> Final CfP: Intra-EU Mobilities: Governance, Bordering and Resistance
>
> 8th Nordic Geographers Meeting in Trondheim, Norway, June 16 – 19 2019
>
> Session Convenors: Kathy Burrell, University of Liverpool and Kathryn Cassidy, Northumbria University
>
> With so much attention being drawn to the spectacle (de Genova 2002, 2013) at the external borders of the EU, and the shifting transfigurations of Fortress Europe (Kofman and Sales, 1992) as it is ‘tested’ by the ongoing trauma of the so called ‘European refugee crisis’, it is easy to recognise, and juxtapose, the privileged mobility status that EU citizens hold, by contrast, within the EU. More and more research, however, has been highlighting that even these most secure of mobile citizens have been facing different a range of bordering practices which are reaching into everyday lives (de Genova, 2018; Yuval-Davis et al, 2018). The position of EU citizens as they move and reside across the block is shaped and sometimes curtailed by a whole series of developments and policies, from welfare bordering and ‘workfare’ initiatives, to the uncertainty brought about by political developments such as the UK’s Brexit move. In this session we wish to explore the kinds of precarities faced by mobile EU citizens, how these kinds of mobilities are governed differently in different EU states, the socially differentiated experiences of these EU citizens, and how these kinds of policies and vulnerabilities are confronted and resisted.
>
> Papers are invited which consider a range of theoretical frameworks and empirical case-studies from different countries, possibly including:
>
> – Different, and changing policies towards EU migrants in EU member states
>
> – Grey areas or zones and the layering of complexity – stratified European citizenship and overlapping mobilities, e.g. Schengen, EEA countries, regional free movement arrangements
>
> – The imaginaries framing European citizenship and mobility, postcoloniality and race
>
> – Welfare and workfare bordering policies and how they are differentially experienced in everyday life
>
> – Other kinds of everyday bordering
>
> – Intersectional impacts of different policies
>
> – Emerging resistances to different bordering practices
>
> Please email proposed paper abstracts of around 200 words to [log in to unmask] and [log in to unmask] by 10th January 2019.
This message is intended solely for the addressee and may contain confidential and/or legally privileged information. Any use, disclosure or reproduction without the sender’s explicit consent is unauthorised and may be unlawful. If you have received this message in error, please notify Northumbria University immediately and permanently delete it. Any views or opinions expressed in this message are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of the University. Northumbria University email is provided by Microsoft Office365 and is hosted within the EEA, although some information may be replicated globally for backup purposes. The University cannot guarantee that this message or any attachment is virus free or has not been intercepted and/or amended.
########################################################################
To unsubscribe from the CRIT-GEOG-FORUM list, click the following link:
https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?SUBED1=CRIT-GEOG-FORUM&A=1
|