From Center for Immigration Studies <[email protected]>
Subject Immigration Events, 3/17/20
Date March 17, 2020 10:46 PM
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Immigration Events, 3/17/20 ([link removed])

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1. (#1) 3/18, DC - Book discussion: Humanity in Crisis: Ethical and Religious Response to Refugees - [Postponed to Fall 2020]
2. (#2) 3/18-21, Atlanta - National Council on Public History annual meeting - [Cancelled - alternative plans being made]
3. (#3) 3/24, Cambridge, MA - Workshop on evaluations of victimization in US asylum determinations
4. (#4) 3/24, New York, NY - Book discussion: The Shifting Border - [Postponed]
5. (#5) 3/25-28, Honolulu - Immigration at the International Studies Association annual convention - [Cancelled]
6. (#6) 3/26, DC - Discussion on assessing temporary-to-permanent immigration systems in Europe and North America - [Livestreamed only]
7. (#7) 3/27, DC - Society of Government Economists annual convention - [Cancelled]
8. (#8) 3/31, Fairfax, VA - Celebration of the contributions of immigrant entrepreneurs - [See event link for updates]
9. (#9) 3/31, Cambridge, MA - Workshop on the contexts of reception that make asylum seekers feel welcome in Germany
10. (#10) 4/15-17, DC - Certificate program course on environmental displacement and migration
11. (#11) 4/16-19, Chicago - Immigration at the Midwest Political Science Association annual meeting - [Cancelled]
12. (#12) 4/22, Los Angeles - Lecture on unaccompanied Moroccan migrant minors in Spain - [Cancelled]
13. (#13) 4/22-23, Edinburgh, Scotland - Immigration at the Association for the Study of Ethnicity and Nationalism annual conference - [New Listing]
14. (#14) 4/23, Cambridge, MA - Lecture on writing immigration history in an age of fake news - [Cancelled]
15. (#15) 4/24, Pittsburgh - Lecture on a comprehensive approach to the issue of immigration - [Cancelled]
16. (#16) 4/27-28, Brussels - Annual conference on European immigration law
17. (#17) 5/6-8, DC - Certificate program course on immigration policy
18. (#18) 5/21-23, New Orleans - Conference on aiding immigrant and refugee communities in the Southeast U.S. post-Hurricane Katrina
19. (#19) 5/13-16, Guadalajara, Mexico - Latin American Studies Association annual meeting - [New Listing]
20. (#20) 6/29-7/10, Brussels - 2020 Summer School on EU Immigration and Asylum Law and Policy - [New Listing]
21. (#21) 7/27-31, DC - Certificate program course on global displacement and migration studies - [New Listing]
22. (#22) 9/24-26, Portland, OR - Crimmigration Control International Network of Studies conference - [New Listing]
23. (#23) 10/5-6, Ottawa - Annual Canadian immigration summit - [New Listing - rescheduled from 3/13-14]

Book Event: Humanity in Crisis: Ethical and Religious Response to Refugees

12:00 p.m., Wednesday, March 18, 2020
Arrupe Hall, Multipurpose Room
Georgetown University
3700 O Street NW
Washington, DC 20057
[link removed]

Description: ISIM will co-sponsor a book event with author David Hollenbach, the Pedro Arrupe Distinguished Research Professor and ISIM Faculty Affiliate. Professor Hollenbach's new book is titled Humanity in Crisis: Ethical and Religious Response to Refugees, and it is published by Georgetown University Press. Panelists will include Anne Richard, former assistant secretary of state for population, refugees and migration; Alex Aleinikoff, former United Nations Deputy High Commissioner for Refugees; Clemens Sedmak, professor of social ethics at the University of Notre Dame, as well as Profesor David Hollenbach. More information soon.

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National Council on Public History annual meeting

Wednesday-Saturday, March 18-21, 2020
Atlanta, GA
[link removed]

NCPH 2020 In-Person Meeting in Atlanta Cancelled; Alternative Plans Afoot

After careful deliberation and consideration of the best information available at this time, given the unfolding outbreak of COVID-19, the NCPH Board of Directors and staff have concluded, with regret, that we cannot proceed with holding the in-person 2020 NCPH annual meeting in Atlanta, Georgia as planned (March 18-21, 2020). This decision, as participants surely understand, was not made lightly. We made this decision with the health and physical safety of our attendees, staff, volunteers, and vendors foremost in our minds.

Here is what attendees need to know right now:

1. NCPH’s annual meeting will be held virtually to the greatest extent possible. More information will be provided over the coming days as we consult with presenters.

2. We recommend that you do not initiate your travel to Atlanta. If you are already en route to Atlanta, you should plan to return to your home.

3. Cancel your hotel reservations today, directly with your hotel, to avoid possible penalties.

4. We are following up with presenters via a separate email that will come from a board member.

5. The decision carries with it significant financial consequences for the organization, some of which will be discussed below. We will be considering the implications of a partial refund policy in the coming weeks. No decisions can be made about refunds until the total financial impacts of this decision can be assessed; please do not query the office on this point at this time.

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Legal Standards and Moral Worth in Frontline Decision-Making: Evaluations of Victimization in US Asylum Determinations

12:00pm to 1:30pm, Tuesday, March 24, 2020
William James Hall, Room 450
33 Kirkland Street
Cambridge, MA 02138
[link removed]

Speaker:
Talia Shiff, Postdoctoral Fellow at the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs and Lecturer in Sociology at Harvard University

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Book Discussion: 'The Shifting Border'

Presented by Zolberg Institute on Migration and Mobility at The New School.

6:00-7:30 p.m., Tuesday, March 24, 2020
Theresa Lang Community and Student Center
Starr Foundation Hall, U L102, University Center
The New School
66 West 12th Street
New York, NY 10011
[link removed]

Speaker:
Ayelet Shacher, Professor of Law, Political Science, and Global Affairs
Toronto University

Description: We tend to think of a border as a static line, but recent bordering techniques have broken away from the map, as governments have developed legal tools to limit the rights of migrants before and after they enter a country’s territory. The consequent detachment of state power from any fixed geographical marker has created a new paradigm: the shifting border, an adjustable legal construct untethered in space. This transformation upsets our assumptions about waning sovereignty, while also revealing the limits of the populist push toward border-fortification. It also presents a tremendous opportunity to rethink states’ responsibilities to migrants. This book proposes a new, functional approach to human mobility and access to membership in a world where borders, like people, have the capacity to move.

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International Studies Association Annual Convention

Wednesday-Saturday, March 25-28, 2020
Hilton Hawaiian Village Waikiki Beach Resort
2005 Kalia Road
Honolulu, HI 96815
[link removed]
[link removed]

Immigration-related sessions:

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

8:00-9:45 a.m.
Political Economy of migration

Closed Door Policy: Explaining the Wage Gap of Immigrants to the United States
Rita Boyajian Groh, University of Tennessee, Chattanooga

Estimating the Factors that Affect the Circular Flow of Skilled Migrants Between their Destination and Origin Countries
Esther Jack-Vickers, University of Massachusetts, Lowell

Italy’s Silent Return to Emigration: Trends, Causes, Consequences
Francesca Fauri, University of Bologna and Donatella Strangio, Sapienza University Rome

10:00-11:45 a.m.
Climate Change and Migration

Environment-induced migration in the IR agenda: current challenges and urgent needs
Carolina de Abreu Basta Claro, University of Brasilia

Support for Climate Migrants or Rohingya? How Bangladeshis Donate to Local Humanitarian Charities
Rachel Castellano, University of Washington

Shifting gendered subjectivies: Everyday lives of Burmese climate-induced migrants in Thailand
Chung Ah Baek, University of Warwick

A fallout from ‘good’ citizenship?: Diversity, identity and participation at times of political crisis and stability

Effect of Dual Citizenship on Electoral Viability
Alice Yiqian Wang, Stanford University

The Right to Community Participation and Citizen Security in Colombia
Dáire McGill, University of Oxford

The gendered path to Brexit: masculine identity and Euroscepticism in the UK
Charloe Galpin, Birmingham University

Citizenship on timeout? Mapping youth perceptions of ‘good’ citizenship in the nexus of migration and social media
Nora Siklodi, Norwegian University of Science and Technology/University of Portsmouth

Moving, Walking, Blocking: Conceptualizing Mobility in International Relations

Necropolics and Forced Migration in Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador. Violence as a device of death
Ruth Elizabeth Prado, ITESO, Jesuit University of Guadalajara

Securitizing and Desecuritizing Refugees during Election Campaigns: Categorization and Labelling of Mobility in Turkey
Sezgi Karacan, University of Ottawa

Challenges of Higher Education in the Global South - Panel

The Emergence of Higher Education Networks in the Global South
Jermain Grin, American University

The International Migration of Students from the Global South: Does it Reduce or Boost Social Inequality?
Uwe Hunger, University of Muenster

12:15-2:00 p.m.
Refugees and International Migration

Refugees, education and inter-community trust: New micro-level evidence from Rohingya Refugees living in Cox’s Bazaar, Bangladesh
Gudrun Østby, Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO) and Kendra Dupuy, Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO)

Fear, anxiety and emotional security after the refugee wave
Chrisan Kaunert, International Centre of Policing and Security, University of South Wales and Joana de Deus Pereira, University of South Wales - United Kingdom

The Religious Left and Right: Attitudes and Action Regarding US Immigration Policy and Border Security in Houston, Texas
Joanna U. Kaan, University of Houston - Downtown

Conservation-induced displacement and the democratic deficits of global governance: a study of a village by the Sinharaja World Nature Heritage Site
Grace Cheng, San Diego State University and Upali Pannilage, University of Ruhuna

Restrictive refugee policies: A guarantee for local security?
Heidrun Bohnet, University of Geneva

Mexico’s Perspective on the Central American migration Crisis
Carlos E. Juarez, Universidad de las Americas Puebla, Mexico and Juan Carlos Gachuz Maya, (UDLAP)

Discomfort in the Biopolical Heart of the State Apparatus? The case of missing asylum-seekers in Sweden
Anna Hammarstedt, Swedish Defence University

Moving people: adopting, interrogating and refuting governmental categorizations
Julia Morris, University of North Carolina, Wilmington

2:15-4:00 p.m.
Migration and Security in South Asia

Two Hard Places at Once: Pakistani Labour Migrants in the Persian Gulf
Zahra Babar, Georgetown University Qatar, Center for International and Regional Studies

4:15-6:00 p.m.
Regional Organizations and Human Rights

After Securisation: Militarisation of Governance of migration in the EU and Implications for the EU’s identity
Muge Kinacioglu, Hacateepe University & Leiden University

The Dichotomy between Humanitarian practice and National Security: A comparison of EU and ASEAN migration issues.
Pakawadee Suphunchitwana, Ramkhamhaeng University

Foreign Influences on National Elections

Immigrants Political Preference and Social Democratic Parties: The Quantitative Analysis on Immigrants Voting in Australian Election
Juan Chen, University of Sydney

Managing migration: histories, actors, strategies

The Internal Migration Industry in Myanmar
Darshan Vigneswaran, University of Amsterdam

Turkey’s reversed liberal immigration paradox: the logic and implications of Turkey’s positive rhetoric on migration on the international stage
Juliette Tolay, Penn State Harrisburg

After Cologne - Gender, Body Politics, and migration in Germany
Sabine Hirschauer, New Mexico State University

The Shifting Context of Reception for Migrants to Japan: 1970-2010
Tristan Ivory, Cornell University

Thursday, March 26, 2020

8:00-9:45 a.m.
Banks and Borders

Migration and cross-border banking: The missing link?
Alexandra Zeitz, University of Oxford

IPE- Gendering International Political Economy

Gendered Dimensions of Skilled Migrant Women: United States and Ecuador in comparative perspective due to the crisis in Venezuela
Maritza Figueroa, Pontifical Universidad Católica del Ecuador

The “Rights” Way to Care: How policies for migrant domestic work are developed
So Young Chang, GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies

Gender and migration

Environmental-induced migration in Mexico and Central America: A conceptual and empirical approach
Ursula Oswald Spring, National Autonomous University of Mexico

A feminist analysis of the ‘embodied’ experiences of Nepali women migrant workers in the Gulf countries
Hari KC, Balsillie School of International Affairs

The Personal is International: Transborder Movements and Abortion Access in the US-Mexico Borderlands
Andreanne Bissonnee, University of Quebec in Montreal

Consequences of the lack of intersectional public policies for women refugees: The cases of São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro
Mariana Almeida Silveira Corrêa, Universidade de São Paulo and Kelly Agopyan, University of São Paulo

10:00-11:45 a.m.
New Directions in Public Opinion about Foreign Policy I

Prejudice Towards Internal and Foreign migration: Combining List and Endorsement Experiments In Brazil
Feliciano de Sá Guimarães, University of São Paulo and Ivan Almeida Lopes Fernandes, UFABC

Cities in War and Peace

Cities, migration, and Insurgency in India's "Red Corridor"
Matthew Cobb, University of Arizona

Migration and the European Union

Turkey’s migration management: Uncertainties arising from swift changes in the legal framework and the impact of the EU-Turkey Statement
Elif Çen, University of Cambridge and Yaşar University

The cultural and economic determinants of an-immigration attitudes and support for right-wing populism in Europe
Daphne Halikiopoulou, University of Reading

The not-so-hidden cost of the ‘Australian model.’ A warning for the EU Fabio Scarpello, University of Auckland

Managing migration in the Central Mediterranean: SAR Missions, Disembarkment, and the Politics of Saving Lives
Gemma Marolda, University of Pittsburgh

Who Emigrates? Electoral Consequences of Emigration in Eastern Europe Junghyun Lim, University of Pittsburgh

Security and violence in colonial and post-colonial contexts

Face recognition as a postcolonial practice for migration control
Flavia Guerra-Cavalcan, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro

12:15-2:00 p.m.
Gender, Displacement and Dispossession in the Middle East

The intersecting experience of gender, displacement(s) and politics of migration: the case of Palestinian refugees from Syria in Jordan
Afaf Jabiri, University of East London

The ‘Inherent Vulnerability’ of Being Female: A Gendered Analysis of Morocco’s Immigration Reform
Kelsey Norman, Baker Institute, Rice University and Carrie Reiling, Washington College

Syrian Refugee Men and the Violence of Humanitarian “Vulnerability”
Lewis Turner, Arnold Bergstraesser Institute

Precarity, exclusion and everyday migrant struggles

Performing the perfect carer and ideal migrant. The ambiguity of female migration, role expectations and migrant agency in an age of global mobility.
Catherine Goetze, University of Tasmania and Georgia Spiliopoulos, University of Nongham, Ningbo, China

Everyday Meaning Making Practices of Refugees
Mehpare Selcan Kaynak, Bogazici University and Cansu E. Dedeoglu, University of Toronto

Shared spaces, disparate horizons: the (dis)similar struggles of migrant and native squatters in São Paulo, Brazil
Diana Thomaz, Balsillie School of International Affairs

The Ability to Exclude while Claiming Inclusion: The Role of Temporary Humanitarian Visas in Reproducing Precarious Migrants
Carla Angulo-Pasel, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley

From Poverty Porn to Humanization and Resisting the Trump Administration: Interrogating the US Immigrant and Refugee Rights Spaces Through Questions of Inequality, Diversity and Representations
Sabrina Axster, Johns Hopkins University

2:15-4:00 p.m.
People on the Move law, gender, and technologies of migration

Militarization, Infrastructure and migration Management: The EU`s new Agenda on migration and its Hotspot Approach in the Mediterranean Borderscape
Bilgin Ayata, University of Basel

International soft law and local immigration policies, perspectives from Mexico City and Buenos Aires
Adriana S. Ortega, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla (BUAP)

Race and migration Policies in a Colorblind World
Andrew Rosenberg, University of Florida

The Masculinities of Humanitarianism
Lewis Turner, Arnold Bergstraesser Instute

Mitigating Fears of Being Outnumbered: Studying Singapore’s Efforts to Maintain a Chinese Majority Amidst Increasing migration
Rebecca Grace Tan, University of Bristol

Forced migration

Forced migration from areas of limited statehood in northern Central America
Sonja C. Wolf, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas (CIDE)

Transit migration and people smuggling in Asia, Africa and the Americas: a rich field for comparison
Antje Missbach, School of Social Sciences Monash University

Devolving anti-child tracking responsibilities to multinational companies: the big scam? Lessons from the field in the European Union and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations
Elisa Narminio, Waseda University & Université Libre de Bruxelles

4:15-6:00 p.m.
Plotting ‘Return’: Diasporas, Diplomacy and the Homeland

Kabootarbazi: Phantom Experiences, The Policies of Naming, and Illegal migration
Akta Kaushal, University of Hawai'i at Mānoa

Universalist and Particularist Diplomacy

Plyler v. Doe: The Fulcrum of Liberal American Immigration Policy
Dan Keller, Baylor University

Friday, March 27, 2020

8:00-9:45 a.m.
Problematizing Migration

Messaging and Immigration Attitudes: (How) Can They be Improved?
Ken Stallman, University of Colorado at Boulder

The excess of migrants’ experiences over modern political categories
Suzana Velasco, Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro

Who chooses to leave? Heterogeneous migration decisions in conflict and non-conflict settings.
Jana Kuhnt, German Development Instute/Deutsches Instut für Entwicklungspolik (DIE) Constann Ruhe, Goethe-University Frankfurt am Main

Global migration Governance from Below? Civil Society and the Global Compact for migration
Stefan Rother, Arnold Bergstraesser Institute at the University of Freiburg

Environmental migration and conflict: Evidence from disaster induced displacement
Angela Chesler, University of Notre Dame

Borders and International Relations

Bringing sociology to the study of border security: a critical analysis
Cagla Luleci-Sula, Bilkent University

First Impressions at the Border: The Effects of Securitization at Europe’s Frontier
Alice Vercelli, Northeastern University

Territorial Salience: A Better Predictor for Territorial War and Peace
Karthikeyan Thiagarajan, University of Central Florida

Innovating outside the 1951 Refugee Convention- A Comparative Study of UNHCR in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh
Kundan Mishra, University of Massachusetts Boston

Queer/Trans Displacement in the United States and the Theoretical Borders of Forced migration Studies
Samuel Ritholtz, University of Oxford

New Borders to migrations In South Africa: How South Africa’s use of carrier sanctions has created new actors and new obstacles to migration
K. Taplin, University of Ottawa

The informalisation of EU migration cooperation with third countries
Juan Santos Vara, University of Salamanca and Laura Pascual Matellán, University of Salamanca

10:00-11:45 a.m.
Power and Wealth in the Anthropocene: Bringing Illicit, Informal and Resource Economies into IPE

“We are not an Immigration Country!” Complex Political Economy, Gender, and migration in Germany
Sabine Hirschauer, New Mexico State University

The Many Faces of Populism

Immigration in the European mind: The confounding of migration from within and outside the EU
Maurits Van der Veen, College of William & Mary

Internal migration Politics 2

Staging the national Other: Internal migration within the EU and populist an-immigrant mobilization
Oliver F. Schmidtke, University of Victoria

Does Immigration from Eastern Europe Fuel Euroscepticism?
Dimiter Toshkov, Leiden University

Not local enough: Opposition to internal migration in Asia
Isabelle Cote, Memorial University of Newfoundland

Internal migration and support for separatism in southern Thailand
Bethany Ann Lacina, University of Rochester

Human Rights, Gender and (In)voluntary migration: Human, Sex and Labor Tracking

Labor NGOs and Labor Tracking: Does the Spotlight Work?
Robert G. Blanton, University of Alabama at Birmingham; Shannon Lindsey Blanton, University of Alabama at Birmingham; and Dursun Peksen, University of Memphis

Sex Tracking and Women's Rights in India
Heather Smith-Cannoy, Arizona State University

Human Tracking and the International Labor Organization: Perspectives of the Global South
Ana Laura Anschau, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul

Human Tracking and the Relationship Between Civil Society and Anti-Tracking Legislation
Rachel Castellano, University of Washington

Successful Human Tracking Investigations: Questioning the Law Enforcement Standard
Richard Ramm, University of Nevada Reno

Recent Developments and Challenges in Return and Circular migration: Focusing on Reintegration of Returned Emigrants, Migrant Workers and Refugees in Home Countries

Reexamining the Reintegration Policies and Practices in Assisted Voluntary Return of Refugees and Migrants from Europe ---the German Case Studies
Ryo Kuboyama, Senshu University

Swedish labour market integration of refugees: Is the right to work guaranteed?
Ikuko Sato, J.F., Oberlin University

Returning to their homeland after a protracted period of immigrant life: Interrelationships between transnationalism and return migration among Filipino migrants in Italy
Itaru Nagasaka, Hiroshima University

Integration and Mobility: Complex Reality of migration in and from Africa
Mari Katayanagi, Hiroshima University

African Security Challenges

In search for common ground: conceptual, polical, and organizational dynamics of the migration partnership between the European Union (EU) and the African Union (AU).
Alice Musabende, University of Cambridge and Maria Chiara Vinciguerra, University of Cambridge

12:15-2:00 p.m.
International migration in an Integrated World

Into the Woods: migration and the Breon Woods Institutions
Merih Angin, Koç University; Albana Shehaj, Harvard University; and Adrian Shin, University of Colorado Boulder

Get Out: How Authoritarian Governments Decide Who Emigrates
Julian Michel, University of California, Los Angeles and Margaret E. Peters University of California, Los Angeles

Compacts and Declarations: A Two-Tiered Approach to Migrants and Refugees in Global migration Governance
Nicholas Micinski, ISA Rosenau Postdoctoral Fellow, Boston University

The Global Compact on migration: the role of the EU in the global governance of migration
Juan Santos Vara, University of Salamanca and Laura Pascual Matellán, University of Salamanca

Flexible Governance and Mul-Stakeholders Negoang the Global Compact for migration from the ‘cheap seats’ or the ‘front row’
Nicola Piper, Queen Mary University of London and Jenna Hennebry, International Migration Research Centre, Wilfrid Laurier University

International Legal Issues in Asia

An Emerging International Norm of Paid Voluntary Return or Remigration? The International Office for migration (IOM), The Netherlands, and Japan
Michael O. Sharpe, City University of New York

Spaces, Mobilities, Infrastructures II

Geoinfrastructuring border crossing and migrant (im)mobility
Polly Pallister-Wilkins, University of Amsterdam

Bordering practices: a contribution to theory and practice through the case of Hungarian-Serb border policing practices
Beatrix Futak-Campbell, Leiden University

Borders and Outsiders: Ethnicity and Biometrics in Border Control
Samah Raq, Yale University

States and Statelessness

Marginalized and Misunderstood: How An-Rohingya Language Policies Contribute to Persecution and Forced Displacement
Lindsey Kingston, Webster University and Aroline Seibert Hanson, Arcadia University

Cycles of violence: The protection issues facing stateless adolescent Rohingya refugees
Alison Brele, King's College London

Reexamining the Dichotomy between the Nation and the Foreign: The Analogy between Statelessness and Dual Nationality
Ryo Watanuki, Osaka University of Economics and Law

No place like home? Citizens, governance, and the sovereignty of disappearing States.
Selina O'Doherty, Queens University, Belfast

A Dualism of State Sanction: The Emigrant-Citizens of Egypt and Tunisia
Ahmed Khaab, Georgetown University

2:15-4:00 p.m.
State Responses to Sudden Demographic Change

Refugees: Accounting for South America’s Puzzling Generosity
Sybil Rhodes, Universidad del Centro de Estudios Macroeconómicos de Argenna

Leadership Psychology and the Restrictiveness of migration Policy: A Cross-National Study
Dennis M. Foster, Virginia Military Institute

Modeling the Transformation of migration
Anne Marie Baylouny, Naval Postgraduate School

Roundtable
At A Crossroads: The Future of Comparative Immigration Politics

Disc. Jusn Gest, George Mason University, Part. Audie Klotz, Syracuse University Part. Harris Mylonas, George Washington University Part. Kelsey Norman, Baker Institute, Rice University

4:15-6:00 p.m.
Challenges to European Democracy

The Failure of Sea Rescue in the Mediterranean as an Expression of a Political Crisis of the EU
Patricia Schneider, Institute for Peace Research and Security Policy at the University of Hamburg (IFSH)

The EU and its sub-Self Others: The struggle against disintegration in the context of the ´migration crisis
Julia Simon, Helmut Schmidt University Hamburg

Queering IR

Everyday Racism Facing Queer Syrian Migrants and Asylum Seekers in Lebanon
Razan Ghazzawi, University of Sussex

Middle East Feminism and its contributions to International Relations

The Syrian Refugee Crisis: Gendered migration During Conflict and Marriage Patterns
Carla Abdo-Katsipis, Wesleyan University

Narratives on migrations

Narraves of (be)longing? On the need to decolonise migration + refugee studies
Jasmin Habib, University of Waterloo

EU border and migration governance and NGOs: civil society partnership revisited
Satoko Horii, Akita International University

Expanding Theoretical Horizons: Studying Ethnic Diversity and migration in Postcolonial States
Rebecca Grace Tan, University of Bristol

The exclusionary violence of the forced migration: Venezuela´s case
Ivonne Tellez Patarroyo, Poncia Universidad Católica del Ecuador

Where are you from?: Identity and Interpretivism in migration Studies
Oanh Nguyen, University of Minnesota

Saturday, March 28, 2020

8:00-9:45 a.m.
Human Rights and migration

Safeguarding Human Rights through European Asylum Policy? An Ethnographic Investigation at a Greek Migrant Camp
Zoe Zahariadis, Vassar College and Nikolaos Zahariadis, Rhodes College

Divided Families: Impact of Family Reunicaon Policies on Syrian Refugees in Germany
Isis Nusair, Denison University

Equal Rights, Unequal Access: Citizenship, State Capacity, and Access to Social Rights
Natasha Benne, University of Puget Sound

Movement and Belonging

Variation in Home- and Host-Country Attachments among Turkish Immigrants: A Comparative Analysis
Melanie Kolbe, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies

Diaspora Mobilization, Political Engagement, and Rebel Group Violence
Nadia Eldemerdash, University of Nevada Las Vegas and Steven Landis, University of Nevada, Las Vegas

Opposing from afar? The activation and formation of transnational opposition against growing authoritarianism at home – The case of Turkey’s Diaspora in Germany
Gözde Böcü, University of Toronto

Intersections of migration and Trade

Local Economic Benefits Increase Positivity toward Foreigners: Evidence from an Exogenous Influx of Chinese Foreign Capital
Steven Liao, University of California, Riverside; Neil Malhotra, Stanford University; and Benjamin Newman, University of California, Riverside

Job-Training, Ideas, and Values: Explaining the Link between Education and Pro-Immigrant Attitudes
Seungbin Park, University of Alabama and Kim-Lee Tuxhorn, University of Calgary

Firm Influence on Immigration in Comparative Perspective: The Power of Large Markets
Vivienne Born, Texas Woman's University

Disrupting Barriers: Automation, migration, and Trade
Eric Stein, UC Santa Barbara

Migrants, Refugees, and Power Politics

Hyperpresidentialism, migration and International Relations: Understanding Regional Reactions to the Venezuelan Displacement Crisis
Soledad Casllo Jara, Universidad del Pacíco

Migration Diplomacy as Power Politics: A Typology of migration and Refugee “Deals"
Fiona Adamson, SOAS, University of London and Gerasimos Tsourapas, University of Birmingham

Safeguarding Dictators: EU migration Management & Authoritarianism in Africa
Kelsey Norman, Baker Institute, Rice University and Nicholas Micinski, ISA Rosenau Postdoctoral Fellow, Boston University

Refugees, Camps, and (Global) Governance: A Comparative Study of Refugee Camps Across Jordan
Rawan Arar, University of Washington

Governing Transit migration: A Relational Approach to Polycentric Governance
Maria Koinova, Warwick University

Non-State Approaches to the Politics of Ethnic Nationalism and migration: Korea from a Comparative Perspective

Talking of a Multicultural Korea: The Prospects for Transformational Change in a Homogenous Nation-State
Timothy C. Lim, CSU, Los Angeles

Pacifying Citizenship: Two Tales of Political Incorporation in Japan and the United States
Erin Chung, Johns Hopkins University and Jaeeun Kim, University of Michigan

Dusting Off ‘North Korean Identity’ and Embracing Cosmopolitan Identity: North Korean Defectors’ Onward migration to Australia
Kyungja Jung, University of Technology Sydney

10:00-11:45 a.m.
Contextualizing the Chinese Communist Party’s Foreign Influence Activities

Channeling PRC Pressure: Media, Immigration, and Institutions in Australia and New Zealand
Eric Hundman, NYU Shanghai

Global Perspectives on migration, Refugees and Sustainable Development - Panel

The migration and refugee ‘crisis’, international law, and the backlash against human rights
Ralph Wilde, University College London

Mainstreaming migration into National Development Plans: Perspectives from Kenya
Linda Oucho, African migration and Development Policy Centre

Leaving no one behind? Achievement of SDGs 3 and 17 in relation to migrants’ access to healthcare in Mexico and the US
Valeria Marina Valle, Universidad Iberoamericana Mexico City

Universal Health Coverage and migration: The Challenge of Reaching the most Vulnerable in an African Context
Dêlidji Eric Degila, Ecole Nationale d'Administraon du Bénin & Graduate Institute, Geneva

Resistance and polical mobilisation within and across diverse geographical contexts

Mobilizing and Organizing Beyond Borders: Transnational Activism in the Vietnamese Diaspora
Duyen Bui, University of Hawaii at Manoa

Migrant Workers Activism as a Form of Resistance to migration Management: The Case of Italy
Aurora Ganz, St. Andrews University

A Continent on the Move! Migration in Contemporary Latin America, the Caribbean and the United States - Panel

Lan America’s Pendulum Politics: Implications for Democratic Development in the Region
Emily Acevedo, California State University, Los Angeles

Escapando la “Tierra de Gracia”: Venezuelan migration in era of the “Bolivarian Revolution
Miguel Tinker Salas, Pomona College

The Haitian Diaspora in Mexico
April Mayes, Pomona College

Loving, Loathing, and Leaving Honduras: Coups, Militarization and Displacement in Central America in the Trump Era
Suyapa Portillo Villeda, Pitzer College

Revival of the Far Right

"Lies about Migrants: Immigration policy in a me of 'post-truth' politics"
Beverly Crawford, University of California, Berkeley

The Le Behind: Emigration, Political Brain Drain, and Support for Radical-Right Pares in Europe
Paula Ganga, Columbia University and Filip Savatic, Georgetown University

12:15-2:00 p.m.
Internationalizaon, Researcher Mobility and Intellectual Exile: Shaping Institutions, Networks and Narratives beyond the Center Periphery Divide

Latin America and Syrian Conflict: Politics, Ideology and Immigration
Mehmet Ozkan, Center for Global Policy, Washington D.C.

Forced migration and Academics in Fragile Host Countries: The Case of Lebanon
Hana Addam El-Ghali, American University of Beirut

Turkey's Academics in Exile: The German Experience
Ergun OZGUR, Leibniz-Zentrum Moderner Orient, Berlin

Of Dependencies and Opportunities: Reconstructing Transnational Networks of Scholars in Exile
Carola Richter, Free University Berlin and Florian Kohstall, Free University Berlin, Cairo Office

Identity and China

Debating Cizenship, Discussing Identity: The Children of Chinese Immigrants in Spain and their Artistic Activism
Nieves Romero-Diaz, Mount Holyoke College

East Asian Sociopolitical Challenges

Immigration Policy without Immigrants in East Asia
Erin Chung, Johns Hopkins University

The Accidental migration State: Taiwan’s Transformation of the Immigration Policy in the Globalizing World (1949-1990’s)
Yuki Tsuruzono, Waseda University

2:15-4:00 p.m.
Rhetoric and Politics

The Rhetoric of Immigration Enforcement
Kevin Cope, University of Virginia and Charles Crabtree, University of Michigan

The polical implicaons of South-South migration of Migrant Domestic Workers: Challenges for International Relations

Justified migrations from Central America: Asylum Caravans and Accountability Claims
Noelle K. Brigden, Marquee University

Race and Humiliation through the Kafala: the case of Ethiopian migrant domestic workers
Bina Fernandez, University of Melbourne

West African Domesc Worker migration to the Gulf: The case of Ghana as a ‘newcomer’
Mary Setrana, University of Ghana and Leander Kandilige, Centre for migration Studies, University of Ghana

Title: Governing the migration of Domestic Workers in Asia: a Gender and Rights-based analysis of Bilateral Labour Agreements
Nicola Piper, Queen Mary University of London Jenna Hennebry, International migration Research Centre, Wilfrid Laurier University

Influencing International Relations from below: Philippine Migrant domestic workers as transnational political actors
Stefan Rother, Arnold Bergstraesser Institute at the University of Freiburg

Other Options, Other Worlds: Central American migration to Mexico
Marcus Boyd, University of Maryland

Forced Displacement: Causes and Solutions Using Novel Data and Methods

When to flee? Understanding patterns of displacement during the Lebanese Civil War
Tiffany Chu, Virginia Military Institute and Faten Ghosn, University of Arizona

Counterinsurgency Heuristics: Ethnicity and Forced Resettlement
Christoph Dworschak, University of Essex

The Effect of the 2015 Crisis on Attitudes towards Refugees in Europe
Lamis Abdelaaty, Syracuse University

An Examination of U.S. Refugee Policy Over Time
Rebecca Cordell, University of Texas at Dallas and Thorin M. Wright, Arizona State University

How do refugee crises end? Theory & Evidence from Syrian Refugees in Lebanon
Daniel Masterson, Stanford University and Ala' Alrababa'h, Stanford University

Women and the Economics and Violence of migration

Migrant Domestic Workers: Immigration Policies Exacerbating Gender Inequality in Japan and South Korea?
Atsuko Abe, J.F. Oberlin University, Tokyo and Jihey Bae, J.F. Oberlin University, Tokyo

Labour migration from Central Asia to Russia: Economic and Social Impact on the Societies of Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan
Irina Malyuchenko, OSCE Academy in Bishkek

Dimensions of gendered violence in forced migration research
Cita Weerich, University of Freiburg

Violence Across Borders: migration, Gender, and Subjectivity Among Rohingya Refugee Women
Farhana Rahman, University of Cambridge

4:15-6:00 p.m.
Studying Identity in the Global South

The Lost Idenes: Understanding the victimisation of migrant women across the Asian countries
Tanushree Malakar, Jawaharlal Nehru University

The Politics of Power in Human Rights

Unveiling Citizenship and Immigration in Canada v. Zunera Ishaq
Herbert McCullough, Midwestern State University

Identity and Island Politics

How State Education Shapes An-Immigrant Attitudes
Boyoon Lee, Pennsylvania State University

The Political Legacy of American Occupation on Native Hawaiian Identity
Ngoc Phan, Hawaiʻi Pacific University

Fighting for Hawaiian Home Lands: Challenges to Nave Hawaiian sovereignty.
Ngoc Phan, Hawaiʻi Pacific University

Taiwan Naonalism and “One China”: Examining Mainlander (waishengren) Identity
Junki Nakahara, American University

Internal Migration Politics 3

Those who leave Quebec: the politics of secondary migration
Mireille Paquet, Concordia University and Catherine Xhardez, Sciences Po Paris and Université Saint-Louis

Strangers in their Homeland: Internal Migrants in Soa, Bulgaria
Chris Kostov, Schiller University

Inequality and the Individualization of Social Rights in China
Alexsia Chan, Hamilton College

Research Note on Immigrant Youth Radicalization and Terrorism: Pre-and Post migration Considerations
Haval Ahmad, Aberystwyth University and Mambo Masinda, TSAS

Communicating Human Rights

Silencing through benevolence: Turkey’s ‘generous’ Syrian refugee policy and its impact on the (dis)empowerment of refugees
Juliee Tolay, Penn State Harrisburg

Framing of immigrants and refugees during the EU’s refugee crisis: Comparing framing of different categories of migrants across East Central European and Western European countries
Jan Kovar, Institute of International Relations Prague & University of New York in Prague

Indigenous Treaties, Custodianship, and Constitutional Recognition

Transforming External Sovereignty: Indigenous Assertions of Self-determination in Trade and Global Agreements, Defense, and Immigration in Canada and New Zealand
Sheryl Lightfoot, University of British Columbia

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Works in Progress: Assessing Temporary-to-Permanent Immigration Systems in Europe and North America

10:00-11:30 a.m., Thursday, March 26, 2020
Bipartisan Policy Center
1225 Eye Street NW, Suite 1000
Washington, DC, xxxxxx
[link removed]

Speakers:
Cristobal Ramon
Senior Policy Analyst and Report Author, Bipartisan Policy Center

Julia Gelatt
Senior Policy Analyst, Migration Policy Institute

Daniel Costa
Director of Immigration Law and Policy Research, Economic Policy Institute

Moderator:
Theresa Cardinal Brown, Director of Immigration and Cross Border Policy, BPC

Description: Since the 1990s, a significant part of the reform debate on immigration has focused on whether the United States should change its legal immigration system to accept more high-skilled immigrants. President Trump and his congressional allies have argued that the United States should take cues from Canada and Australia and implement merit based systems that focus on admitting almost exclusively high-skilled migrants using a points-based assessment. However, the ways that workers on temporary visas can, or cannot, transition to permanent status rarely get discussed. When thinking about U.S. immigration reform, looking at other countries’ approaches to establishing temporary-to-permanent pathways may give us insight into a path forward.

Join the Bipartisan Policy Center as it releases its latest comparative report looking at five employment-based immigration systems in Europe and North America, and what we can glean from these approaches, followed by an expert panel discussion. Coffee and light snacks will be served.

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The Society of Government Economists Annual Convention

8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Friday, March 27, 2020
Janet Norwood Conference and Training Center
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
2 Massachusetts Ave, NE
Washington, DC 20002
[link removed]

Immigration-related sessions:

8:05 a.m.
The Migration Cost-Remittance-Consumption Pathway: Implications of High Migration Costs for Human Capital Investment in Nepal and Pakistan
Esther Bartl, The World Bank Group; Laura Caron Georgetown University; and Sundas Liaqat, The World Bank Group

Abstract: South Asian economies are major sources of international migrant labor and have experienced positive development impacts from the process. However, these countries have some of the highest migration costs in the world, and there is limited understanding of how these costs affect household welfare and behavior. This paper focuses on Nepal and Pakistan, to address this gap. In these countries, households that receive remittances spend 11% percent more on education and health than non-remittance receiving households. However, the high costs of migration tend to dampen both the propensity to remit and the amount remitted: a 1% increase in recruitment cost may decrease remittances by 0.05-0.15%. Specific interventions, such as the elimination of visa costs for Pakistani migrants could increase remittances by 2.9-5%. Policies that reduce migration costs may have large and important impacts on household investment behavior, and therefore the economic growth and development of Nepal and
Pakistan.

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Celebrating the Contributions of Immigrant Entrepreneurs

4:00-5:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 31, 2019
Johnson Center, Meeting Room C
George Mason University
4400 University Drive
Fairfax, VA 22030
[link removed]

Speakers:
TBA

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The contexts of reception that make asylum seekers feel welcome in Germany

12:00-1:30 p.m., Tuesday, March 31, 2020
William James Hall, Room 450
33 Kirkland Street
Cambridge, MA 02138
[link removed]

Speaker:
Rahsaan Maxwell, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

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Certificate program course in International Migration Studies

XCPD-715 - Environmental Displacement and Migration

9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m., Wednesday-Friday, April 15-17, 2020
Georgetown University School of Continuing Studies
C-204, 640 Massachusetts Ave. NW
Washington, DC 20001
[link removed]

Course Description: Since the earliest history of humankind, people have migrated in response to environmental change. Today there is growing concern that human-induced climate change, coupled with human settlement patterns, will lead to far greater movements of people; some movement is likely to be voluntary as people look for better opportunities elsewhere in response to changing livelihoods. Some is likely to be involuntary – either anticipatory as people see the handwriting on the wall or reactive as people have no alternative but to move. Some will be spontaneous – in the case of Puerto Rico where hundreds of thousands of people left Puerto Rico following Hurricane Maria in 2017. Some will be planned as in the case of Staten Island where people decided to move elsewhere, with government support, after Hurricane Sandy in 2012. Environmental displacement and migration are not just concerns for future generations; people are already moving. This course will begin with an examination of
environmental risk due to physical processes and then review the state of theoretical knowledge about patterns of migration. The course will then look at the socio-economic, political, security, and demographic factors that affect environmental displacement and migration as well as the consequences for those who move, for the destination communities, for those left behind and for national and international politics

Course Objectives:

At the completion of the course, a successful student will be able to:

* Understand the relationship between environmental phenomena and socio-economic factors as drivers of displacement and migration

* Analyze the relationship between environmental risk and mobility

* Understand the normative frameworks applicable to different types of internal and cross-border migration and displacement

* Explain basic concepts, such as vulnerability, risk, disaster risk reduction, climate change mitigation and adaptation

* Identify different disciplinary approaches to environmental migration and displacement

* Recognize the different international institutional actors

Instructor: Elizabeth Ferris

Tuition: $1,195.00, 24 contract hours

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Midwest Political Science Association annual conference

Thursday-Sunday, April 16-19, 2020
Palmer House Hilton
17 East Monroe Street
Chicago, IL 60603
[link removed]

[CANCELLED as of March 17, 2020]

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Unaccompanied Moroccan Migrant Minors in Spain

3:00-5:00 p.m., Wednesday, April 22, 2020
Lydeen Library, Rolfe Hall West 4302
UCLA campus
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1487
[link removed]

Speakers:
Susan Plann, Research Professor Emerita at UCLA in the departments of Chicana and Chicano Studies and Spanish and Portuguese and the author of Coming of Age in Madrid: An Oral History of Unaccompanied Moroccan Migrant Minors .

Abdellah Laroussi, social worker with Fundación La Merced Migraciones (Madrid), director of various residences for unaccompanied migrant youth, and prominent immigrant rights activist and spokesperson.

Description: According to Human Rights Watch, unaccompanied child migration is today the new normal; according to the Spanish press, it has now reached crisis proportions, and the great majority of unaccompanied foreign migrant minors in Spain are Moroccans. The topic of “Unaccompanied Moroccan Migrant Minors in Spain” is of importance for both European and African im/migration, and it also has significant implications for child migration to the U.S.

During the first half of the presentation Prof. Plann will provide an overview of unaccompanied Moroccan child migration to Spain, including the motives for their migration, how it is accomplished, their reception on Spanish shores, their status under Spanish law, and what happens when these children come of age. She will also point out notable differences between their situation in Spain and that of migrant minors in the U.S. Spain’s policy toward unaccompanied child migrants, which includes a path to citizenship, may seem an attractive alternative to the American model, but Prof. Plann argues that it also has its downsides.

The second half of the presentation will feature Mr. Laroussi, himself a former Moroccan child migrant who now resides in Madrid. Social worker with the foundation Merced Migraciones and prominent immigrants’ rights activist and spokesperson, Mr. Laroussi will tell his personal story and analyze the current situation of unaccompanied migrant youth in Spain, with whom he works on a daily basis.

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30th ASEN Annual Conference: Nationalism and Multiculturalism

Wednesday-Thursday, April 22-23, 2020
University of Edinburgh
Edinburgh, Scotland
[link removed]

Conference programme draft - Immigration-related sessions

Wednesday, April 22, 2020

9:00-10:30 a.m.
Welcome Ceremony and First plenary speaker: Bikhu Parekh

10:45 a.m.-12:15 p.m.
PANEL SESSION 1

Diaspora Communities: Long-Distance Nationalism in Situ

Indo-Trinidadian heritage: Toronto as a diaporic context
Kathleen Boodhai

Nationalism and politics among the Chinese diaspora in the UK
Oana Burcu

How Restrictive is Liberal Nationalism’s Immigration Policy?
Ranjoo Herr

Rescaling Identity in Europe: Civilisationism, Self-determinism, and Multiculturalism

Other Brexit Imaginaries: Openness and the crisis of liberal Britain
Arshad Isakjee

Rescaling the border: Simulation, sovereignty and civilisationism
Paul Richardson

Challenges to Scandinavian National Identities

From Exclusion to Establishment: Researching Anti-Political Establishment Parties in Scandinavia
Johan Andersen

3:15-4:45 p.m.
PANEL SESSION 2

Social Perceptions of Diversity : Migration in European Nations

National/ European identities and attitudes towards migrant integration: findings from EVS-European Values Study
Simona Guglielmi

The perception of European migrant crisis by Danish minority in Germany and German minority in Denmark. A comparative analysis of media discourses.
Sergiusz Bober

Migration and national minority communities: two sides in the debate about multiculturalism and interculturalism in Catalonia
Mariona Lladonosa

What’s in a name? Children of migrants, national belonging and the politics of naming
Marco Antonsich

3:00-4:30 p.m.
PANEL SESSION 3

Indeterminate status: the Global Refugee Crisis

Nationalism and Immigration in Greece and the Netherlands: a Comparative Perspective
Thanos Koulos

Creating “refugees” within: Challenges for multiculturalism in Japan where only 20 refugees are accepted out of 20,000 applications
Naoko Hosokawa

Syrian refugees in Turkey: Challenge to Nationalism
Cigdem Nas

New Approaches in Nationalism Studies

Beyond assimilation: the compliance – resistance theory
Manolis Pratsinakis

When the Methods are Madness: Researching with Refugees in the UK
Isabella Gabrovsky

4:00-6:00 p.m.
Plenary speaker: Christian Joppke

Thursday, April 23, 2020

9:00-10:30 a.m.
Populism, Multiculturalism and Internationalism in Eurasia: Negotiating Empire and its Legacies

Russia reports Western voting: transnational nationalisms versus multiculturalism
Chatterje-Doody

1:30-3:00 p.m.
PANEL SESSION 5

Minority Nationalisms in the West

Immigration and the Imagined Community: Province-wide Norm or Local-level Realities in Quebec?
Antoine Bilodeau

European stateless nationalisms facing the challenge of multiculturalism. Insights from Scotland, Catalonia, Basque Country and Flanders
Paolo Perri

Migration, Minority Groups and the Politics of Multiculturalism in Japan and Northeast Asia

The politics of local multiculturalism in the age of superdiversity and resurgent nationalism in Japan
Sachi Takaya

Challenges and Possibilities of “Multicultural Japan” – The Emergence of Minority Representatives in Japan’s Political Landscape
Seiko Mimaki

Territorial Disputes in Northeast Asia: Questioning the “national consciousness” paradigm
Alexander Bukh

Cultural nationalism in multicultural Japan
Fumiko Takahashi

Book Panel: Struggle over Borders
Pieter De Wilde

Disputing ‘One China’: Cases from Hong Kong and Taiwan

One country, two identities. In search of Hong Kong’s identity
Malgorzata Osinska

‘I was discriminated against because I was seen as PRC-Chinese’: The negotiation between ethnicity and nationalism among Taiwanese migrants in Australia
Yao-Tai Li

Representing the Nation in Media Discourses

Cultural Boundary Drawings of German National Identity in Migrant Integration Discourses
Anja Benedikt

Book Panel: Borderline Citizen: Dispatches from the outskirts of nationhood
Robin Hemley

3:15-4:45 p.m.
Beyond the Melting Pot: Ethnicity in North America

Melting the Pot: The Rise of ‘Ethnicity’ in the United States
Jaakko Heiskanen

The Oxymoronic Nation: Liberal Individualism and the Invention of Color Race and Ethnicity in the United States, 1880-1920
Reynolds Scott-Childress

Muslim Minorities in Europe

Liberal citizenship, pluralism and Muslims in Europe
Nasar Meer

Spiritualising Reason, Rationalising Spirit. Ex-, Practicing, and Converted Muslim Public Intellectuals in the German Far-Right
Julian Gopffarth

Laïcité bien comprise vs. Laïcité compromise: Senegalese Muslims in France
Olivia Till

Questioning Perceptions of National Belonging with Discourse Analysis

Discursive constructions of national identity in the Gulf States: ‘Deserving citizens’ and ‘undeserving migrants’
Idil Akinci

Cataloguing the nation: National canons and admission to citizenship in the Netherlands and Flanders (2006-2019)
Jan Rock

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Writing Immigration History in an Age of Fake News

12:00-1:30 p.m., Thursday, April 23, 2020
Robinson Hall Basement Seminar Room
35 Quincy Street
Cambridge, MA 02138
[link removed]

Speaker:
Katy Long, Senior Research Associate at the School of Advanced Study at the University of London

Description: In the battle that currently rages over immigrants’ place in America’s future, history has been weaponized. If liberals remain convinced that America is at its very core a ‘nation of immigrants’: a country shaped by a constant flow of newcomers, conservatives insist that preserving historic American identity depends upon keeping an imminent immigrant ‘invasion’ at bay. The reality, however, is a far more less binary history than is suggested by either shrill and repetitive headlines about walls, deportations and looming crisis, or romanticized nostalgia for an era in which ‘huddled masses’ were ushered through ‘golden doors’. At a moment when debates over immigration are at the center of a national political crisis, is there a duty to write about immigration in ways that reach beyond the seminar hall? If so, how can researchers best tell stories about the history of American Immigration in ways which engage an ever-more skeptical and polarized public.

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The Issue of Immigration in America: Moving Beyond Walls and Open Borders

4:30–6:00 p.m., Friday, April 24, 2020
Heinz College – Hamburg Hall A301
Carnegie Mellon University
5000 Forbes Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15213-3890
[link removed]

Description: In the United States, the issue of immigration gives rise to controversy and conflict. This issue requires us to wrestle with challenging questions about many things, including:

Who should be admitted to the US as an immigrant (family members, skilled workers, etc.)?

How many people should the US admit as immigrants (should we increase, decrease or keep current levels)?

What rules should guide the immigration process (and how should these rules be enforced)?

How should we address the problems (social, political, and economic) that cause people to migrate from their home countries?

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Annual Conference on European Immigration Law 2020

Monday-Tuesday, April 27-28, 2020
Academy of Europe
Avenue des Arts 56
1000 Bruxelles, Belgium
[link removed]

Objective:
The aim of this conference is to provide legal practitioners with an update on recent developments in the EU legal migration system and the mechanisms put in place to tackle labour and skills shortages and to reinforce the attractiveness of the EU for key workers. It will give them the opportunity to discuss current legal reforms with high-level experts in the field.

Key topics: Key novelties in current EU legal migration law.

Schengen Visa Code amendments

Blue Card system for highly qualified workers

Intra-Corporate Transfers Directive in practice

Implementation of the Single Permit Directive

Family reunification of third-country nationals

Integration of third-country nationals in the EU Member States

Strengthening cooperation with non-EU countries: facilitating legal migration pathways

Employment and immigration law post-Brexit

Recent case law of European courts in legal migration matters

Conference Program:

Monday, April 27, 2020

I. THE LEGAL MIGRATION FRAMEWORK IN THE EU – RECENT DEVELOPMENTS

9:45 a.m.
Recent legislative developments and key priorities for 2020-2021 in the EU legal migration system
Laura Corrado

10:45 a.m.
Update on the Community Code on Visas: Regulation (EU) 2019/1155 amending Regulation (EC) 810/2009
Dimitri Giotakos

12:15 p.m.
The post-Brexit UK immigration system and its impact on EU citizens

* Should business be worried by the drop in EU migration?
* Current assessment of adopted measures
* What additional challenges are to be expected by companies?
* Solutions for cross-border workers after Brexit Annabel Mace

II. ASPECTS OF EU AND NATIONAL LEGAL MIGRATION LAW IN A BROADER LEGISLATIVE CONTEXT

2:15 p.m.
Investor citizenship and residence schemes in the European Union: the cases of Malta, Bulgaria and Cyprus

* Investor residence schemes and EU law on legal migration
* The link between investor residence schemes and naturalisation procedures
* Areas of concern
* Risks posed by investor citizenship and residence schemes
Jelena Dzankic

3:15 p.m.
Mobility rights for third-country nationals under the EU’s migration directives: posted workers and EU intra-corporate transferees – how to differentiate and ensure compliance

* Main changes introduced by the revised posted workers directive
* Facilitating intra-EU mobility by the ICT permit
* Case law of the CJEU Matthias Lommers

4:30 p.m.
The new German skilled immigration rules
Marius Tollenaere

Tuesday, April 28, 2020

III. CASE LAW OF THE CJEU AND ITS IMPACT ON EU LEGAL MIGRATION LAW

9:30 a.m.
The right to family reunification and long-term resident status in recent CJEU jurisprudence

* G.S. and V.G. Joined cases C-381/18 and C-382/18
* Cases C-519/18 and C-706/18
* Case C-93/18: Right of residence of a third-country national who is a direct relative in the ascending line of Union citizen minors
* Case C-302/18: Conditions for the acquisition of long-term resident status
Doyin Lawunmi

IV. EXTERNAL DIMENSION OF LEGAL MIGRATION

11:00 a.m.
Developing and implementing alternative pathways for legal migration

* Socio-economic challenges
* Pilot projects for legal migration with selected third countries
* Legal migration pathways to Europe for low- and middle-skilled migrants
Silvio Grieco

V. FUTURE CHALLENGES AND OUTLOOK

12:00 p.m.
Reflections on EU legal migration law

* Assessment of the current situation
* Main challenges
* Ideas and suggestions for the future Kees Groenendijk

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Certificate program course in International Migration Studies

XCPD-716 - Immigration Policy

9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m., Wednesday-Friday, May 6-8, 2020
Georgetown University School of Continuing Studies
C-204, 640 Massachusetts Ave. NW
Washington, DC 20001
[link removed]

Course Description: U.S. Immigration Reform examines the strengths and weaknesses of current US immigration policy and proposals for its reform. The course focuses on the system for legal permanent admissions and temporary admissions (nonimmigrant categories) for work, family reunification, study, and other similar purposes. It also examines policies designed to curb unauthorized migration, assessing the effectiveness of border and interior enforcement activities.

The course also examines policies related to forced migration, including refugee resettlement, asylum and temporary protected status. These issues will be discussed in a comparative framework, analyzing how other countries address issues affecting the United States. The course will examine the role of federal, state and local authorities in implementing policy reforms. It also examines the role of public opinion and various interest groups in affecting policy formulation.

Students will be required to write a 10-page paper, due after the course completion, on a specific reform issue.

Section Notes: U.S. Immigration Reform examines the strengths and weaknesses of current US immigration policy and proposals for its reform. The course focuses on the system for legal permanent admissions and temporary admissions (nonimmigrant categories) for work, family reunification, study, and other similar purposes. It also examines policies designed to curb unauthorized migration, assessing the effectiveness of border and interior enforcement activities.

Instructor: Katharine Donato

Tuition: $1,195.00, 24 contract hours

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Building Just and Inclusive Communities in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama: 15 Years After Katrina

A Whole of Community Approach to Immigrants and Refugees

Thursday-Saturday, May 21-23, 2020
Loyola University New Orleans College of Law
526 Pine Street
New Orleans, LA 70118
[link removed]

Description: The Center for Migration Studies’ (CMS) Whole of Community Conference will be held this year at Loyola University New Orleans College of Law from May 21-23, 2020. At the conference, participants will explore the challenges facing diverse immigrant and refugee communities in local communities in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and elsewhere. The conference will feature best practices in supporting and defending these communities.

The Whole of Community Conference is a platform for community-focused collaborations among public officials, legal service providers, community organizers, community-based organizations, faith-based organizations, scholars, researchers, immigrants, refugees, and others in response to local and national immigration policies. The sponsors of this year’s event will be CMS, Loyola University New Orleans College of Law and the Jesuit Social Research Institute / Loyola University New Orleans.

The conference schedule includes: optional site visits on May 21; and plenary panels and workshops on May 22 and 23. The conference fee of $50 includes lunch and refreshments throughout the event.

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Latin American Studies Association annual meeting

Wednesday-Saturday, May 13-16, 2020
Guadalajara, Mexico
[link removed]

Conference program to be available soon.

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2020 Summer School on EU Immigration and Asylum Law and Policy

Monday, June 29-Friday, July 10, 2020
Université libre de Bruxelles
Brussels, Belgium
[link removed]

Description: While we celebrate the 20th anniversary of our summer school, it has trained more than 2000 persons and is well known among employers considering it as an asset for job seekers. This 20th edition will focus on the new pact on migration to be presented in April by the European Commission. The objective is to give to the participants a global understanding of the immigration and asylum policies in the EU from a legal perspective. The summer school is organised by the Odysseus Network for Legal Studies on Immigration and Asylum in Europe, founded in 1999 with the support of the European Commission. In addition to classes, the summer school provides an excellent opportunity to spend an intellectually stimulating time in a group of around one hundred participants specialised in the area of asylum and immigration from all over Europe. The location of the summer school in Brussels creates a unique environment facilitating participants’ interaction with European institutions.
Participants in the summer school typically includes PhD and graduate students, researchers, EU and Member State officials, representatives from NGOs and International Organisations, lawyers, judges, social workers, etc. The classes are taught by academics originating from all EU Member States collaborating in the framework of the Odysseus Network, and by high- ranking officials from the European Institutions, particularly the European Commission. You can discover the Summer School through this video: odysseus-network.eu/2020-summer-school

Subjects:

Opening lecture

Migration flows and statistics

Free movement of EU citizens

European institutional framework.

Implications of human rights

External relations and European migration policy

European Databases (SIS, VIS, Eurodac, etc.)

External border control

European visa policy

Immigration for purposes of work

Family reunification

Status and integration of third country nationals

Smuggling and trafficking

Return and readmission

Reception conditions for asylum seekers

European concepts of refugee and of subsidiary protection

Member States responsibility

(“Dublin mechanism”)

Asylum procedures

Calendar and Schedule: The first general part of the program includes 14 hours of lectures and the second and third specialised parts on immigration and asylum 30 hours in total. Each day is generally done of 2classes of 2 hours, presented with a coffeebreak in between. In order to enable participants in full-time employment to attend the classes, courses take mainly place in the afternoon between 2 pm and 6:30pm.

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Certificate program course in International Migration Studies

XCPD-744 - Global Displacement & Migration Studies

9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m., Monday-Friday, July 27-31, 2020
Georgetown University School of Continuing Studies
C-204, 640 Massachusetts Ave. NW
Washington, DC 20001
[link removed]

Course Description: This course offers deep knowledge and information about the different groups of people on the move (labor migrants, refugees, internally displaced, asylum seekers, and others), and the multiple causes and consequences of such movements of people. It also provides a global overview of displacement and migration numbers and trends; drivers of population movements; impacts on origin, transit and host countries; and policy responses to population movements.

Specifically, the course will cover the major theoretical explanations underpinning displacement and international migration; global migration and refugee governance; differences and trends in national policies, especially refugee resettlement and labor migration; integration experiences of immigrants in host countries; and connections between migration and displacement and other issues as security, development and environmental change. Finally, the certificate will illustrate how research questions are answered in an effort to enhance existing knowledge and improve policies and practices.

Course Objectives:
* After completing the certificate, successful students will be able to:

* Understand current patterns and trends related to displacement and global migration, including the number and characteristics of those on the move at global, regionally and national levels

* Understand differences among those on the move, including refugees, internally displaced persons, asylum seekers and others

* Articulate the causes of displacement and migration, drawing from both theory and empirical evidence;

* Describe the global refugee and migration governance frameworks and how they articulate the rights of people on the move and the responsibilities of origin, transit and destination countries;

* Assess the interconnections between international migration and other transnational issues, such as development, security and climate change

* Discuss and articulate strengths and weaknesses of the national policy frameworks governing the admission of migrants, control of irregular migration, protection of refugees and other forced migrants, etc.

* Understand the integration process of immigrants, and the resettlement process of refugees, in destination countries

* Learn how to ask and answer relevant research questions about these issues

Instructor: Katharine Donato

Tuition: $4,995.00, 60 contract hours

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Crimmigration, Capital, and Consequences, 5th Biennial CINETS Conference

Wednesday-Friday, September 24–26, 2020
Lewis and Clark Law School
10015 SW Terwilliger Blvd #7768
Portland, OR 97219
[link removed]

Description: The Crimmigration Control International Network of Studies (CINETS) is pleased to invite you to our fifth biennial international conference, which will be held in partnership with Lewis & Clark’s 25th annual Business Law Forum. For the first time, Oxford-based Border Criminologies will join CINETS as a co-host for this event.

Crimmigration, the merging of immigration enforcement and criminal justice regimes, has rapidly become the dominant response to human mobility around the globe. Crimmigration has emerged, ironically, in tandem with growing economic globalization. For capital, national borders have virtually disappeared, while the walls, virtual and literal, are growing higher for workers and others who need mobility to thrive, and even survive. Race, ethnicity, and personal wealth matter in who gains entry. Are fairness, justice, and inclusion, values that democratic societies hold dear, to be available only on a members-only basis? What is the role of capital in fomenting human mobility and profiting from the barriers that governments are erecting to deter immigrants? How can we resist the bordering trend that works selectively against those most in need? This conference will treat crimmigration and bordering holistically as systems nested within economy and society in subtle, and not-so-subtle, ways.

We welcome individual and panel submission (fully or partly-formed). The conference also welcomes submissions for work-in-progress sessions, including potential Border Criminologies blog posts. To apply, submit a (maximum) 200-word abstract, with a tentative title and contact information. Please indicate whether you are applying for a papers-only panel or a work-in-progress/blog post session.

Deadline for submissions is June 15, 2020. Send your submissions and questions to Richard Adams at [email protected].

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Immigration and the changing nature of work

Canadian Immigration Summit 2020

[RESCHEDULED FROM MARCH 13-14, 2020]

Monday-Tuesday, October 5-6, 2020
The Shaw Center
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
[link removed]

Programme:

Monday, October 5, 2020

8:20 a.m.
Opening remarks—Building an attractive and welcoming immigration system

8:40 a.m.
Remarks—Remaining competitive in a disruptive economy

9:00 a.m.
Keynote -Radical innovation for greater social good

9:30 a.m.
Panel presentation - Global migration trends—Systems and policies

11:00 a.m.
Concurrent Sessions (please select one)

Concurrent A1: Fostering immigrant entrepreneurship

Concurrent A2: Long-term success of international students in Canada

Concurrent A3: Paving pathways for inclusion for skilled refugees

1:00 p.m.
Concurrent Sessions (please select one)

Concurrent B1: Using technology to help immigrants and refugees

Concurrent B2: Immigrant women and the fourth industrial revolution

Concurrent B3: In-camera session for employers—Talent solutions at the intersection of immigration and long-term prosperity

2:30 p.m.
Panel presentation - Attracting an immigrant workforce: Regional approaches to immigration in the new world of work

3:30 p.m.
Panel discussion - Innovation in the workplace—The employer experience

4:45 p.m.
Day 1 roundup

Tuesday, October 6, 2020

8:15 a.m.
Remarks—Building a forward-thinking workforce

9:00 a.m.
Keynote - Innovative solutions: Can technology help transform the labour market, reskill workers, and support lifelong learning?

10:00 a.m.
Panel discussion - Business savvy with a global mindset: Employment in the age of increased migration

11:00 a.m.
Presentation - Remaining competitive through immigration and future-thinking

11:45 a.m.
Summit closing remarks

12:00 p.m.
Conference conclusion

1:00 p.m.
Optional Workshop Attracting international investment through business succession

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