From June, 1962 through January, 1964, women in the city of Boston lived in fear of the infamous Strangler. Over those 19 months, he committed 13 known murders-crimes that included vicious sexual assaults and bizarre stagings of the victims' bodies. After the largest police investigation in Massachusetts history, handyman Albert DeSalvo confessed and went to prison. Despite DeSalvo's full confession and imprisonment, authorities would never put him on trial for the actual murders. And more t ...
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Ep.2 (S4): Ayham Dalal about Refugees as Architects
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Contenu fourni par The Migration Podcast. Tout le contenu du podcast, y compris les épisodes, les graphiques et les descriptions de podcast, est téléchargé et fourni directement par The Migration Podcast ou son partenaire de plateforme de podcast. Si vous pensez que quelqu'un utilise votre œuvre protégée sans votre autorisation, vous pouvez suivre le processus décrit ici https://fr.player.fm/legal.
In this episode Amanda Alencar speaks to Ayham Dalal about how refugees living in camps adapt the space around them to fit their needs. Ayham Dalal is an urban planner and architect specialised in the field of Forced Migration. He is the author of the book “From Shelters to Dwellings: The Zaatari Refugee Camp” published by Transcript Verlag (2022). He has been a research fellow at the Refugee Studies Center in Oxford University, the CRC “Re-Figurations of Space” at TU Berlin, and CNRS in France. Currently, he is a Lecturer at the Architecture and Urban Design at the German University in Cairo. More information on Ayham and about the film mentioned in this episode can be found here: https://www.ayhamdalal.com/about/
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52 episodes
Manage episode 372626342 series 3359153
Contenu fourni par The Migration Podcast. Tout le contenu du podcast, y compris les épisodes, les graphiques et les descriptions de podcast, est téléchargé et fourni directement par The Migration Podcast ou son partenaire de plateforme de podcast. Si vous pensez que quelqu'un utilise votre œuvre protégée sans votre autorisation, vous pouvez suivre le processus décrit ici https://fr.player.fm/legal.
In this episode Amanda Alencar speaks to Ayham Dalal about how refugees living in camps adapt the space around them to fit their needs. Ayham Dalal is an urban planner and architect specialised in the field of Forced Migration. He is the author of the book “From Shelters to Dwellings: The Zaatari Refugee Camp” published by Transcript Verlag (2022). He has been a research fellow at the Refugee Studies Center in Oxford University, the CRC “Re-Figurations of Space” at TU Berlin, and CNRS in France. Currently, he is a Lecturer at the Architecture and Urban Design at the German University in Cairo. More information on Ayham and about the film mentioned in this episode can be found here: https://www.ayhamdalal.com/about/
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52 episodes
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1 Ep2(S5) How can film and digital storytelling be used in migration research? 24:37
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It’s an exciting time for qualitative research methods these days. Migration scholars are pushing the boundaries of traditional interview techniques, with the aim to amplify the voices of marginalized groups as well as to influence policy and reach wider audiences. In this episode you’ll hear Silindile Mlilo interview two researchers who are using creative and non-traditional research methods. Isabel Rose Soloaga will talk about the use of participatory research and film through her forthcoming documentary, Growing Up in America: Life After the Taliban. The film is a personal story following two young girls and their family, who were forced to evacuate Kabul after the Taliban rose to power in 2021. Isabel told us: “Everyone has a camera and a platform today through social media, so I think debates on how to use these tools in an ethical way, while inviting people to reach out to their new neighbors -- the key message of my film.” Ntokozo Yingwana will discuss her use of digital story telling – which I learned is, the growing practice of everyday people using digital tools to tell their stories. In her PhD research project “Queering Sex Work and Mobility in South Africa: How does Migration and mobility Influence Genderded Sexualities in Sex Work? Duh-kozo conducted data collection through a digital storytelling workshop and WhatsApp. She also worked with two of people from her research participant group, who are sex workers, as research assistants. Isabel Rose Soloaga is a Research Fellow at the University of Sussex School of Law, Politics and Sociology in the UK and an Independent Documentary Filmmaker Ntokozo Yingwana is a Doctoral researcher at the African Centre for Migration and Society at Wits University in South Africa. Are you interested in reading more? Yingwana, N. (2024). Sex Work in Africa. The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Sexuality Education. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-95352-2_83-1. Yingwana, N. (2022). Queering Sex Work and Mobility. Anti-Trafficking Review, 19, 66–86. https://doi.org/10.14197/atr.201222195. Vidima, N., Tenga, R., & Yingwana, N. (2022). Reflections on the use of FPAR as a research methodology for sex worker (and key populations) research. Global Public Health, 17(10), 2604–2616. https://doi.org/10.1080/17441692.2022.2110915. Life After the Taliban: Kabul to California: A Cinematic Exploration of New Beginnings by The Reel Truth https://videoconsortium.org/mag/thereeltruth05 Watch our short film: https://vimeo.com/801454823?share=copy After narrowly escaping from Taliban-controlled Afghanistan in August 2021, 21 year old Ali and his family begin a new life in Northern California. Growing up in America: Life After the Taliban, is an intimate documentary short following one family's journey of building home after war. Directed by Isabel Soloaga (https://www.isabelsoloaga.com) Co-Directed by Najaf Ali Mohammady ○ Website: https://www.lifeaftertalibandoc.com ○ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lifeaftertalibdoc ○ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lifeaftertalib_doc/ ○ You can support Isabel's upcoming feature film by donating at https://bit.ly/LifeAfterTalib_Doc…

1 Ep.1(S5):Dublin, solidarity and age. How do these factors matter in the EU asylum system? 28:03
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Welcome back! You’re listening to the first episode of the 5th season of IMISCOE’s Migration Podcast. If you’re listening for the first time: IMISCOE is the largest European network of scholars in the area of migration and integration, with 69 member institutes and over 1400 scholars from all over the world. And this is the network’s podcast, where we hear migration researchers talk about their latest research and why it matters. As in the past seasons, we have an amazing team of interviewers who are migration scholars themselves. And this season, you’ll hear more episodes with them talking to 2 or more researchers who are working on similar themes, together. The conversation you'll hear is about concepts in migration governance that are often taken for granted – but when you dig a bit deeper, or wider, like the researchers in this episode have done, it’s clear that not everyone has the same idea of what they really mean or their implications in practice. You’ll hear Liberty Chee speaking to Eleonora Milazzo, who has been working on what exactly “solidarity” means between European Union Member States when it comes to the asylum system. We may have a sense that so far, it’s been “failing”, but what does solidarity really mean in practice? Ulrike Bialas also joins the conversation, to talk about her research on how age classification determines the lives of young asylum seekers in Germany. How do they experience this legal focus on age, especially when many do not actually have documents that can prove their dates of birth and may not know them, anyways. I also found the practical challenges of conducting their research, that both Elenora and Ulrike talk about, particularly interesting. Just a last note: both of them talk about research to do with migration governance in Europe, and both mention “the Dublin System”. In case you need a refresher: the Dublin System is made up of several procedures that determine responsibility for assessing asylum claims in EU Member States. Further readings: Bialas, Ulrike. 2023. Forever 17: Coming of Age in the German Asylum System. Chicago: University of Chicago Press Bialas, Ulrike. 2023. "Ambiguous Ages, Ambivalent Youths: How Asylum Seekers in Germany Navigate Age Categorization." Migration Politics 2, no. 1: 003. Bialas, Ulrike. 2024. "Who is a minor? Age assessments of refugees in Germany and the classificatory multiplicity of the state." Ethnic and Racial Studies: 1-23. Bialas, Ulrike, Johanna M. Lukate, and Steven Vertovec. 2024. "Contested categories in the context of international migration: introduction to the special issue." Ethnic and Racial Studies: 1-23. Milazzo, E. (2024). Refugee Protection and Solidarity. The Duties of EU Member States. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2023. https://global.oup.com/academic/product/refugee-protection-and-solidarity-9780192885715?cc=be&lang=en&# Also have a look at the Migration Research to Policy Co-Lab https://migrationresearchtopolicy.eu/…

1 REPOST Borders and Belonging: The rise of digital nomads 44:01
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While we take a break from our regular programming before our fifth season – we have a special treat for you! We have the honour of offering you an episode from the fantastic podcast "Border & Belonging, a CERC Migration podcast", which is produced by the Canada Excellence Research Chair in Migration and Integration at Toronto Metropolitan University. The episode is about the rise of digital nomads – how do “digital nomads” disrupt definitions and theories we have about migration and the nation state? From Lisbon, to Chang Mai, to Barbados, what are the impacts of this form of human mobility? What insights do we have from research on this phenomenon? Are you interested in hearing more Borders & Belonging episodes? This is where you can find them: https://www.torontomu.ca/cerc-migration/borders-and-belonging/#!accordion-1729180383471-season-3 Follow the Borders & Belonging podcast here: X: @cercmigration, host: @maggie_perzyna LI: Borders & Belonging Podcast, host: Maggie Perzyna FB: https://www.facebook.com/CERCMigrationFB IG: @cercmigration Please stay tuned for the Migration Podcast’s next season! We look forward to bringing you a fresh slate of interviews on the latest migration research starting in the next few months.…

1 Ep.14 (S4): Mathew Creighton discusses the resilience of xenophobia 20:56
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Announcement: The deadline for submitting a paper proposal for IMISCOE’s 2025 conference has been extended to October 8. All information can be found here: https://www.imiscoe.org/events/imiscoe-events/2117-22nd-imiscoe-annual-conference ************** In this episode, you’ll hear Asya Pisarevaskaya’s conversation with Mathew Creighton about his recent book “Hidden Hate: The Resilience of Xenophobia.” Mathew talks about how our opinions and behaviours, for example when it comes to race and ethnicity, can vary greatly whether they are being expressed in public or not. In other words, people may have an opinion or belief, but they may show another one, through “masking”. The research behind the book helps us understand anti-immigrant attitudes in countries including in Ireland, the Netherlands, Norway, the UK, and the US, and how we can go beyond a “majority vs the minority” perspective to better understand the persistent marginalization of minority groups. Mathew Creighton is associate professor in the School of Sociology at University College Dublin. He is also the national coordinator of the European Social Survey in Ireland and the principal investigator of a Horizon Europe project, EqualStrength, which assesses prejudice in work, childcare, and housing throughout Europe. If you enjoy the Migration Podcast, please consider “liking” and “following” us. Thank you for listening!…

1 Ep.13 (S4): Ivana Kyliushyk speaks about Ukrainian emigration to Poland 19:47
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“Even the market next to the station was called Warsaw Market.” In this episode you’ll hear Louise Ryan interview Ivanna Kyliushyk about the situation of Ukrainian migrants in Poland, before and since the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. She talks about how NGOs and local governments have stepped forward to provide aid and the urgent need for a long-term strategy to integrate Ukrainians into the economic and political fabric of Polish society. We also hear a bit about her personal experience as a Ukrainian, migrant, and researcher in Poland. Ivana Kyliushyk is a political scientist and researcher at the Centre for Research on Social Change and Human Mobility, also referred to as CRASH, at Kozminski University in Poland. Her current research is on migrant inclusion and political participation, and focuses on Ukrainian and women’s migration. If you enjoy the Migration Podcast, please consider liking and following us. Thank you for listening!…

1 Introducing: Migration Talks - The Impact Of Migration Narratives On EU Policymaking 35:44
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Check out the "Migration Talks" podcast and their recent episode on the impact of migration narratives on EU policymaking, just in time before the EP elections this month. In this episode, the "Migration Talks" team explores how migration narratives shape the upcoming European elections and influence policymaking in Brussels. These narratives are central to discussions and policies across Europe, especially as far-right parties amplify them as security threats for electoral gains. What are the prevailing migration narratives within the EU, and how do they impact the policymaking processes of the European Union? These and more questions will be answered by Florian Trauner, Co-director of BIRMM and Omar Ba who is a community organizer, activist and politician. You will find the Migration Talks podcast here: Migration Talks: https://birmm.research.vub.be/migration-talks-a-podcast-by-birmm…

1 Ep.12 (S4): Pablo Ceriani on migrant child protection in Latin America & the Caribbean 18:56
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“There's a total contradiction between irregularity and child protection…not doing anything, or rather the opposite, blocking the access to a resident permit is a children's rights violation, in my opinion, because it leads to vulnerability, it leads to some kind of protection issues, social exclusion, and so on.” In this episode, we hear Alexandra Castro talk with Pablo Ceriani about the increasing and changing migration patterns of children across Latin America. Pablo talks about how there has been a general increase in capacity and willingness to deal with migrant child protection in the region; however, he also argues that xenophobia and public narratives that criminalize migrants are influencing new policies and laws and this increases vulnerability for all migrants, including children. Pablo Ceriani is a lawyer and has a PhD in Human Rights. He is currently the Director of the Master of Migration and Human Rights in Latin America and the Caribbean at the National University of Lanús, in Argentina. He's also a member of the UN Committee on Migrant Workers. If you enjoy the Migration Podcast, please consider “liking” and “following” us. Thank you for listening!…

1 Ep.11 (S4): G.Tsourapas & K.Sadiq on the transnational social contract in the Global South 21:43
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“Theoretical categories that we have had from this emphasis on South North have to be rethought, or maybe we need innovation and new categories to be introduced.” In this episode, Roos Derrix chats with Gerasimos Tsourapas and Kamal Sadiq about their latest project on the politics of South-South labour migration, and the development of a transnational social contract between states and their migrant populations. They explain how, in the context of labour migration to the Gulf Cooperation Council states, migrant agency is curtailed through surveillance and labour commodification, while novel forms of dependence are created between countries of origin and destination. Gerasimos and Kamal argue that innovative methods and further work on postcolonial migration states are needed to further untangle and to understand these practices. Kamal Sadiq is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science and the Director of the Center for Global Peace and Conflict Studies at the University of California, Irvine. Gerasimos Tsourapas is a Professor of International Relations in the School of social and political sciences at the University of Glasgow. Are you interested in reading Kamal and Gerasimos work? Look at these: Malit, F. T. and Tsourapas, G. (2021) Migration diplomacy in the Gulf – non-state actors, cross border mobility, and the United Arab Emirates. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 47(11), pp. 2556-2577. (doi: 10.1080/1369183X.2021.1878875) Malit, F. T. and Tsourapas, G. (2021) Weapons of the weak? South-south migration and power politics in the Philippines-GCC corridor. Global Studies Quarterly, 1(3), ksab010. (doi: 10.1093/ isagsq/ksab010) Sadiq, K., & Tsourapas, G. (2021). The postcolonial migration state. European Journal of International Relations, 27(3), 884-912. https://doi.org/10.1177/13540661211000114 Sadiq, K., & Tsourapas, G. (2023). The Transnational Social Contract in the Global South. International Studies Quarterly, 67(4), sqad088. https://doi.org/10.1093/isq/sqad088 Sadiq, K., & Tsourapas, G. (2023). Labour coercion and commodification: from the British Empire to postcolonial migration states. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 1-20. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2023.2269778 Tsourapas, G. (2021) Migration Diplomacy in the Middle East and North Africa: Power, Mobility, and the State. Manchester University Press: Manchester. ISBN 9781526132093 Tsourapas, G. (2020) The long arm of the Arab state. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 43(2), pp. 351-370. (doi: 10.1080/01419870.2019.1585558) The research behind this interview was funded by the UK Research and Innovation (grant reference no. EP/X019667/1) If you enjoy the Migration Podcast, please consider “liking” and “following” us. Thank you for listening!…

1 Ep.10 (S4): Mira Burmeister-Rudolph on Kerala's social protection policies for emigrants in the Gulf 21:45
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”I think [it is important to] stress again that colonial legacies also really determine how South to South migration is being structured today.” In this episode, Mira Burmeister-Rudolph speaks with Liberty Chee about Kerala’s social protection policies for Indian migrants to the Gulf, the latter’s relationships with diasporic communities and how migrant status is shaped by and shapes citizen-state relations. She also shares with us how she became interested in migration in South Asia, and her experiences doing research during the Covid-19 pandemic. During the interview, Mira and Liberty mention NORKA several times. NORKA stands for the Department of Non-Resident Keralites Affairs. Mira Burmeister-Rudolph is an early career scholar at the University of Amsterdam. In her research, she explores the plurality of actors involved in the development and implementation of policies towards low-wage labor emigrants in the context of migrant-origin states. She investigates South-South migration, with a focus on migration from South Asian countries to the Gulf Cooperation Council region. Her research focus lies at the intersection of citizenship, social policy, and diaspora studies. The piece mentioned about Kerala is “A transnational social contract: Social protection policies toward Non-Resident Keralites” in Migration Studies. https://academic.oup.com/migration/article/11/2/286/7072785 The piece on citizen-state relations is “Policy differentiation and the politics of belonging in India’s emigrant and emigration policies”. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13621025.2023.2244451…

1 Ep.9 (S4): Loren Landau reflects on migration studies and migration to African cities 21:53
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“What does that [balancing research objectives and donor priorities] mean for us training the next generation and for people entering the field? I think what it requires….is that we all have to work in multiple registers.” In this episode we hear Silindile Mlilo interview Loren Landau about his latest research on African cities. He talks about how patterns of migration to cities in Africa is distinct from urbanization in other parts of the world. He has been looking the regulation of space and how migrants relate to cities, as well as issues around ethics of inclusion and visibility. Loren also talks about how he sees the current state of migration studies and the importance of keeping space for research that shifts perspectives away from donor priorities. Loren Landau is Professor of Migration and Development at the University of Oxford, and at the African Centre for Migration & Society at the University of the Witwatersrand. His interdisciplinary research includes the topics of representation, multi-scale governance, and the transformation of socio-political communities across the Global South. He is currently overseeing a multi-year initiative exploring mobility, temporality, and urban politics in Ghana, Kenya, and South Africa. Below is a selection of Loren's work. 1. N. Iskander and L.B. Landau. 2022. The Centre Cannot Hold: Arrival, Margins, and the Politics of Ambivalence,’ Migration Studies 10(2): 97-111 2. L.B. Landau. 2021. ‘Asynchronous Mobilities: Hostility, Hospitality, and Possibilities of Justice,’ Mobilities. 16(5): 656-669. DOI: 10.1080/17450101.2021.1967092 3. J.P. Misago and L.B. Landau. 2022. ‘Running Them Out of Time: Xenophobia, Violence, and Co-Authoring Spatiotemporal Exclusion in South Africa.’ Geopolitics. DOI: 10.1080/14650045.2022.2078707 4. J.P. Misago and L.B. Landau. 2022. ‘Running Them Out of Time: Xenophobia, Violence, and Co-Authoring Spatiotemporal Exclusion in South Africa.’ Geopolitics. DOI: 10.1080/14650045.2022.2078707 Loren would like to acknowledge the following persons for contributing to his work: Caroline Wanjiku Kihato, Mary Setrana, Mary Muyonga, Carina Kanbi, Kabiri Bule, and Brittany Birberick…

1 Ep.8 (S4): Alejandra Díaz de León on "road families" en route to the Mexico-US border 19:16
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“Migrating is a very difficult and dangerous thing if you're doing it undocumented, but also it's a very beautiful thing because you're walking, you're meeting people, you're talking… I hope this is not romanticizing the pain they experience, but I think... my book tries to show that they experience both. They are people, they are complete people, who are enduring the journey and sometimes enjoying the journey while walking alongside other people and interacting and expressing things.” In this episode, we hear Itzel Eguiluz speaking with Alejandra Díaz de León about her book “Walking Together: Central Americans and Transit Migration through Mexico”, which was published in 2023. Alejandra talks about how the journey of Central American migrants walking north, through Mexico, is about much more than just having practical strategies to survive the journey –solidarity, trust and social bonds that are formed along the way, can also be valuable elements of the experience. We hear about what Alejandra calls “road families” and how during their journeys, migrants form communities around their common understanding and experiences of crossing Mexico. Alejandra would like to acknowledge Dr. Yasemin Soysal and Dr Carlos Gigoux for their contribution/support. Alejandra's research benefitted from funding through the CONACyT scholarship and SLAS. Alejandra Díaz de León is an assistant professor of migration and violence at the Center for Sociological Studies at the Colegio de Mexico, in Mexico City. She holds a PhD in Sociology and an MA in Human Rights from the University of Texas. Her research focuses on human rights, solidarity, and the creation of bonds, trust, and cooperation among strangers during contexts of violence and uncertainty, like the transit of Central Americans through Mexico and to the United States. Also check out these publications by Alejandra: Díaz de León, Alejandra. “Family Dynamics, Violence and Transit Migration through Mexico.” Third World Quarterly 0, no. 0 (May 16, 2023): 1–15. https://doi.org/10.1080/01436597.2023.2193321. Díaz de León, Alejandra. “Why Do You Trust Him? The Construction of the Good Migrant in the Mexican Migrant Route.” European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies 111 (2021): 1–17. https://doi.org/10.32992/erlacs.10645. Díaz de León, Alejandra. “Resignation and Resistance: How Do Undocumented Central American Migrants View Detention in Mexico? Journal of Latin American Geography 22, no. 1 (2023): 11–30. Díaz de León, Alejandra. “Keep Them Out! Border Enforcement and Violence since 1986.” In These Ragged Edges: Histories of Violence along the U.S.-Mexico Border, edited by Andrew J. Torget and Gerardo Gurza-Lavalle. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 2022. While you're here – we, at the IMISCOE Migration podcast, would like to give you a recommendation for another, related podcast episode from the “Borders and Belonging” podcast, which is produced by our friends at Toronto Metropolitan University. They are currently releasing their second season, and have a really interesting episode on Mexicans migrants in the US who are from indigenous groups – check it out! This is the link: https://www.torontomu.ca/cerc-migration/borders-and-belonging/#!tab-1699366719120-ep--2…

1 Ep.7 (S4): Biao Xiang On Logistical Power and the constraint of Mobility 18:50
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In this episode, Yixin Zhang interviews Biao Xiang, about how analyzing processes of control over mobility and immobility can help explain the different consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic in Wuhan and Shanghai, in China. This research is from Professor Xiang’s latest paper, called, “Logistical Power and Logistical Violence”. It was recently published in the Journal of Contemporary East Asia Studies. Here is the link: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/24761028.2023.2285022 The paper is available Open Access. Biao Xiang is a Director at the Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, in Halle, Germany. There, he also leads the “Mo lab”, which is dedicated to migration and mobility studies. The lab addresses questions around human experiences and perceptions of mobility, including how social resources, such as human emotions and commitment are organized and distributed. The lab also seeks to prioritize issues that migrants themselves are concerned with, for instance, attachment and sacrifice. Yixin Zhang is a PhD student at the Population Research Center, University of Groningen, the Netherlands. Her research interests include migrants' community participation, social integration, internal migrants in China, and social capital.…

1 Ep.6 (S4): Russell King on researching how and why people migrate, for over 50 years 19:57
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Russell King has been teaching and researching the topic of migration for more than 50 years. In this episode, he is interviewed by Sara Hannafin about thinking beyond the dominate frameworks of how and why people migrate. This ambition has led him to study return migration, retirement migration, student migration, and most recently, migration motivated by love. He also reflects on working with, and being inspired by, his students over the past decades. Russell King is Emeritus Professor of Geography at the University of Sussex in the UK and visiting professor in Migration Studies at Malmo University in Sweden. At Sussex, he founded the Sussex Centre for Migration Research, the MA and PhD programs in migration studies, and was the editor of the Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies from 2001 to 2013. If you enjoy the Migration Podcast, please consider “liking” and “following” us. Thank you for listening!…

1 Ep.5 (S4): Bernadette Kumar speaks about fostering a career across disciplines & sectors 16:40
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* Applications for the 2024 IMISCOE PhD School in Lancashire are open. Apply here before November 26th : https://app.oxfordabstracts.com/stages/6786/submitter More information is available on the IMISCOE website: https://www.imiscoe.org/events/imiscoe-events/1875-2023-imiscoe-phd-school-2 * In this episode, Larisa Ozeryansky speaks to Dr. Bernadette Nirmal Kumar, expert in migration and health, about her career trajectory from working in medicine, to public health policy and pursuing academic research. She talks about how her personal experience of being a migrant has motivated and informed her research and its outputs, and the professional benefits of having a specialization as well as experience in different sectors. Bernadette Nirmal Kumar is a trained medical doctor originally from India. After many years of working for international organizations, she turned to research, and specifically to the topic of migrant health. Among other roles, Dr. Kumar is a researcher at the Norwegian Institute of Public Health and Co-chair of Lancet Migration Europe. Larisa Ozeryansky is a PhD Candidate (University of Washington) and Fulbright scholar in Norway researching refugee health with the Norwegian Institute of Public Health. Her current Fulbright-Norway project is the design and facilitation of a participatory-media workshop/film for Oslo-based youth who arrived to Norway as refugees within the last two years. This project will apply Participatory Art Based Research (PABR), time and physical activity in nature, and digital media education, all with a trauma-informed, healing-centered and equity-based approach, to explore concepts of belonging, identity, and sense-of-place.…

1 Ep.4 (S4): Natalie Brinham On Statelessness And Research Ethics 19:44
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Natalie Brinham talks about the rich field of statelessness studies, how survivors of state crime disrupt dominant discourse around “legal identity”, and her experience of conducting qualitative research with Rohingya in the wake of the genocide in 2017. At that time, she was set to carry-out fieldwork for her PhD, but instead, took a bold step back, and changed her plans to enable a more ethical research process. She says: “when trauma is so fresh and widespread traditional research can sometimes do more harm than good.” The interview was conducted by Samanwita Paul. Dr Natalie Brinham (aka Alice Cowley) is a genocide and state crime scholar. She is coauthor (with Zarni) of the 2014 study titled ‘The Slow Burning Genocide of Myanmar’s Rohingya.’ She has worked for many years in NGOs in the U.K. and Southeast Asia on forced migration, trafficking and statelessness in both frontline service provision roles and research and advocacy roles. She has published policy papers, academic articles, and opeds on statelessness, legal identities and genocide. She completed her PhD in legal studies at Queen Mary University of London in 2022. Understanding genocide as a sociological process, her doctoral thesis explores the central role of state identification schemes in Myanmar’s genocide, from enabling systems of segregation and institutionalised discrimination, to the physical destruction of the group, to identity destruction and the reorganisation of national identities and power relations. Drawing on Rohingya oral histories and narratives relating to their ID cards, the research considers how survivors of state crime disrupt international discourses on statelessness and legal identities for all. In October 2023, Dr Natalie Brinham will begin an ESRC Post Doctoral Fellowship at Migration Mobilities Bristol at the University of Bristol.…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Ep.3 (S4): Koen Leurs On Digital Migration 19:34
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Migrants are natural adopters of mobile technologies. Rob Sharp interviews Koen Leurs about his book Digital Migration . Among other things, they discuss the datafication of migration and that migration researchers need to avoid enabling mechanisms of migration control. Read about the book here: Leurs, K. (2023). Digital migration. London: Sage. https://www.uu.nl/en/publication/digital-migration The book was written with support of the Netherlands Institute of Advanced Studies (NIAS https://nias.knaw.nl/), and the Utrecht University Graduate Gender Programe, the Governing the Digital Society (GDS https://www.uu.nl/en/research/governing-the-digital-society) focus area and the GDS Digital Migration Special Interest Group. Learn more about Koen here: https://www.uu.nl/staff/khaleurs Are you interested in other publications relevant to the discussion? Koen recommends these: Sandberg, M., Rossi, L., Galis, V., & Bak Jørgensen, M. (Eds.) (2022). Research methodologies and ethical challenges in digital migration studies. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan. K. Smets, K. Leurs, M. Georgiou, S. Witteborn & R. Gajjala (Eds.), Handbook of media and migration. London: Sage. M. McAuliffe (Ed.) (2021), Handbook of migration and technology. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar. Also, Koen would like to acknowledge the scholarly communities of IMISCOE, STS Mig@Tec (https://www.sts-migtec.org/), and the European Communication Research and Education Association Diaspora, Migration and the Media section (ECREA DMM https://ecrea.eu/Diaspora-Migration-and-the-Media) for their collegiality, encouragement and inspiration Koen thanks JR for allowing him to include an aerial photograph of their work ‘Migrants. Picnic Across the Border’ (2017) on the cover of the book https://www.jr-art.net/projects/migrants-picnic-across-the-border…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Ep.2 (S4): Ayham Dalal about Refugees as Architects 20:08
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In this episode Amanda Alencar speaks to Ayham Dalal about how refugees living in camps adapt the space around them to fit their needs. Ayham Dalal is an urban planner and architect specialised in the field of Forced Migration. He is the author of the book “From Shelters to Dwellings: The Zaatari Refugee Camp” published by Transcript Verlag (2022). He has been a research fellow at the Refugee Studies Center in Oxford University, the CRC “Re-Figurations of Space” at TU Berlin, and CNRS in France. Currently, he is a Lecturer at the Architecture and Urban Design at the German University in Cairo. More information on Ayham and about the film mentioned in this episode can be found here: https://www.ayhamdalal.com/about/…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Ep.1 (S4): Caroline Wanjiku Kihato speaks about turning data into art 21:59
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We only just get started with Season 4 and there is important news already: -Fiona will be on leave for a while, leaving you in Kate’s capable hands. ("bye bye!"~Fiona) -The annual IMISCOE conference is about to start; we hope to see you in great numbers online or in person in Warsaw from July 3-6th 2023. https://www.imiscoe.org/conference -We have a new podcast team! Follow the IMISCOE channels to learn more about our members. Now…back to business: Have you ever considered translating your research into music or other forms of art? In this episode, Asya Pisarevskaya speaks with Caroline Wanjiku Kihato about how she collaborated with artists to turn stories from her book “Migrant Women of Johannesburg: Life in an in-between City” into a musical composition. Titled “You Will Find Your People Here”, the exhibition at the La Biennale Architettura 2023, is a collaborative of performance, film, composition and artwork by pianist Mareli Stolp (South Africa), sociologist Caroline Wanjiku Kihato (Kenya), composer Clare Loveday (South African) and artist Sedinam Awo Tsegah (Ghana). The project is part of curator’s special project Gender and Geography. The show opens on the 18th May and can be seen until November, 2023. The work is based on Caroline Kihato’s book, Migrant Women of Johannesburg: Everyday Life in an in-between City, (Wits University Press) which explored the lives of women from different parts of the continent who came to live in Johannesburg. It was transformed into a composition by Clare Loveday. Mareli Stolp performed the music at William Kentridge and Bronwyn Lace’s Centre for the Less Good Idea in July 2022, before being chosen for the Biennale. Awo Tsegah joined the project, providing the fabric maps and artwork for the exhibition. Follow this link to learn more about the exhibition at the Venice Biennale: https://www.labiennale.org/en/architecture/2023/gender-geography/caroline-wanjiku-kihato-clare-loveday-and-mareli-stolp-collaboration-sedinam-awo-tsegah Visit the project website here: https://www.youwillfindyourpeoplehere.frame45.com/the-film/ Follow this link to Caroline’s book : https://searchworks.stanford.edu/view/10411672 Funding declaration: Mellon Foundation, Mobility, temporality, and Africa’s future politics project, at the University of the Witwatersrand (Grant Number 1804-05760) The African Centre for Migration and Society, University of the Witwatersrand The Migration Governance Lab, University of the Witwatersrand and Oxford University African Futures Institute, Accra Ghana. Dr Caroline Wanjiku Kihato is a Visiting Researcher at Oxford University’s Department of International Development and at Wits University, Johannesburg. She is also a Global Scholar at the Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars in Washington DC. Her research focuses on migration, gender, governance, and African urbanization. If you enjoy the Migration Podcast, please consider “liking” and “following” us. Thank you for listening!…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Episode 9 (S3): Kevin Smets On Using Participatory Filmmaking In Research 22:09
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In this episode, we explore how participatory filmmaking can be used in research. Amanda Alencar spoke to Kevin Smets about studying borderlands through film. Learn more about the project REEL Borders here: https://reelborders.eu/ Kevin Smets is Associate Professor at VUB (Vrije Universiteit) in Brussels. This is the final episode of this season. The Migration Podcast team will be back after a break.…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Episode 8 (S3): Birgit Glorius compares Refugee Reception In Germany in 2015 and today 26:23
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In this episode, Asya speaks to Birgit Glorius about refugee reception in Germany. They discuss whether refugee reception and reception infrastructure have changed over time, and how the reception experienced by asylum seekers in 2015 differs from that experienced by Ukrainian refugees arriving in Germany since early 2022. Birgit Glorius is Professor of Human Geography, focusing on European Migration Studies at Chemnitz University of Technology.…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Episode 7(S3): About the role of perceptions and(mis)information in migration to Europe 24:23
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Since 2019, I was involved in PERCEPTIONS, a research project exploring perceptions and imaginaries of Europe, how these came about, how they circulated, and enquiring about their role in migration decisions. As the project comes to a close, I am discussing some of the findings with my colleagues Diotima Bertel, Sara Carrasco Granger, Elizabeth Kassinis and Alagie Jinkang. Diotima Bertel is a researcher at SYNYO and the project coordinator of PERCEPTIONS. She has a background in social sciences and in the philosophy of technology. Diotima’s research is located at the intersection of science, society and technology, focusing in particular on social inequalities (mediated by technology), hierarchies and (gendered) power dynamics, as well as the individual, social, and epistemological implications of technologies. Sara Carrasco Granger is a research fellow at the University Rey San Carlos . She is a member of the Good Governance Observatory of URJC, collaborates with PICUM (an advocacy group for undocumented migrants), and is completing her PhD studies on the migrant refugee binary. Elizabeth V. Kassinis is currently the director of Caritas Cyprus, responsible for the strategy, operations, and partnerships of a grassroots humanitarian organization that supports vulnerable populations, including migrants, asylum seekers and refugees. Her tenure with Caritas Cyprus coincided with the island becoming the largest recipient of asylum seekers per capita in the European Union. Previously, she served in various positions within the US Agency for International Development (USAID) in Cyprus from 1998 to 2015 and worked as a humanitarian affairs officer with the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Assistance. Alagie Jinkang, PhD, is a research fellow at the Department of Psychology of the University of Bologna. His research interests include- but are not limited to- Human Rights & immigration law, humanitarian aid organizations, labour exploitation and labour rights of third-country nationals, slavery & colonial studies, African, Afro-American & Afro-European studies, as well as the study of West African migrations and remittance induced development. ------------------------------ PERCEPTIONS – Understanding the Impact of Narratives and Perceptions of Europe on Migration and Providing Practices, Tools and Guides for Practitioners The project was funded by the European Commission, under the Horizon 2020 Research & Innovation Action, grant SU-BES01-2018-2019-2020 More information on the project and all research tools and outcomes are available here: https://www.perceptions.eu/…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Episode 6 (S3):Viktoria Sereda about Ukrainian displacement since 2014 22:34
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Our guest today is Viktoria Sereda, a Ukrainian scholar whose research expertise straddles the formation of sociopolitical identity, cross-regional mobility, as well as internal and international displacement of Ukrainians following the Russian annexation of Crimea in 2014. Our associate producer, Asya Pisarevskaya, speaks with Viktoria about researching forced displacement as her home country has come under attack. Viktoria Sereda is a fellow of the Forum of Transregional Studies in Berlin, a senior researcher at the Institute of Ethnology of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, and Professor at the Ukrainian Catholic University. Her book "Displacement in war-torn Ukraine: State, dislocation, and belonging" is forthcoming with Cambridge University Press.…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Episode 5 (S3): Zvezda Vankova & Albert Kraler on Complementary Pathways 21:23
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Complementary pathways are safe and legal pathways outside of traditional resettlement for asylum seekers and refugees looking to relocate. Such pathways make use of existing legal migration routes leading to, for example, residence titles for the purpose of education, employment, or family reunification, or acquired through humanitarian and sponsorship schemes. Here to tell us more about complementary pathways, are Zvezda Vankova and Albert Kraler . Zvezda Vankova is post-doctoral researcher at Lund University (Sweden). Albert Kraler is Assistant professor at at the Department of Migration and Globalisation at Danube University in Krems (Austria).…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Who is academic podcasting for? Bella´s Research Results 31:35
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Perhaps you remember Bella from an earlier episode (Calling our listeners) in which we asked you to participate in her research project on Academic podcasting. Maybe you even participated in her survey. Listen to this episode if you want to find out what Bella found. -------------------- Academic podcasting is enjoying a steady increase in engagement across all fields. But who is it for? My study investigates this and delves into sub-questions like “when is a podcast academic enough?” as well as issues relating to accessibility. Using a 12-question qualitative survey followed by interviews, I investigated how academic podcasting is perceived and received by audiences. My findings are based on 40 survey responses (80% of respondents were affiliated with academia) and 7 interviews with a mix of non-academics, postgraduate and undergraduate students, and experts from the field of academic podcasting. Each interview was 10-20 minutes long. My findings were interesting and at times contradicting: - About 85% of respondents had used and were familiar with academic podcasting (and they knew of The IMISCOE Migration Podcast). They used this medium for research and leisure. Some had appeared in episodes. Despite listening to podcasts, about 25% were not comfortable using podcasts to showcase their own work. - 96% thought it was a more accessible medium to communicate academic research. -More than once, interviewees described academic podcasts as a ‘liberating and fun’ approach - based on the interviews, it seems that academic podcasting is suited for a broad audience - In an expert interview, critique was voiced regarding the need to further develop the practice of academic podcasting, and to think of possibilities for the podcast to be more interactive rather than unidirectional. --------------- Bella´s project was made possible through the Sheffield Undergraduate Research Scheme (SURE).…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Episode 4 (S3): Gediminas Lesutis on how farmers cope with displacement in Mozambique 16:03
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People do not only migrate across borders. Very often, they move within countries. Our guest Gediminas Lesutis spoke to Jolynna Sinanan about the displacement and resettlement of small-scale farmers because of mining activities in Mozambique, and how these farmers cope with the ensuing changes to their lives. Gediminas Lesutis is a Marie Curie Fellow at the Department of Geography, Urban Planning, and International Development Studies, at the University of Amsterdam. Learn more about Gediminas here: https://www.gediminaslesutis.com/about Are you interested in purchasing his book? This is the link: https://www.routledge.com/The-Politics-of-Precarity-Spaces-of-Extractivism-Violence-and-Suffering/Lesutis/p/book/9781032014227?utm_source=individuals&utm_medium=shared_link&utm_campaign=B021435_eh1_1au_7pp_d876…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Episode 3 (S3): Patrick Sakdapolrak on Climate Change and Migration 19:49
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In this episode, we turn our attention to exploring the relationship of migration with climate change. Patrick Sakdapolrak, who explores migration as a climate change adaptation strategy, is here to speak about his research on translocal social resilience, and whether migration can impact sustainability practices. Patrick Sakdapoldrak is Professor for Population Geography and Demography at the University of Vienna. You can find his profile and list of publications here: https://geographie.univie.ac.at/en/working-groups/population-geography-and-demography/people/team/patrick-sakdapolrak/…
Bella is joining our team from July to October to find out more about academic podcasting, its use cases and what makes a podcast 'academic'. Share your thoughts by participating in the survey: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/H7GV692 The survey is open from 28 June 2022 until mid-August. Isabella C. Gualano is majoring in Chinese studies at the University of Sheffield. She is currently completing her BA degree. Her project was made possible through the Sheffield Undergraduate Research Scheme (SURE). Thank you in advance for your participation!…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Episode 2 (S3): Yva Alexandrova on Eastern Europeans in the UK 20:39
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In a 2016 referendum, the British public voted to exit the European Union. Xenophobia played an important role in the outcome of that vote, and a lot of that antipathy against migrants was directed towards Eastern Europeans. Yva Alexandrova lived and worked in the UK during that time, and in the wake of the Brexit vote began writing her book, protesting the notion that Eastern European migrants in the UK were merely transient workers. This is the link to Yva's book "Here to Stay": https://repeaterbooks.com/product/here-to-stay-eastern-europeans-in-britain/…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Special Episode (3): Migration and Media 1:02:10
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This is the final episode of our podcast crossover trilogy. Migration has been a characteristic of societies for centuries. Humans have always migrated to either escape harsh lives, or in search for better ones, or both. Continuing immigration flows and increasing diversity in many societies have led to more complex processes of belonging and integration, as well as the emergence of cross-border engagements of migrants, organizations and institutions. In this episode, we focus on the role played by media and communication in the different aspects of migration, ranging from media representations of migrants to the mediated communication exchanges conducted in digital spaces, from interactions between relevant stakeholders in the different levels of migration governance through the political and economic side of migrants’ lives to the role played by hands-on intercultural mediation and digital solidarity projects. To talk about these topics, Amanda Paz Alencar (Dept. of Media and Communication, Erasmus University Rotterdam) invited Myria Georgiou (Dept. of Media and Communications, London School of Economics) and Earvin Cabalquinto (School of Communication and Creative Arts, Deakin University) – experts on the topic of media and migration. Would you like to learn more about Amanda's work? Follow this link: https://www.eur.nl/people/amanda-paz-alencar Would you like to learn more about Myria's work? Follow this link: https://www.lse.ac.uk/media-and-communications/people/academic-staff/myria-georgiou Are you interested in learning more about Earvin's work? Follow this link: https://www.deakin.edu.au/about-deakin/people/earvin-cabalquinto…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Episode 1 (S3): Steven Vertovec on understanding Social Complexity 20:44
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To kickstart our new series of episodes, we invited Steven Vertovec to speak about ways of studying and understanding one of the consequences of migration, that is social complexity. Around 2007, Steve coined the concept 'super-diversity' to grasp the increasing diversity within migrant populations in British society, highlighting that this diversification should not merely be understood in terms of ethnic, linguistic or religious backgrounds. Occurring at the same time was a diversification of migration channels, legal statuses and conditions, gender, age and forms of human capital. Yet, before arriving at this concept, Steven Vertovec explored and critiqued other concepts such as transnationalism, multiculturalism, and cosmopolitanism. In this episode, he retraces his intellectual project and tells us how he eventually arrived at 'super-diversity'. This is the link to the article that created excitement among migration scholars: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/01419870701599465 His forthcoming book with Routledge "Super-diversity. Migration and Social Complexity" will be available Open Access in late 2022 [we will update the link here, once the book is out].…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Special Episode (2): Football, Race and Racism 58:43
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In this second episode of the Culture & Inequality x The Migration Podcast trilogy, we discuss the linkages between race and sport, with a particular focus on football. International migration in professional football has brought together players of various racial and ethnic backgrounds. This applies, in particular, to professional men’s football which has become a highly visible platform for racial/ethnic diversity. While this can lead to interethnic bonding amongst players, we also know how football can be a place where racial/ethnic exclusion and discrimination takes place, This leads us to ask: How do race and ethnicity gain meaning within European football in the 21st century? And as an important sub-question: How does racism manifest itself in the game and what can we do to fight it? To talk about this, Jacco van Sterkenburg (Erasmus University Rotterdam) has invited two experts on the topic, Manou Anselma (VU Amsterdam/Mulier Instituut) and John Olivieira (the Fare network).…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Special Episode (1): Music, Social Media and Migration 56:44
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This a special crossover episode between the Migration Podcast and the Culture and Inequality Podcast. The first in a series of three, this episode investigates how Music and Social Media matter in Migration (and vice-versa). Our guests are Daniela Jaramillo-Dent and Marco Martiniello. The episode is hosted by Julian Schaap. For centuries, music has been a powerful source of individual and social well-being, something which studies from psychology to sociology to medicine continue to demonstrate. As people migrated, music migrated with them – causing the rapid and continuing spread of hundreds of music genres in countries across the globe. Since digitalization, music has become more mobile than ever before, as people can connect with their favorite music as long as they have an internet connection. This leads us to ask: How do migrants in the 21st century use music during processes of migration? To talk about this, Julian Schaap (Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands) has invited Daniela Jaramillo Dent (Universidad de Huelva, Spain and Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands) and Marco Martiniello (Université de Liège, Belgium). Are you interested in hearing more episodes by The Culture & Inequality Podcast? You can find them here: https://eucci.eu/podcast/ And on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6BGJkiCyIFxeJFX9uN7tSw…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Episode 10 (S2): Sverre Molland takes a critical look at "safe migration" 18:54
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In this episode, our guest Sverre Molland takes a critical look at two themes that have prominently structured humanitarian aid and funding: human trafficking and safe migration. With Jamie, he speaks about how one discourse increasingly gives way to the other, and what that might have to do with the politics of migration. Want to know more about Sverre? Check out his website: https://www.sverremolland.com/about Sverre Molland's book "Safe migration and the politics of brokered safety in Southeast Asia" (2021, Routledge) is available Open Access at Taylor & Francis. This is the link: https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/oa-mono/10.4324/9781003185734/safe-migration-politics-brokered-safety-southeast-asia-sverre-molland This is the last episode of our second season and after a short break we will be back with new guests speaking about their research. We hope you will tune into Season 3.…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Episode 9 (S2): Shanthi Robertson on the importance of time in migration 20:24
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When we think of migration we immediately think of space. But time plays a crucial role, too. Just think of the temporal limitations of a visa, or of cross-border mobilities as part and parcel of someone’s professional and personal careers. Jolynna Sinanan spoke to Shanthi Robertson about her new book “Temporality in Mobile Lives. Contemporary Asia–Australia Migration and Everyday Time”, about the intersection of temporality and movement, and about the development of Shanthi’s intellectual project. Shanthi Robertson is an associate director at The Insight Centre, and a research fellow at the Institute for Culture and Society at Western Sydney University. Find Shanthi's book at Bristol University Press: https://bristoluniversitypress.co.uk/temporality-in-mobile-lives or on project MUSE: https://muse.jhu.edu/book/81128…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Episode 8 (S2): Katarzyna (Kasia) Grabska on co-production and collaborative research with refugees 20:37
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Co-productive and co-creative research is all the rage, but what does it entail? Can a research project in collaboration with members of the population studied indeed be realised? And is all research that labels itself co-productive, truly so? Or do we perhaps mistake consultations for the co-production of knowledge? Kasia Grabska speaks with Milena Belloni about her experiences doing collaborative research, and reflects on which parts of the process have been the most challenging for her. Kasia Grabska is senior researcher at PRIO, the Peace Research Institute in Oslo. Currenlty she is also visiting professor at the institute of Ethnology, at Neuchatel University. Learn more about Kasia here: https://www.prio.org/people/8217 Here is a link to Kasia's ongoing project INSPIRE: https://www.prio.org/projects/1861…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Episode 7 (S2): Evan Easton-Calabria on refugee self-reliance 20:13
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A central concern in debates around refugee integration is that of labour market integration. But how do displaced people create livelihoods for themselves and become self-reliant? For this episode we invited Evan Easton-Calabria to discuss the meaning of refugee self-reliance, how assistance practices have changed over time, and the important yet often overlooked role of refugee-led organisations in providing training and labour market orientation. Evan Easton-Calabria is senior research officer at the University of Oxford, Refugee Studies Center. Learn more about Evan here: https://www.rsc.ox.ac.uk/people/evan-easton-calabria-1 This interview was conduced by Amanda Paz Alencar.…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Episode 6 (S2): Valentina Mazzucato on ways to explore migrants' transnational connections 19:15
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Milena Belloni speaks to Valentina Mazzucato about how she explores the minute details of everyday migrant transnationalism: the ties and relationships that connect migrants with other people across nation-state borders. Our guest highlights the importance of exploring transnationalism from different locations simultaneously, the value of defocusing research from the migrants’ side of the story, and speaks about the implications of transnational ties for people who remain deeply interconnected despite leading their lives apart. Valentina Mazzucato is is Professor of Globalisation & Development at Maastricht University. Learn more about Valentina here: https://www.maastrichtuniversity.nl/v.mazzucato…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Episode 5 (S2): Nina Glick Schiller on conceiving 'migrant transnationalism' 25:09
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In April 2019, a year before we launched The Migration Podcast, I sat down for an interview with Nina Glick Schiller in New York. New York is the city where Nina had based her PhD project on Haitian immigrants, a project that laid the foundation for the book “Nations Unbound”. The book, co-authored by Linda Basch, Nina Glick Schiller, and Cristina Szanton Blanc, would deeply impact how we think about migrant’s social, political and economic ties across national borders. In this episode, Nina recounts how the idea for Nations Unbound germinated, we spoke about her intellectual project throughout the years, and about how she carved out a career in academia from the margins. Nina Glick Schiller is Emeritus Professor of Anthropology and was the Director of the Cosmopolitan Cultures Institute at the University of Manchester. She continues to be active with the Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology in Halle (Saale), Germany. Nina published her latest book together with Ayse Çaglar in 2018: "Migrants and City Making: Dispossession, Displacement and Urban Regeneration" Duke University Press. The book can be downloaded for free here: https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/25763 Learn more about Nina here: https://www.eth.mpg.de/schiller or visit her profile on academia.edu: https://manchester.academia.edu/NinaGlickSchiller…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Episode 4 (S2) John Gee about struggling for migrant workers' rights in Singapore 21:25
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Aimé21:25
Approximately a third of Singapore´s active labour force is non-resident (Ministry of Manpower, 2021), meaning they are neither Singapore citizens nor permanent residents. Of those, the majority are foreigners employed to do menial work in the construction industry, in shipyards, or in the service sector, such as domestic work in people´s homes. Much of Singapore's shiny skyscrapers, award-winning architecture, public housing, and world-class infrastructure was built by foreign workers on low wages. Many women in Singapore have found the freedom to venture into better paying jobs outside the home because the burden of domestic work has shifted to women from low-income countries. In this episode, Mamta Sachan Kumar speaks to John Gee about the continuing struggles to maintain foreign workers´ rights and wellbeing in a country that so dearly relies on their labour. With Mamta, John speaks about his experiences as a practitioner. John Gee was involved in the planning stages of Transient Workers Count 2 (TWC2) and acted as the organisation´s president from 2007 to 2011. TWC2 on the web: https://twc2.org.sg/ Mamta Sachan Kumar is PhD candidate at the School of Culture, History & Language at The Australian National University. Referenced report: Ministry of Manpower (2021) "Singapore Manpower Statistics in Brief 2021", Manpower Research and Statistics Department: Singapore. Available at https://stats.mom.gov.sg/iMAS_PdfLibrary/mrsd-msib2021.pdf#search=migrant%20workers , access 25.08.2021.…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Episode 3 (S2) Cecilia Menjivar About Legal Liminality And Violence 13:03
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In this episode we speak about how bureaucracy and law shape everyday lives, but we also learn more about how listening closely to research participants can yield insights that go beyond what is already known. Milena Belloni speaks to Cecilia Menjivar about liminality and the different, less obvious forms of violence faced by women in Guatemala and by Central American immigrants in the United States. These include narratives about different forms of everyday suffering described by women in two Guatemalan villages, as well the constant uncertainty some groups of immigrants live with, in the United States. Cecilia Menjivar published extensively about these two empirical areas of work, her books ”Enduring Violence: Ladina Women’s Lives in Guatemala” (University of California Press, 2011) and “Fragmented Ties: Salvadoran Immigrant Networks in America” (University of California Press, 2000) having won her several prices and awards. Learn more about Cecilia´s work here: https://soc.ucla.edu/people/cecilia-menj%C3%ADvar…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Episode 2 (S2) Patricia N. Martuscelli on refugees mobilizing for family reunification in Brazil 18:32
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What is a family, and under what conditions can its members live a life together, abroad? In this episode, we look at family reunification policy in Brazil. Amanda Paz Alencar speaks to Patricia Nabuco Martuscelli about her research on family reunification policy in Brazil, and about the efforts of different groups of refugees to claim their right to live with family members. Patricia Nabuco Martuscelli holds a Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of São Paulo (USP). She is currently a Social Science Research Fellow in Conflict and Migration at the Institute for Risk and Disaster Reduction (UCL). Prior to this, Patricia was a Visiting Scholar at the Carolina Population Center (2017-2018), at the Jacobs Center for Productive Youth Development (2018-2019) and a ZUKOnnect Fellow at the University of Konstanz (2019). Patrícia is interested in investigating the changes in family-reunification policies in Brazil since 1997. Her project, titled "The Family Reunification Policy for refugees in Brazil", aims to improve the understanding of best practices and challenges in family reunification procedures for refugees in Brazil. Her research interests involve asylum and migration politics in Latin America, family reunification of refugees, refugee children, and refugees and COVID-19 in Brazil. Learn more about Patricia here: https://sites.google.com/view/patricia-martuscelli Amanda Paz Alencar recently joined The Migration Podcast Team. She is Assistant Professor at the Department of Media and Communication at the Erasmus University Rotterdam.…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Episode 1 (S2): Douglas Massey on how US migration policies shaped Mexican migration to the U.S.A. 17:59
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Aimé17:59
Season 2 begins with a conversation between Douglas S. Massey and Asya Pisarevskaya about migration across the U.S.-Mexican border since the early 20th century. Their conversation is based on D. Massey's recent article "Immigration policy mismatches and counterproductive outcomes: unauthorized migration to the U.S. in two eras" (2020) published in the journal Comparative Migration Studies. The paper is openly available here: https://comparativemigrationstudies.springeropen.com/track/pdf/10.1186/s40878-020-00181-6.pdf Douglas Massey is Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs, with a joint appointment in The Princeton School of Public and International Affairs, at Princeton University. Learn more about Douglas here: https://pop.princeton.edu/people/douglas-s-massey Asya Pisarevskaya is part of The Migration Podcast Team and Assistant Professor at the Erasmus University Department of Public Administration and Sociology, in Rotterdam.…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Episode 10 (S1): Ien Ang on how her biography influenced her research career 20:18
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In this final interview of the season, I speak to Ien Ang about her research on media audiences , cultural consumption, migration and identity politics in an age of globalisation. Her two books, “Watching Dallas” and “On not speaking Chinese”, are classics in the field of cultural studies and have been translated into many languages, including Chinese, Japanese, Italian, Turkish, German, Korean, and Spanish. In our interview, Ien tells me how her biography inspired her research career. Ien Ang is Distinguished Professor at Western Sydney University. This interview was conducted in January 2020.…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Episode 9 (S1): Hannah Thinyane about ICT Against Labour Exploitation And Human Trafficking 17:30
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Aimé17:30
According to the International Labor Organisation, approximately 40 million people worldwide are in modern slavery, including almost 25 million in forced labour in 2016. One in four victims are exploited outside of their country of residence, pointing at the vulnerability of migrant workers. (ILO 2007: 30) The Asia Pacific Region has the highest share of victims across all forms of modern slavery. (27) To combat the problem, civil society organisations and authorities in Thailand are now supported by an app, which allows first-line responders to better identify victims of human trafficking and labour exploitation. The development of this app, called Apprise, was headed by Hannah Thinyane, a computer scientist at UNU Macao with a background in ICT for development. In this episode I speak to Hannah about the project that led to the making of Apprise, and how the app has been received. Dr. Hannah Thinyane is a Principal Research Fellow at the United Nations University Institute in Macau. Learn more about Hannah and Apprise here: Hannah´s profile: https://unu.edu/experts/hannah-thinyane.html#profile Apprise: https://www.apprise.solutions/home Cited ILO Report : Global estimates of modern slavery: Forced labour and forced marriage International Labour Office (ILO), Geneva, 2017 ISBN: 978-92-2-130131-8 (print) ISBN: 978-92-2-130132-5 (web pdf) Available at: https://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/@dgreports/@dcomm/documents/publication/wcms_575479.pdf…
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The Migration Podcast

1 Episode 8 (S1): Alcinda Honwana on African Youth in Waithood 17:40
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Aimé17:40
For this episode, associate producer Milena Belloni spoke to Alcinda Honwana about her work on African youth in waithood. Through Alcinda's work, we learn more about young Africans' aspirations to become productive and accomplished members of society, and how these aspirations get youth to mobilise, politically and across space. You can find Alcinda's professional profile here: https://www.lse.ac.uk/africa/people/Staff/Alcinda…
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