, and repeat migrants. It provides a transnational perspective for a '360-degree view' of migration experiences to better understand the emotional labor undertaken by both stayees and migrants. Counterstreams in Migration is an excellent contribution to migration studies as well as to the emerging scholarship on African diaspora studies."—Cawo Abdi, Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Minnesota and Research Fellow at the University of Pretoria, and author of Elusive Jannah: The Somali Diaspora and a Borderless Muslim Identity"Counterstreams in Migration is a major intervention into the field of migration studies. Hewan Girma examines non-migrants, return migrants, and repeat migrants to reshape how we understand movements of people and demonstrates that mobility is a dynamic process rather than a one-time event. Girma's attention to storytelling, vibrant narratives from migrants, and the emotional dimensions of migration make Counterstreams in Migration a lively read." —Daniel Mains, Wick Cary Professor of Anthropology and African Studies at the University of Oklahoma, and author of Under Construction: Technologies of Development in Urban Ethiopia"In Counterstreams in Migration, Hewan Girma smartly shifts our analytical focus not only to the multidirectional and agentic nature of migration (who migrates, who returns, who does not migrate, etc.) but also to equally important Black mobilities (migrants and non-migrants alike). In doing so, she provides an essential intervention in critical migration studies. Highly recommended!"—Jean Beaman, author of Citizen Outsider: Children of North African Immigrants in France