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06/14/20 Global Migrations: Histories, Structures, Experiences | University of Glasgow
Global Migrations: Histories, Structures,Experiences
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Course Texts (20 items)
Textbooks (2 items)There is no one ‘textbook’ for this course, but you may wish to consider buying, either onyour own or together with another member of the class, one or both of the following books.
Migration theory: talking across disciplines - 2015Book | Suggested for Student Purchase | 2nd ed in stock at Soc Sci E35 BRE2
The age of migration: international population movements in the modern world - StephenCastles, Hein de Haas, Mark J. Miller, 2014
Book | Recommended
Below, you will find 'key' and 'additional' readings for each week's lecture and seminar.However, you are encouraged to search the library catalogue to find further relevantsources (e.g. ones that relate to particular interests you might have).
The library also stocks a number of relevant journals, some of which are listed below.Many of the journals are available electronically and can be searched using key words inorder to find articles on particular topics. We would also recommend that you searchrelevant journals to find further readings to help you prepare your coursework.
Journals (17 items)
Asian and Pacific migration journal: APMJ. - 1991-Journal | Recommended
Comparative migration studies - 2013-Journal | Recommended
Crossings: journal of migration and culture - 2010-
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Journal | Recommended
DiversitiesJournal | Recommended
European journal of migration and law - 1999-Journal | Recommended
Finnish Journal of Ethnicity & MigrationJournal | Recommended
IZA journal of migration - 2012-Journal | Recommended
Journal of ethnic and migration studiesJournal | Recommended
Journal of identity and migration studies: JIMS - Universitatea din Oradea. Centrul pentruStudierea Problemelor Migrației și Indentitatii
Journal | Recommended
Journal of Immigration Asylum and Nationality LawDocument | Recommended
Journal of international migration and integration: Revue de l'intégration et de la migrationinternationele - 2000-
Journal | Recommended
Journal of Migration HistoryJournal | Recommended
Mashriq & mahjar: journal of Middle East migration studies - 2013]-Journal | Recommended
Migration letters - 2003-Journal | Recommended
Nordic journal of migration research - 2011-Journal | Recommended
The journal of migration and refugee issuesJournal | Recommended
Transit - 2005-Journal | Recommended
READINGS (LECTURES AND ESSAYS)
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Note: The 'Key Readings' for each class will be the main ones on which the lecture willdraw. While the lectures may also refer to some of the 'Additional RecommendedReadings', the latter are listed here primarily as further relevant readings for the essayquestions.
Week 1: Introduction and Overview; Lecturers: Robert Gibb andDominic Pasura (18 items)This introductory session will provide an overview of the course, explaining its aims andobjectives, and presenting its structure and content. A key theme running through thecourse is ‘questioning assumptions, categories and binary oppositions’ in relation to globalmigrations, and this will also be introduced. Historical and contemporary processes ofmigration will then briefly be explored, and recent claims about the globalisation,differentiation, acceleration, feminisation and politicisation of migration discussed. One ofthe main points highlighted will be that historical evidence shows that ‘migration is anormal part of social relations’ (Castles 2010: 1568) and that ‘what is abnormal,changeable and historically constructed is the idea that human societies need to constructpolitical borders and institutions that constrain spatial mobility… such that immobilitybecomes the norm’ (Favell 2013: 271). Finally, time will be devoted at the end topreparing the last session of the course: (Week 10:) Representations (literary and other).Members of the class will be invited to suggest a poem, novel, short story, piece of musicor art, and/or film that everyone will read/listen to/watch and come prepared to discuss inthe final week.
Key Readings (5 items)
Migration theory: talking across disciplines - Ebooks Corporation Limited, 2008Book | Essential
The age of migration: international population movements in the modern world - StephenCastles, Hein de Haas, Mark J. Miller, 2014
Book | Essential
The Globalization of Migration: Has the World Become More Migratory? - Mathias Czaika,Hein de Haas, 2014
Article | Essential
Migration in the 21st century: political economy and ethnography - Ebooks CorporationLimited, 2012
Book | Essential
Refugee Studies and the international refugee regime: a reflection on a desirableseparation - G. Scalettaris, 2007
Article | Essential
Additional Readings (13 items)
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Migration in the 21st century: political economy and ethnography - Ebooks CorporationLimited, 2012
Book | Further
From lifestyle migration to lifestyle migration: Categories, concepts and ways of thinking -Michaela Benson, Karen O’Reilly, 2016
Article | Further
Fifty Years of Refugee Studies: From Theory to Policy - Richard Black, 2006Article | Further
Understanding Global Migration: A Social Transformation Perspective - Stephen Castles,2010
Article | Further
The Birth of a 'Discipline': From Refugee to Forced Migration Studies - B. S. Chimni, 2008Article | Further
Europe / Crisis: New Keywords of ‘the Crisis’ in and of ‘Europe’Webpage | Further
Migration theory: talking across disciplines - Ebooks Corporation Limited, 2008Book | Further | See: Rebooting Migration Theory: Interdisciplinarity, Globality, and
Postdisciplinarity in Migration Studies. (See also the same author’s chapter ‘MigrationTheory Rebooted? Asymmetric Challenges in a Global Agenda’ in the third edition of thebook published in 2015.)
Forced Migration Studies: Could We Agree Just to 'Date'? - J. C. Hathaway, 2007Article | Further
World Migration Report, Geneva - 2013Document | Further
Global apartheid: refugees, racism, and the new world order - Anthony H. Richmond, 1994Book | Further
Migration - Michael Samers, 2017Book | Further
The suffering of the immigrant - Abdelmalek Sayad, 2004Book | Further
Introduction: the language of inclusion and exclusion in the context of immigration andintegration - Marlou Schrover, Willem Schinkel, 2013
Article | Further
Week 2: Why do people move ?; Lecturer: Dominic Pasura (32 items)Why do people move? In other words, why does migration occurs and how is it sustained
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over time? Are there a different set of explanations for the initiation of migration asopposed to its continuation? Why do some people stay put? The lecture, taking aninterdisciplinary perspective, assesses and analyses the central concepts and theoreticalperspectives pertaining to the study of global migration. Distinguish between theindividual’s desires and motives to move and the structural and macro changes thatencourage movement. What are the permissive and inhibiting factors at a meso-level: forexample, immigration policies? We will also examine some of the alternative conceptualframeworks to explain contemporary migration, integrative approaches e.g., socialnetworks, diaspora and transnationalism, migration and social transformation.
Key Readings (2 items)
The age of migration: international population movements in the modern world - StephenCastles, Hein de Haas, Mark J. Miller, 2014
Book | Essential | See: Chapters 2 and 3
Migration theory: talking across disciplines - Ebooks Corporation Limited, 2008Book | Essential | See: Chapter 1 pp. 1-31
Additional Readings (30 items)
Some Reflections on Structure and Agency in Migration Theory - Oliver Bakewell, 2010Article | Further
Combining Economics and Sociology in Migration Theory - Christina Boswell, 2008Article | Further
Family and Personal Networks in International Migration: Recent Developments and NewAgendas - Monica Boyd, 1989
Article | Further
Towards a Sociology of Forced Migration and Social Transformation - Stephen Castles,2003
Article | Further
Understanding Global Migration: A Social Transformation Perspective - Stephen Castles,2010
Article | Further
The Globalization of Migration: Has the World Become More Migratory? - Mathias Czaika,Hein de Haas, 2014
Article | Further
Migration and Development: A Theoretical Perspective - Hein de Haas, 2010Article | Further
The Migration and Development Pendulum: A Critical View on Research and Policy - Heinde Haas, 2012
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Article | Further
Migration Theory: Quo Vadis? - Hein de HaasArticle | Further
Transnational social spaces: agents, networks, and institutions - German-Turkish SummerInstitute, Thomas Faist, Eyüp Özveren, 2004
Book | Further
Migrants as transnational development agents: an inquiry into the newest round of themigration–development nexus - Thomas Faist, 2008
Article | Further
Migration theory: talking across disciplines - Ebooks Corporation Limited, 2008Book | Further | See: ‘Rebooting migration theory: interdisciplinarity, globality and
postdisciplinarity in migration studies.’ pp. 259-278
Migration Networks and Migration Decision-Making - Sonja Haug, 2008Article | Further
South-South migration: implications for social policy and development - Katja Hujo, NicolaPiper, 2010
Book | Further | See: South-South Migration. Implications for social policy anddevelopment, pp. 1-45
World Migration Report, Geneva - 2013Document
‘Mind the Gap!’ Integrating Approaches to Internal and International Migration - RussellKing, Ronald Skeldon, 2010
Article | Further
Gendered Global Migrations - Eleonore Kofman, 2004Article | Further
Global migration, ethnicity and Britishness - Tariq Modood, John Salt, 2011Book | Further | See: Chapter 4, pp. 65-83
Transnational migration: taking stock and future directions - Peggy Levitt, 2001Article | Further
Transnational Migration Studies: Past Developments and Future Trends - Peggy Levitt, B.Nadya Jaworsky, 2007
Article | Further
Theories of International Migration: A Review and Appraisal - Douglas S. Massey, JoaquinArango, Graeme Hugo, Ali Kouaouci, Adela Pellegrino, J. Edward Taylor, 1993
Article | Further
Globalisation, Governance and Migration: An Introduction - Ronaldo Munck, 2008Article | Further
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Immigration Theory for a New Century: Some Problems and Opportunities - AlejandroPortes, 1997
Article | Further
A Cross-Atlantic Dialogue: The Progress of Research and Theory in the Study ofInternational Migration - Alejandro Portes, Josh DeWind, 2006
Article | Further
Migrants' Social Networks and Weak Ties: Accessing Resources and ConstructingRelationships Post-Migration - Louise Ryan, 2011
Article | Further
Migration - Michael Samers, 2017Book | Further
Women's Burden: Counter-Geographies of Globalization and the Feminization of Survival -S Sassen, 2002
Article | Further
Migrant Transnationalism and Modes of Transformation - Steven Vertovec, 2004Article | Further
The Next Waves: Migration Theory for a Changing World - Aristide R. Zolberg, 1989Article | Further
Theories of Migration and Social Change - Nicholas Van Hear, 2010Article | Further | See: also articles in the Special Issue Journal of Ethnic and Migration
Studies
Week 3: Where do people move ?; Lecturer: Francesca Stella (25 items)Do we live in 'the age of migration'? Where are people moving from and to, and how hasthis changed over time? Do people 'on the move' always move across internationalborders? How does the changing nature of borders and migration affect people'smobilities? In this session, we will critically interrogate the scale and direction ofinternational migration, and also attempt to integrate insights from internal andinternational migration theory. We will also consider how the control of people's mobilitieshas changed over time, and how this may impact on migrants' trajectories and livedexperiences of migration.
Key Readings (3 items)
‘Mind the Gap!’ Integrating Approaches to Internal and International Migration - RussellKing, Ronald Skeldon, 2010
Article | Essential
The Globalization of Migration: Has the World Become More Migratory? - Mathias Czaika,Hein de Haas, 2014
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Article | Essential
Globalization: the human consequences - Zygmunt Bauman, Ebooks Corporation Limited,1998
Book | Essential | See: Chapter 4
Additional Readings (11 items)
Us and them?: the dangerous politics of immigration control - Bridget L. Anderson, OxfordUniversity Press, 2013
Book | Further | See: Chapter 1
Policing Borders, Producing Boundaries. The Governmentality of Immigration in Dark Times- Didier Fassin, 2011
Article | Further
People on the move: an atlas of migration - Russell King, Richard Black, Michael Collyer,Anthony J. Fielding, Ronald Skeldon, Sussex Centre for Migration Research, 2010
Book | Further
International migration systems: a global approach - Mary M. Kritz, Lin Lean Lim, HaniaZlotnik, 1992
Book | Further | See: Chapter 1
Worlds in motion: understanding international migration at the end of the millennium -Douglas S. Massey, 1998
Book | Further
Anthropological Takes on (Im)Mobility - Noel B. Salazar, Alan Smart, 2011Article | Further
Globalization and its discontents: [essays on the new mobility of people and money] -Saskia Sassen, 1998
Book | Further
Migration and development: a global perspective - Ronald Skeldon, 1997Book | Further
Crossing the line: vagrancy, homelessness, and social displacement in Russia - SvetlanaStephenson, 2006
Book | Further
The invention of the passport: surveillance, citizenship and the state - John Torpey, 2000Book | Further | See: Chapter 1
Mobilities - John Urry, 2007Book | Further | See: Chapter 7 'Gates to heaven and Hell'
Case Studies (11 items)
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Illegality, inc: clandestine migration and the business of bordering Europe - RubenAndersson, 2014
Book | See: Chapter 1 'Mohammadou and the migrant eaters'
The refugee crisis: destabilizing and restabilizing European borders - Synnøve K. N.Bendixsen, 2016
Article
Materialising the Border: Spaces of Mobility and Material Culture in Migration fromPost‐Socialist Poland - Kathy Burrell, 2008
Article
In-Between Places: Trans-Saharan Transit Migrants in Morocco and the FragmentedJourney to Europe - Michael Collyer, 2007
Article
Being En Route - Susan Bibler Coutin, 2005Article
Bordering encounters, sociality and distribution of the ability to live a ‘normal life’ - DaceDzenovska, 2014
Article
'Illegal' traveller: an auto-ethnography of borders - Shahram Khosravi, 2010Book | See: Chapters 1 and 2
‘It’s not what it was’: British Migrants in Postcolonial Hong KongDocument
Crossing Mexico: Structural violence and the commodification of undocumented CentralAmerican migrants - Wendy A. Vogt, 2013
Article
Polish Return and Double Return Migration - Anne White, 2014Article
Dynamic Migration Intentions and the Impact of Socio-Institutional Environments: A TransitMigration Hub in Turkey - Marieke Wissink, Franck Düvell, Anouka van Eerdewijk, 2013
Article
Week 4: How do people move ?; Lecturer: Robert Gibb (25 items)How do people move? How have attempts been made historically and in contemporarysocieties to facilitate, control or stop the movement of human beings from one place toanother? These are the two main questions that this session aims to explore. It willexamine the different means of transport people use (when they are not travelling onfoot!) in order to move, and also how specific ways of moving come to be defined as ‘legal’or ‘illegal’ by national, regional and international authorities and institutions. The sessionwill focus in particular on issues raised by the phenomena of ‘clandestine migration’ and‘migrant smuggling’.
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Key Readings (3 items)
Illegality, inc: clandestine migration and the business of bordering Europe - RubenAndersson, 2014
Book | Essential | See: Especially introduction and Chapter 3
The international law of migrant smuggling - Anne T. Gallagher, Fiona David, 2014Book | Essential | See: Introduction and Chapter 1
Bordering the Sea: Shipping Industries and the Policing of StowawaysDocument | Essential
Additional Readings (22 items)
Border: a journey to the edge of Europe - Kapka Kassabova, 2017Book
Issues and Recent Trends in International Migration in Sub-Saharan Africa - AderantiAdepoju, 2000
Article | Further
Managing the undesirables: refugee camps and humanitarian government - Michel Agier,2011
Book | Further
A crisis of protection and safe passage: violence experienced by migrants/refugeestravelling along the Western Balkan corridor to Northern Europe - Jovana Arsenijević, ErinSchillberg, Aurelie Ponthieu, Lucio Malvisi, Waeil A. Elrahman Ahmed, Stefano Argenziano,Federica Zamatto, Simon Burroughs, Natalie Severy, Christophe Hebting, Brice de Vingne,Anthony D. Harries, Rony Zachariah, 2017
Article | Further
The Movement Beyond (Lifestyle) Migration: Mobile Practices and the Constitution of aBetter Way of Life - Michaela Benson, 2011
Article | Further
Toward a Critical Sociology of Lifestyle Migration: Reconceptualizing Migration and theSearch for a Better Way of Life - Michaela Benson, Nick Osbaldiston, 2016
Article | Further
Belgrade Station: The Perils of the Balkan Route - George Butler, 2017Article | Further
Making people illegal: what globalization means for migration and law - CatherineDauvergne, 2008
Book | Further | See: Chapters 1 and 2
Border Controls at Sea: Requirements under International Human Rights and Refugee Law- A. Fischer-Lescano, T. Lohr, T. Tohidipur, 2009
Article | Further
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Survival at extreme altitude – The misery and miracle of aircraft stowaways - GerardThomas Flaherty, Ian James Long, 2016
Article | Further
Violent borders: refugees and the right to move - Reece Jones, 2016Book | Further
Coastal State Obligations in the Context of Refugees at Sea under the EuropeanConvention on Human Rights - Stefan Kirchner, Katarzyna Geler-Noch, Vanessa Frese,2015
Article | Further
Why Migrant Smuggling Pays - Khalid Koser, 2008Article | Further
The wall around the West: state borders and immigration controls in North America andEurope - Peter Andreas, Timothy Snyder, c2000
Book | Further | See: The Mobility Money Can Buy: Human Smuggling and BorderControl in the European Union
Supporting the Snakeheads: Human Smuggling from China and the 1996 Amendment tothe U.S. Statutory Definition of "Refugee" - Cleo J. Kung, 2000
Article | Further
Invisible Immigrants: Undocumented Migration and Border Controls in Postwar Japan -Tessa Morris-Suzuki, 2006
Article | Further
The Dilemma of the Sea Refugee: Rescue without Refuge - J. Z. Pugash, 1977Article | Further
Drowning not Waving: Boat People and Humanitarianism at Sea - M. Pugh, 2004Article | Further
(De-)Constructing Borders. Contestations in and around the Balkan Corridor in 2015/16 -Kiri Santer
Article | Further
The Language of Walls Along the Balkan Route - Federico Giulio Sicurella, 2017Article | Further
The Principle of Non-Refoulement and the Right of Asylum-Seekers to Enter State Territory- Vadislava Stoyanova, 2008
Article | Further
The New Slave Trade: The International Crisis of Immigrant Smuggling - Kevin Tessier,1995
Article | Further
Week 5: Political Structures; Lecturer: Gareth Mulvey (14 items)
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This lecture looks at the political structures in which migrations take place. This will beginwith a critical appraisal of the role of the nation state on the premise that without theexistence of nation states there would be no such thing as international migration. Thusthe history of the nation state, the construction of nation states and their existence aretaken as something to be contested, not something primordial. We will then go on toexamine national policies and practices. How do states develop their approaches and why?What do states or governments want from migration and what architecture is created tofacilitate this. These questions will touch upon many of the ‘big’ socio-political issues oftoday, including the ways policies look at race and class as a means of determining whoare wanted and unwanted migrants; the relationships between globalisation/neoliberalismand national welfare regimes; the importance of history in the form of post-colonialism;and the question of whether states’ ability to control migration is increasing throughtechnology, or decreasing through more global pressures. Underpinning this is therelationship between politics and policy.
Key Readings (3 items)
Editorial: why no borders? - Bridget Anderson, Nandita Sharma, Cynthia Wright, 2009Article | Essential
Security and immigration: Toward a critique of the governmentality of unease - Didier Bigo, 2002
Article | Essential
The age of migration: international population movements in the modern world - StephenCastles, Hein de Haas, Mark J. Miller, 2014
Book | Essential | See: Chapter 5 The state and international migration: the quest forcontrol
Additional Readings (11 items)
Us and them?: the dangerous politics of immigration control - Bridget L. Anderson, OxfordUniversity Press, 2013
Book | Further
Editorial: why no borders? - Bridget Anderson, Nandita Sharma, Cynthia Wright, 2009Article | Further
Why migration policies fail - Stephen Castles, 2004Article | Further
Twenty-First-Century Migration as a Challenge to Sociology - Stephen Castles, 2007Article | Further
The Decline of Sovereignty? Politics and Immigration Restriction in Liberal States - Gary P.Freeman, 1998
Chapter | Further
Immigration research for a new century: multidisciplinary perspectives, Rumbaut: Rubň G.Rumbaut, Steven J. Gold, editors - Nance Foner, c2003
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Book | Further | See: The Rise of Non-State Actors in Migration Regulations in the USand Europe: Changing the Gatekeepers or Bringing the State Back In?
Power: a radical view - Steven Lukes, 2005Book | Further
The migration reader: exploring politics and policy - Anthony M. Messina, Gallya Lahav,2006
Book | Further
Britain's asylum and immigration regime: the shifting contours of rights - Lydia Morris,2002
Article | Further
The migration debate - Sarah Spencer, Ebooks Corporation Limited, 2011Book | Further | See: Chapter 1 Migration Policy in the 21st Century
No land's man: irregular migrants' challenge to immigration control and membershippolicies - Andrei Stavilă, 2015
Article | Further
Week 6: Economic Structures; Lecturer: Francesca Stella (34 items)In this seminar we will explore changing structures facilitating or hindering labourmigration. The seminar will focus in particular on Europe, although with comparativereference to other migration contexts. We will look at on the role of national/supranationalpolicies and the market in creating these structures. As Swiss novelist Max Frisch wrote,European governments ‘asked for workers, but human beings came’. Thus, in the secondpart of the seminar, we will turn to research on migrants’ experiences to criticallyinterrogate assumptions about ‘the migrant worker’ made in policy debates.
Key Readings (3 items)
The migration debate - Sarah Spencer, Ebooks Corporation Limited, 2011Book | Essential | See: Chapter 3
European migration governance since the Lisbon treaty: introduction to the special issue -James Hampshire, 2016
Article | Essential
A Very Private Business - Bridget Anderson, 2007Article | Essential
Additional Readings (31 items)
Who needs migrant workers?: labour shortages, immigration, and public policy - MartinRuhs, Bridget Anderson, Oxford University Press, 2010
Article | Further | See: Chapters 1 and 2
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Migration and care labour: theory, policy and politics - Bridget Anderson, Isabel Shutes,2014
Book | Further
Illegality, inc: clandestine migration and the business of bordering Europe - RubenAndersson, 2014
Book | Further | See: Chapter 1
A continent moving west?: EU enlargement and labour migration from Central and EasternEurope - Richard Black, 2010
Book | Further
Migration and mobility in the European Union - Andrew Geddes, Christina Boswell, 2011Book | Further
Poles Apart? EU Enlargement and the Labour Market Outcomes of Immigrants in theUnited Kingdom - Stephen Drinkwater, John Eade, Michal Garapich, 2009
Article | Further
EU post-accession Polish migrants trajectories and their settlement practices in Scotland -Emilia Piętka-Nykaza, Derek McGhee, 2017
Article | Further
The New Face of East–West Migration in Europe - Adrian Favell, 2008Article | Further
Migrants' experiences of material and emotional security in rural Scotland: Implications forlonger-term settlement - Moya Flynn, Rebecca Kay, 2017
Article | Further
Immigrants, markets, and states: the political economy of postwar Europe - James FrankHollifield, 1992
Book | Further
Migrant Workers and Vulnerable Employment: A Review of Existing Data - 2009Document | Further
European migration governance since the Lisbon treaty: introduction to the special issue -James Hampshire, 2016
Article | Further | See: Especially introduction and chapters by Hampshire and Menz
Complex and dynamic integration processes in Europe: intra EU mobility and internationalmigration in times of recession - Hans-Jörg Trenz, Anna Triandafyllidou, 2017
Article | Further
Language, labour and migration - Anne J. Kershen, Queen Mary and Westfield College(University of London). Centre for the Study of Migration, c2000
Book | Further
Towards a new map of European migration - Russell King, 2002Article | Further
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International migration systems: a global approach - Mary M. Kritz, Lin Lean Lim, HaniaZlotnik, 1992
Book | Further | See: Chapter 1
At Your Service Madam! The Globalization of Domestic Service - Helma Lutz, 2002Article | Further
Theories of International Migration: A Review and Appraisal - Douglas S. Massey, JoaquinArango, Graeme Hugo, Ali Kouaouci, Adela Pellegrino, J. Edward Taylor, 1993
Article | Further
Dignity, happiness and being able to live a ‘normal life’ in the UK – an examination ofpost-accession Polish migrants' transnational autobiographical fields - Derek McGhee, SueHeath, Paulina Trevena, 2012
Article | Further
The Policies and Politics of Managed Migration: Exploring Mature Labour Migration fromCentral and Eastern Europe into the UK - Simon Pemberton, Lisa Scullion, 2013
Article | Further
Wages of empire: neoliberal policies, repression, and women's poverty - Amalia L.Cabezas, Ellen Reese, Marguerite R. Waller, 2007
Book | Further | See: Neoliberalism, Globalization, and the International Division of Care
Migrant Filipina Domestic Workers and the International Division of Reproductive Labor -Rhacel Salazar Parrenas, 2000
Article | Further
The Policies and Politics of Managed Migration: Exploring Mature Labour Migration fromCentral and Eastern Europe into the UK - Simon Pemberton, Lisa Scullion, 2013
Article | Further
Birds of passage: migrant labor and industrial societies - Michael J. Piore, 1979Book | Further
Migration and development: reconciling opposite views - Alejandro Portes, 2009Article | Further
Globalization and its discontents: [essays on the new mobility of people and money -Saskia Sassen, 1998
Book | Further
‘All you need is love and £18,600’: Class and the new UK family migration rules - AlaSirriyeh, 2015
Article | Further
Migration and development: a global perspective - Ronald Skeldon, 1997Book | Further
The migration debate - Sarah Spencer, Ebooks Corporation Limited, 2011Book | Further
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Intimate Migrations: Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Migrants in Scotland - Stella,Francesca, 2016
Article | Further
United Nations Global Migration DatabaseWebpage | Further
Week 7: Legal Structures; Lecturer: Robert Gibb (30 items)This session explores the relationship between migration and law. How have legalstructures both shaped and been challenged by the movement of human beings? What arethe key instruments of contemporary national, regional and international migration law? Isa global migration law possible, and, if so, how might it develop? These are the mainquestions this session will examine. Particular attention will be devoted to current debatesabout international refugee law.
Key Readings (3 items)
Introduction to Symposium on Framing Global Migration Law - Jaya Ramji-Nogales, Peter J. Spiro, 2017
Article | Essential | See: pp. 1-28
Making people illegal: what globalization means for migration and law - CatherineDauvergne, 2008
Book | Essential | See: Chapters 1 and 2
The invention of the passport: surveillance, citizenship, and the state - John Torpey,American Council of Learned Societies, 2000
Book | Essential | See: Chapter 1 and 5
Additional Readings (27 items)
Migration theory: talking across disciplines - 2015Book
Illegality, inc: clandestine migration and the business of bordering Europe - RubenAndersson, 2014
Book | Further
Refuge: transforming a broken refugee system - Alexander Betts, Paul Collier, 2017Book | Further
Rejecting refugees: political asylum in the 21st century - Carol Bohmer, Amy Shuman,2008
Book | Further | See: Chapter 2
On the doorstep of Europe: asylum and citizenship in Greece - Heath Cabot, Ebooks
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Corporation Limited, 2014Book | Further
The age of migration: international population movements in the modern world - StephenCastles, Hein de Haas, Mark J. Miller, 2014
Book | Further | See: Chapter 10
Migration and human rights: the United Nations Convention on Migrant Workers' Rights -Ryszard I. Cholewinski, P. F. A. de Guchteneire, Antoine Pécoud, 2009
Book | Further
Spectacles of migrant ‘illegality’: the scene of exclusion, the obscene of inclusion -Nicholas De Genova, 2013
Article | Further
Are human rights for migrants?: critical reflections on the status of irregular migrants inEurope and the United States - 2011
Book | Further
Unintended consequences: the impact of migration law and policy - 2016Book | Further
Managing migration: time for a new international regime? - Bimal Ghosh, 2000Book | Further | See: Towards a New International Regime for Orderly Movements of
People
Anthropology and expertise in the asylum courts - Anthony Good, 2007Book | Further
Cultural Evidence in Courts of Law - Anthony Good, 2008Article | Further
Managing migration: time for a new international regime? - Bimal Ghosh, 2000Book | Further | See: Migration, International Law and Human Rights
The refugee in international law - Guy S. Goodwin-Gill, Jane McAdam, 2007Book | Further | See: Chapters 1, 2, 3 and 8
The rights of refugees under international law - James C. Hathaway, 2005Book | Further | See: Chapters 2 and 3
Rethinking border control for a globalizing world: a preferred future - 2016Book | Further | See: The Law of the Border and the Borders of Law: Rethinking Border
Control from the Perspective of the Individual
Refugee Roulette: disparities in asylum adjudication - Jaya Ramji-Nogales, Andrew I.Schoenholtz, Philip G. Schrag, 2007
Article | Further
OR
Refugee roulette: disparities in asylum adjudication and proposals for reform - Jaya
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Ramji-Nogales, Andrew Ian Schoenholtz, Philip G. Schrag, 2009Book | Further | See: Part 1 and Chapter 8
United Nations Convention (1951) and Protocol (1967) Relating to the Status of RefugeesWebpage | Further | NB: these and other ‘basic instruments’ of international law on
refugees as well as ‘selected regional instruments’ relating to asylum seekers andrefugees, including recent European Union Council Directives that will be discussed inlecture 4, can also be found in the annexes to Hathaway, James C. 2005. The Rights ofRefugees under International Law. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
UNHCR (1992) Handbook on Procedures and Criteria for Determining Refugee Statusunder the 1951 Convention and the 1967 Protocol relating to the Status of Refugees
Document | Further
Immigration Detention: Law, History, Politics - Daniel Wilsher, 2011Book | Further | See: Chapter 3
Further relevant articles can be found by searching the following journals:
European journal of migration and law - 1999-Journal | Further
Journal of Immigration Asylum and Nationality LawDocument | Further
The journal of migration and refugee issuesJournal | Further
Week 8: Everyday experiences; Lecturer: Teresa Piacentini (32 items)This seminar will look at migrants’ experiences and their everyday encounters withlong-settled populations. We consider how migrants’ lives are shaped by the political,economic and cultural processes explored in previous seminars. The session will bebroadly structured around two themes: physical and symbolic borders, and how processesof bordering are created, shaped, and reinforced by intersecting variables of difference;and interactions between migrants and populations with a migrant background andnon-migrants, and how these interactions play out in a range of social contexts.Throughout, we will explore differences in immigration status in relation to everydayexperiences.
Key Readings (3 items)
Migrant Urbanisms: Ordinary Cities and Everyday Resistance - Suzanne M Hall, 2015Article | Essential
Living with difference: reflections on geographies of encounter - Gill Valentine, 2008Article | Essential
Everyday multiculturalism - Amanda Wise, 2009Book | Essential
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Additional Readings (27 items)
Ethnicity and the Multicultural City: Living with Diversity - Ash Amin, 2002Article | Further
You’ve Got a Text from UKBAWebpage | Further
New hierarchies of belonging - Les Back, Shamser Sinha, with Charlynne Bryan, 2012Article | Further
The racialization of language in British political discourse - Adrian Blackledge, 2006Article | Further
‘Good relations’ among neighbours and workmates? The everyday encounters ofAccession 8 migrants and established communities in Urban England - Joanne Cook, PeterDwyer, Louise Waite, 2011
Article | Further
Glasgow’s Ellis Island? The integration and stigmatisation of Govanhill’s Roma populationWebpage | Further
Thinking spatially: towards an everyday understanding of inter-ethnic relations - JohnClayton, 2009
Article | Further
'Sleepwalking to segregation'?: challenging myths about race and migration - Nissa Finney,Ludi Simpson, 2009
Book | Further
Surveillant staring: Race and the everyday surveillance of South Asian women after 9/11. -Rachel Finn, 2011
Article | Further
“It's building up to something and it won't be nice when it erupts“: The making ofRoma/Gypsy migrants in post-industrial Scotland - Jan Grill
Article | Further
Refugee community organisations and dispersal: networks, resources and social capital -David J. Griffiths, Nando Sigona, Roger Zetter, 2005
Book | Further | See: Especially Chapter 8
Multicultural Living? - Joanna Herbert, Jon May, Jane Wills, Kavita Datta, Yara Evans, CathyMcIlwaine, 2008-04
Article | Further
Accommodating Otherness: Anti-Asylum Centre Protest and the Maintenance of WhitePrivilege - Phil Hubbard, 2005
Article | Further
Conviviality and Conflict: Pluralism, Resilience and Hope in Inner-City Birmingham -Christian Karner, David Parker, 2011
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Article | Further
Language, labour and migration - Anne J. Kershen, Queen Mary and Westfield College(University of London). Centre for the Study of Migration, c2000
Book | Further
Ordinary Cosmopolitanisms - Michèle Lamont, Sada Aksartova, 2002Article | Further
Beware the security creep into British universities - Gabe Mythen, 2015Webpage | Further
On borders and power: A theoretical framework - David Newman, 2003Article | Further
Using buzzwords of belonging: everyday multiculturalism and social capital in Australia -Maree Pardy, Julian C.H. Lee, 2011
Article | Further
From Institutional Racism to Community Cohesion: the Changing Nature of RacialDiscourse in Britain - 2008
Webpage | Further
Disrupting migration stories: reading life histories through the lens of mobility and fixity -Ben Rogaly, 2015
Article | Further
Rethinking the ‘everyday’ in ‘ethnicity and everyday life’ - Andrew Smith, 2015Article | Further
Affinities in Multicultural Neighbourhoods: Shared Values and their DifferencesWebpage | Further
Codes of Cultural Belonging: Racialised National Identities in a Multi-Ethnic ScottishNeighbourhood - 2006
Article | Further
Secure borders, safe haven, domopolitics - William Walters, 2004Article | Further
Commonplace diversity: social relations in a super-diverse context: social relations in asuper-diverse context - Susanne Wessendorf, 2014
Book | Further
Commonplace diversity and the ‘ethos of mixing’: perceptions of difference in a Londonneighbourhood - Susanne Wessendorf, 2013
Article | Further
Additional Resources (2 items)
Everyday Borders on Vimeo - 2015
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Audio-visual document | Everyday Borders film. 'Everyday Borders' examines the impactof the 2014 immigration act on British society, exploring the way the 'Border' isincreasingly entering into everyday life.
The Bench Project - BlogWebsite
Week 9: Solidarity and Resistance; Lecturer: Teresa Piacentini (27 items)Migrant solidarity and resistance - as witnessed in movements such as Refugees Welcome,No Borders and 1DayWithoutUs - are concepts that have gained purchase in recent years.This is largely because of increasingly restrictive local, national and international contextsof reception migrants have to face in places of settlement. These contexts arecharacterised by extensive and regressive control mechanisms monitoring welfare,movement and consumption, which create conditions that make it very difficult, but notimpossible, to accommodate any form of action or opposition. In this session, the focuswill shift to how migrants - people claiming asylum, refugees, undocumented migrants,migrant workers - may resist the structural processes that frame their categorisation as aproblem to be resolved. Through engaging with how resistance is theorised, and drawingfrom case studies, we will be exploring what resistance might mean as a force structuralchange.
Key Readings (3 items)
Migrant activism and integration from below in Ireland - Ronit Lentin, Elena Moreo, 2012Book | Essential | See: Especially Chapters 1 and 2
RAT and the degradation of black struggle - A. Sivanandan, 1985-04Article
Introduction: The Contentious Politics of Refugee and Migrant Protest and SolidarityMovements: Remaking Citizenship from the Margins - Ilker Ataç, Kim Rygiel, Maurice Stierl,2016-07-03
Article
CASE STUDIES - PLEASE SEE LIST ON MOODLE FOR ALLOCATION OFEACH STUDY (10 items)
‘Refugee Protest Camp Vienna’: making citizens through locations of the protestmovement - Ilker Ataç, 2016-07-03
Article
Displacement of European citizen Roma in Berlin: acts of citizenship and sites ofcontentious politics - Ayşe Çağlar, 2016-07-03
Article
‘Nacimos de la nada’: border struggles and maternal politics in Mexico - Stefanie Kron,
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2016-07-03Article
Transformations of the undocumented youth movement and radical egalitarian citizenship- Helge Schwiertz, 2016-07-03
Article
Mobilizing migrants, making citizens: migrant domestic workers as political agents -Bridget Anderson, 2010
Article | Further
Bordering solidarities: migrant activism and the politics of movement and camps at Calais- Kim Rygiel, 2011-02
Article
Women, immigration and identities in France QUIMINAL CHAPTER - Jane Freedman, CarrieTarr, 2000
Book | See: The Associative Movement of African Women and New Forms of Citizenship.pp. 39-57
Immigrant protest: politics, aesthetics, and everyday dissent - 2014Book | Further | See: Introduction
Subverting neoliberal citizenship. Migrant struggles for the right to stay in contemporaryItaly OLIVERI, F
Document | Further
Migrants as activist citizens in ItalyWebpage | Further
Additional Readings (14 items)
Editorial: Why No Borders? - Bridget Anderson, 2009Article | Further
Strategies in North East England and Scotland | Refugee Review: Social MovementsWebpage | Further
Governmental mobility: The power effects of the movement of detained asylum seekersaround Britain's detention estate - Nicholas Gill, 2009
Article | Further | See: Especially Chapter 8
Migrant Urbanisms: Ordinary Cities and Everyday Resistance - Suzanne M Hall, 2015Article | Further
Migration and Social Cohesion in the UK - Mary J. Hickman, Nicola Mai, Helen Crowley,2012
Book | Further
Go home?: the politics of immigration controversies - Hannah Jones, 2017Book | Further
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The Sans-Papiers - A Woman Draws the First LessonsWebpage | Further
Labor, Citizenship, and Subjectivity: Migrants' Struggles within the Italian Crisis - NicolaMontagna, 2013
Article | Further
Citizenship, migrant activism and the politics of movement - 2012Book | Further | See: (Chapters TBC)
Missing from the picture? Migrant and Refugee Community Organizations' responses topoverty and destitution in Glasgow - Teresa Piacentini, 2015
Article | Further
Weapons of the weak: everyday forms of peasant resistance - James C. Scott, 1985.Book | Further | See: Chapter 2: Normal Exploitation, Normal Resistance.
The business of child detention: charitable co-option, migrant advocacy and activistoutrage - Imogen Tyler, Nick Gill, Deirdre Conlon, Ceri Oeppen, 2014
Article | Further
Immigrant protest: an introduction - Imogen Tyler, Katarzyna Marciniak, 2013Article | Further
A sea of struggle – activist border interventions in the Mediterranean Sea - Maurice Stierl,2016-07-03
Article
Week 10: Representations (Literary and other); Lecturers: Robert Gibband Dominic Pasura (19 items)Previous sessions of the course have examined how ‘migrants’ have been(mis-)represented by a range of agents and institutions, as well as ways they have soughtto resist processes of categorisation. In this final session, the focus will be on how‘migrants’ have attempted to represent themselves and their own experiences using arange of different media. Specific examples (e.g. a poem, a novel, a short story, a piece ofmusic or art, a film) will have been suggested by members of the class by the end of week2, and these will be discussed during the final class.
Key Readings/Sources (1 items)
To be agreed by the members of the class by the end of week 2, with a list posted in thecourse Moodle site
Additional Readings (18 items)
Border: a journey to the edge of Europe - Kapka Kassabova, 2017Book
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Hijab Scenes: Muslim Women, Migration, and Hijab in Immigrant Muslim Literature - SamaaAbdurraqib, 2006
Article | Further
Home and continuity in refugee children's narratives of settlement - Josée Archambault,2012
Article | Further
Polyglot cinema: migration and transcultural narration in France, Italy, Portugal and Spain -2010
Book | Further
European cinema in motion: migrant and diasporic film in contemporary Europe - 2010Book | Further
Walls of Silence and Late Twentieth Century Representations of the Foreign FemaleDomestic Worker: The Case of Filipina and Indonesian Female Servants in Malaysia -Christine B. N. Chin, 1997
Article | Further
The Power of Oral Poetry: Narrative Songs of the Basotho Migrants - David B. Coplan, 1987Article | Further
Stories as Lived Experience: Narratives in Forced Migration Research - M. Eastmond, 2007Article | Further
Writing across worlds: literature and migration - Russell King, Paul White, John Connell,1994
Book | Further
Doctors and other dangers: Bosnian refugee narratives of suffering and survival in WesternAustralia - Renata Kokanovic, Meredith Stone, 2010
Article | Further
'No! I'm Not a Refugee!' The Poetics of Be-Longing among Young Oromos in Toronto - M. K.Kumsa, 2006
Article | Further
Everyday resilience: Narratives of single refugee women with children - Caroline Lenette,Mark Brough, Leonie Cox, 2013
Article | Further
'I am a Widow, Mother and Refugee': Narratives of Two Refugee Widows Resettled toAustralia - C. Lenette, 2014
Article | Further
Hostility themes in media, community and refugee narratives - Ivan Leudar, JacquelineHayes, Jiří Nekvapil, Johanna Turner Baker, 2008
Article | Further
Screening strangers: migration and diaspora in contemporary European cinema - YosefaLoshitzky, 2010
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Book | Further
Critical Dialogues — Transcultural Modernities and Modes of Narrating Africa inDocumentary Films - Nwachukwu Frank Ukadike, 2009-01-01
Article
Writing across worlds: contemporary writers talk - Susheila Nasta, 2004Book | Further
Migrant narratives - V.J. Varghese, 2006Article | Further
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