*Please note that due to high levels of interest the
venue for this
event has been changed to UEL’s Stratford Campus, Room AE.1.01
Academy of Social Sciences Refugee Issues Study Group:
Inaugural Event
with
The Centre for Narrative Research, UEL
and
The Centre for Research on Migration, Refugees and Belonging,
UEL
Refugees, Belonging and Society
Monday 12th December 2016, 5 – 7pm
University of East London, Stratford Campus, Room AE.1.01
Stratford Campus is located on Water
Lane, London E15 4LZ. For directions and a map please follow the link.
A panel discussion on contemporary issues around refugees in the UK and European contexts, open to AcSS
Fellows and to the wider public.
This event goes beyond ‘crisis discourse’ about refugees to explore possible positive narratives about refugees within a new Europe; the
need for a two-way approach to ‘integration’; the political making and unmaking of ‘migrants’ and ‘refugees’, particularly children; and the consequences for refugee issues of new populisms across the world.
Panel speakers:
Heaven Crawley, FAcSS (Coventry
University): Unravelling the Mediterranean migration crisis, and building positive narratives about migration and diversity
Jenny Phillimore, FAcSS (Birmingham
University): Integration in times of crisis
Nando Sigona (Birmingham University):
The EU's 'refugee crisis' and the production of illegality and vulnerability among migrants and refugees
Nira Yuval-Davis, FAcSS (University
of East London): The refugees crisis,’everyday bordering’ and autochthonic politics of belonging
Discussant:
Avtar Brah, FAcSS (Birkbeck College)
Chair:
Corinne Squire, FAcSS (University of East London)
To book your place(s) please follow the Eventbrite link:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/refugees-belonging-and-society-tickets-29644532595
Following the event, there will be an Inaugural meeting of the Academy of Social Sciences Study Group on
Refugee Issues from 7 – 8pm.
Abstracts
Heaven Crawley: Unravelling the Mediterranean migration crisis, and building positive narratives about migration and diversity
Abstract tba
Jenny Phillimore: Integration in times of crisis
The arrival of over 1 million refugees in Europe in 2015 has been described as a crisis
by politicians, the media and policymakers. Responses to the crisis have been largely reactive with focus upon short-term goals such as reducing numbers and redistribution. Discourse about the challenges and opportunities represented by the arrival of refugees
range from concerns about the loss of Europe’s cultural identity and risks to security through to refugees being viewed as a labour force that will aid economic growth threatened by aging societies. The extent to which opportunities can be realised depends
upon the nature of integration policy and practice across Europe. Yet at the current time the EU does not have a common integration policy and many countries lack an integration programme. In this paper I use data taken from interviews with refugees to argue
that integration is only effective if it’s genuinely bi-directional. I contend that co-ordinated and intensive approaches to integration adopting a two-way approach are key to turning the crisis into an opportunity and that integration must begin at the moment
of arrival to Europe.
Nando Sigona: The EU's 'refugee crisis' and the production of illegality and vulnerability among migrants and refugees
Drawing on two ESRC-funded studies on the Mediterranean migration crisis (MEDMIG) and the transitions to adulthood of unaccompanied minors (Becoming Adult), the paper will explore
the nexus between policy responses to the so-called ‘refugee crisis’ in the EU and the production of illegalized and precarious subjects. It addresses the ‘crisis’ as agonistic terrain where competing political agendas are articulated and highlights how they
impact on boat migrants who crossed the Mediterranean irregularly to reach the EU’s southern shores. It explores in particular the position of migrant/refugee children and the issues surrounding their visibility and invisibility of segments of this population
and its implications in terms of policy responses and migrant experiences.
Nira Yuval-Davis: 'The refugees crisis,’everyday bordering’ and autochthonic politics of belonging
Attitudes in the UK and beyond to the 'refugees crisis' and migrants in general need to be analysed in the context of top-down government's policies and bottom-up populist political
projects. I argue that both need to be seen
as responses to a neo-liberal double crisis of governability and governmentality, that also caused 'Brexit' and the election of Donald Trump as the president of the USA.