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Call for Papers
The Immigration Working Group of the CUNY Graduate Center invites 
submissions for:

(New) Debates on Belonging: A Graduate Student Conference on 
Contemporary Issues in Immigration

Keynote Speaker: Richard Alba
Distinguished Professor of Sociology, CUNY Graduate Center

Friday, October 14, 2011
City University of New York, The Graduate Center
365 Fifth Avenue (at 34th Street), New York, NY

With increasing frequency, questions of belonging have dominated the 
news and public debates on immigration: from the recent introduction of 
anti-immigrant legislation in many states to the spirited organizing 
around the DREAM Act and the controversy sparked by Park51’s proposal 
for a Muslim community center near Ground Zero. The prominence of such 
issues highlights both the fiercely contested nature of belonging in the 
United States as well as how diverse groups - whether veteran or newly 
arrived, documented or undocumented, majority or minority, religious or 
secular - mobilize and advocate for their claims. While Congress debates 
and defers decisions on immigration reform on the national level, the 
question of belonging has distinctly regional and local manifestations. 
  Immigrants and their children are claiming their place in American 
society, in its schools, workplaces and neighborhoods. This conference 
will bring together graduate students whose own research bear on these 
issues.

(New) Debates on Belonging welcomes submissions that explore the many 
facets of immigrant belonging, incorporation and boundary drawing. 
Possible topics include, but are not limited to:
?    Place/region: communities, new destinations, urban areas
?    Policy/activism/public health
?    Cross-national and historical comparisons
?    Culture, the arts, and food
?    Citizenship
?    Dimensions of difference: gender, race, sexuality, religion, the body
?    Social institutions: labor and the economy, education, family, the 
media
?    Transnationalism
?    The second generation
?    Language

Submissions are welcome from graduate students in a variety of 
disciplines, including: sociology, political science, history, 
geography, anthropology, psychology, education, ethnic and gender 
studies, demography, public policy, social welfare, and urban planning.

Please submit an abstract of 250-350 words by Friday, July 15, 2011. 
Participants will be asked to submit a 3-5 page summary of the 
paper/presentation in the fall. Please visit 
www.gc-immigration.org/gcimmigrationconference for more details or click 
http://bit.ly/jFf8bl to access the submission form. Any questions may be 
directed to: [log in to unmask]

Applicants will be notified of final decisions for participation by the 
end of August, 2011.
This event is free and open to the public.

Please send all replies to: [log in to unmask]

Best regards,

Zeynep Selen Artan
Doctoral Student
City University of New York, the Graduate Center
[log in to unmask]

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