1. 7/9, DC - Discussion on responses to migration challenges at the U.S.-Mexico border
2. 7/10, DC - House hearing on allegations of mistreatment of migrants at the U.S.-Mexico border - [New Listing]
3. 7/10, DC - Discussion on the upcoming Guatemalan presidential runoff and its implications for US relations - [New Listing]
4. 7/10-12, DC - Certificate program course on global governance of refugees and immigrants
5. 7/10-13, Oakland/Berkeley - Summer Institute on Migration and Global Health
6. 7/12, DC - House hearing on the Administration's child separation policy - [New Listing]
7. 7/15, US/Europe - MPI Webinar on protecting the E.U.’s external border in the western Balkans
8. 8/9-11, New York, NY - Immigration at the Society for the Study of Social Problems annual meeting
9. 8/10-13, New York, NY - Immigration at American Sociological Association annual meeting
10. 10/8, DC - Annual immigration law and policy conference
11. 10/10-11, Zagreb, Croatia - Conference on diaspora and homeland
12. 11/14, San Diego - Book panel: Migration Control
13. 11/20-22, DC - 2019 Homeland Security Week conference
1.
Beyond Walls and Tariffs: Responding to Migration Challenges at the U.S.-Mexico Border
11:00 a.m.-12:30 p.m., Tuesday, July 9, 2019
American Enterprise Institute, Auditorium
1789 Massachusetts Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20036
http://www.aei.org/events/beyond-walls-and-tariffs-responding-to-migration-challenges-at-the-us-mexico-border/
Description: Illegal crossings at the US-Mexico border are at the highest level in more than a decade. President Trump has responded with increasingly dramatic steps, including threatening debilitating tariffs on Mexican exports and the elimination of aid to Central America. At the same time, heightened political polarization undermines the US government’s ability to adequately address the complex challenge of illegal immigration with practical policies and bipartisan legislation.
Join AEI and the Migration Policy Institute for a conversation on border security, as well as policy responses and regional cooperation on illegal immigration.
Join the conversation on social media with @AEI on Twitter and Facebook.
If you are unable to attend, we welcome you to watch the event live on this page. Full video will be posted within 24 hours.
Panelists:
Gerónimo Gutiérrez, former ambassador from Mexico to the US; Beel Infrastructure Partners
Sarah Pierce, Migration Policy Institute
Andrew Selee, Migration Policy Institute
Marc A. Thiessen, AEI
Moderator:
Roger F. Noriega, AEI
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2.
Kids in Cages: Inhumane Treatment at the Border
2:00 p.m., Wednesday, July 10, 2019
House Committee on Oversight and Reform
Subcommittee on Civil Rights and Civil Liberties
2154 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515
https://oversight.house.gov/legislation/hearings/kids-in-cages-inhumane-treatment-at-the-border
Witnesses:
Panel 1
Yazmin Juárez
Asylum Seeker
Panel 2
Michael Breen
President and Chief Executive Officer Human Rights First
Clara Long Deputy
Washington Director Human Rights Watch
Hope Frye
Executive Director Project Lifeline
Carlos A. Gutierrez, M.D. F.A.A.P.
Pediatrics Private Practice
Ronald D. Vitiello
(Minority Witness) Former Chief, U.S. Border Patrol Former Acting Director, Immigration and Customs Enforcement
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3.
Guatemala’s Presidential Runoff: What Next for Rule of Law and US Relations?
9:30-11:00 a.m., Wednesday, July 10, 2019
Inter American Dialogue
1155 15th Street NW, Suite 800
Washington, DC xxxxxx
https://www.thedialogue.org/events/guatemalas-presidential-runoff-what-next-for-rule-of-law-and-u-s-relations/
Description: On June 16, after months of intense campaigning and political controversies that saw two front-running prospective candidates disqualified from the ballot, Guatemalans voted for their next President and Vice President, all 160 seats in Congress, and 340 mayors. Of the 19 candidates for President, Sandra Torres of the National Unity of Hope (UNE) party and Alejandro Giammattei of the Let’s Go (VAMOS) party advanced to a second round runoff on August 11.
Guatemala’s election occurs at a tense and turbulent time. Allegations of irregularities led the Supreme Electoral Tribunal to order an ongoing review of the electoral results, though the OAS has dismissed the possibility of widespread fraud. Outgoing president Jimmy Morales is deeply unpopular and perhaps best known for waging war on the UN’s Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG), which is set to close its doors in September. And Guatemala finds itself the focus of the Trump Administration as a leading source of undocumented migrants as well as a potential “safe third country” for asylum seekers from elsewhere in the Northern Triangle.
Who is likely to win the Guatemalan presidential election, and what can Guatemalans expect of the victor? Can CICIG be saved, and what does the future hold for rule of law, citizen security, and the investment climate in Guatemala? How might the relationship with the United States evolve in the months and years ahead?
To answer these questions, the Inter-American Dialogue is proud to host “Guatemala’s Presidential Runoff: What Next for Rule of Law and US Relations?”
Speakers:
Sadaf Khan, Staff Director, U.S. House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee, Western Hemisphere Subcommittee
Martín Rodríguez Pellecer, CEO and Director, Nómada
Brittany Benowitz, Chief Counsel, Center for Human Rights, American Bar Association
Hugo Maul, Chief Counsel, Center for Human Rights, American Bar Association
Moderator:
Michael Camilleri, Director, Peter D. Bell Rule of Law Program, Inter-American Dialogue
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4.
Certificate in International Migration Studies
XCPD-713 - Global Governance of Refugees and Immigrants
Course Details: While international agreements facilitate the relatively free movement of goods, services, and capital across borders, multilateral agreements on the movement of people are much less developed. This course will begin with an examination of global governance concepts and international regimes and the relationship between global governance of migration and other international issues, such as sovereignty, security, and north-south power differentials. The course will then look at the principal normative frameworks, actors and ‘rules of the game’ for governance of both refugee response and migration. The role of governments of both migrant-sending and migrant-receiving states will be analyzed as well as key international actors such as the International Organization for Migration, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, civil society actors, regional organizations and processes and other international bodies, such as the Global Forum on Migration and Development. The emergence of mini-multilateral initiatives, particularly Migrants in Countries in Crisis and the Platform for Disaster Displacement, will be assessed as possible alternatives to comprehensive, binding legal regimes. Particular attention will be devoted to the implementation of the unanimous decision in 2016 by the UN General Assembly to negotiate two new global compacts: a Global Compact on Refugees and a Global Compact on Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration. The course will be taught by an interdisciplinary team of social
Objectives:
At the completion of the course, a successful student will be able to:
* Outline concepts of global governance and international regimes;
* Present trends in global migration, including forced and voluntary migration;
* Examine the role of sovereignty, security concerns and north-south power differentials in shaping multilateral approaches to migration;
* Compare international regimes for migration and refugees and the reasons for these differences, including mini-multilateral initiatives;
* Classify the principal actors in the international migration and refugee regimes, regional organizations and processes, and other international initiatives;
* Predict the impact around the establishment of a new Global Compact on Refugees and on Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration.
https://portal.scs.georgetown.edu/search/publicCourseSearchDetails.do?method=load&courseId=23340443
Class Meets: 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m., Wednesday-Friday, July 10-12, 2019
Tuition: $995.00, 3 sessions, 24 contact hours
Instructors: Katharine Donato and Elizabeth Ferris
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5.
14th Summer Institute on Migration and Global Health
Wednesday-Friday, July 10–13, 2019
The California Endowment Center for Healthy Communities (Wednesday-Thursday)
2000 Franklin Street, Oakland, CA 94612
University of California Berkeley, School of Public Health (Friday)
2121 Berkeley Way #5302, Berkeley, CA 94720
https://hia.berkeley.edu/summer-institute-on-migration-health/
Description: The Annual Summer Institute on Migration and Global Health is an event that has gained national and international recognition, since it is one of the few academic spaces dedicated to present and analyze in depth the interrelation between migration, the health of migrants, and global health from a multi-disciplinary perspective. The Summer Institute provides researchers, faculty, graduate students, and professionals working with migrant communities around the world, a unique opportunity to learn about different health issues that affect mobile populations.
The four-day event includes a combination of lectures, panel discussions, hand-on workshops, poster sessions, and field trips, to offer an exceptional opportunity not only to learn, but also to create professional networks. Nationally and internationally recognized experts teach the relationship between migration and global health from a public health, public policy, and clinical perspective, among others.
Today, more than ever, we need to have a better understanding of the health effects of migration, and improve the skills of those individuals dedicated to conducting research, impacting policies, and improving health services related to migration and global health. We hope to see you at the 14th Annual Summer Institute on Migration and Global Health, which will be held in Oakland and Berkeley, California, from July 10 to 13, 2019.
This year, for the first time we will be offering live-streaming options for those who cannot attend in person. This service will provide access to the morning lectures from Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. For more information visit: MigrationAndGlobalHealth.org
Agenda:
Wednesday, July 10, 2019
Location: The California Endowment (TCE), 2000 Franklin St. Oakland, CA
8:45–9:00 a.m.
Welcoming Remarks
Remedios Gomez Arnau, Consul General of Mexico in San Francisco
9:00–09:45 a.m.
Global Migration: Past, Present, and Future
Marc Schenker, University of California Davis
9:45–10:30 a.m.
Changes in Immigration Policies in the U.S.
Steven Wallace, University of California Los Angeles
10:45–11:30 a.m.
Best Practices in Responding to Refugee and Migrant Health Challenges in Europe
Santino Severoni, World Health Organization
11:30 a.m.–12:15 p.m.
Human Rights and Medical-Legal Partnerships: a Framework for Research and Advocacy
Joseph Shin, Weill Cornell Medicine
1:00–1:30 p.m.
Presentation of the "Mario Gutierrez Award on Migrant Health" to:
Gudelia Rangel, US-Mexico Border Health Commision Mexican Section & Joseba Achotegui Loizate, University of Barcelona
1:30-2:45 p.m.
Breakout Sessions
1. Data Sources and Research Methods on Migration and Health
Alfonso Rodriguez-Lainz, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
2. US-Mexico Collaborations to Improve Migrants' Health (presentation in Spanish)
Gudelia Rangel, US-Mexico Border Health Commision Mexican Section and Liliana Osorio, University of California Berkeley
3. Occupational Health and Safety
Marc Schenker, University of California Davis
3:00-4:15 p.m.
Breakout Sessions
4. Mapping Spatial Inequality in Immigrant Services
Irene Bloemraad, University of California Berkeley
5. Policy Dialogues: Evidence and Engagement for Advancing Health Equity
Lisa Cacari-Stone, University of New Mexico
6. Alcohol & Substances Related Sexual Risk in Latino Migrant Day Laborers
Kurt Organista, University of California Berkeley
Thursday, July 11, 2019
Location: The California Endowment (TCE), 2000 Franklin St., Oakland, CA
8:30–9:15 a.m.
Regional Coordination and Health Response to Mass Migration in Latin America
Karen Carpio, International Organization for Migration
9:15–10:00 a.m.
Health Disparities among Asian Immigrants in the U.S.
10:15–11:00 a.m.
How to Integrate Migration Health into Global Health Initiatives
Stefano Bertozzi, UC Berkeley
11:00 a.m.–12:15 p.m.
Panel on Data Collection on Immigrant’s Health: Benefits vs Harm
Alfonso Rodriguez-Lainz, Center for Disease Control and Prevention
Deliana Garcia, Migrant Clinicians Network
Joseph Shin, Weill Cornell Medicine
Moderator:
Irene Bloemraad, UC Berkeley
12:15-1:30 a.m.
Lunch & Poster Presentations
1:30–2:45 p.m.
Breakout Sessions
7. Human Trafficking and Health: International Research and Evaluation
Cathy Zimmerman, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
8. Conducting Outreach in an Anti-immigrant Climate
Liam Spurgeon & Diana Lieu, Health Outreach Partners
9. Visit to Asian Health Center- Oakland (from 2:00-4:00 p.m.) The clinic is located at 101 8th St., Oakland.
3:00–4:15 p.m.
Breakout Sessions
10. Resilience, Faith, & Social Supports in Forced Migrants from Central America and Mexico
Mark Lusk, Samuel Terrazas, Janette Caro and Perla Chaparro, University of Texas at El Paso
11. Mental Health and PTSD in War Refugees
Patrick Marius Koga, University of California Davis
Friday, July 12, 2019
Location: University of California Berkeley, School of Public Health. (2121 Berkeley Way #5302, Berkeley, CA 94720. Colloquium Room)
8:30–9:15 a.m.
Gendered Dimensions of Population Mobility Across HIV Epidemics in Rural Eastern Africa
Carol Camlin, University of California San Francisco
9:15–10:00 a.m.
Gender, Vulnerability, and Resilience among children 'Left Behind' by Migrant Kin
Michaella Vanore, United Nations University - Maastricht University
10:15–11:00 a.m.
Refugee Health
Clelia Pezzi, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
Division of Global Migration and Quarantine, Immigrant, Refugee, and Migrant Health Branch
11:00–11:45 a.m.
Returning to the Place of Origin
Andrea Bautista, Colegio de Mexico
11:45 a.m.–12:30 p.m.
The Ulysses Syndrome: The Immigrant Syndrome with Chronic and Multiple Stress
Joseba Achotegui, University of Barcelona
12:30–2:00 p.m.
Lunch and Poster Presentations
2:00–4:00 p.m.
Breakout Sessions
12. Understanding the Tests to Assess the Migratory Mourning and the Ulysses Syndrome
Joseba Achotegui and Dori Espeso, University of Barcelona
13. Climate Change, Migration, and Health
Federico Castillo, University of California Berkeley
14. Humanizing Deportation (videos and discussion)
Robert Irwin, University of California Davis
4:00–4:15 p.m.
Closing remarks
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6.
The Trump Administration’s Child Separation Policy: Substantiated Allegations of Mistreatment
10:00 a.m., Friday, July 12, 2019
House Committee on Oversight and Reform
2154 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515
https://oversight.house.gov/legislation/hearings/the-trump-administration-s-child-separation-policy-substantiated-allegations-of
Witnesses:
TBA
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7.
On the Wrong Path? Protecting the European Union’s External Border in the Western Balkans
9:00 a.m. ET, Monday, July 15, 2019
MPI Europe Webinar
https://www.migrationpolicy.org/events/european-union-external-border-western-balkans
Description: The European Union’s more stringent controls on its external border are having serious effects for its near neighbors. In Bosnia, thousands of people trying to make their way to EU Member States last year had their paths blocked at the Croatian border. Many spent the winter in Bosnia, a country ill-equipped to deal with their needs. Bosnian authorities have struggled to adapt, even with help from international agencies and the European Union, with whom they signed an agreement in January to facilitate joint operations and so-called "rapid border interventions."
With thousands more migrants potentially traveling through the Western Balkans this year, this MPI Europe webinar will explore the implications of the buttressed EU border on the bloc’s neighbors. Is this another example of the European Union outsourcing its toughest political issues on migration control? How can the European Union support efforts to address irregular migration in neighboring countries, many of which are already struggling with complex economic and political challenges? If the incoming crop of EU leaders continues these policies, what are the tradeoffs and considerations that they must weigh? Experts on this webinar will address these and other questions.
Speakers:
Karen Mets, Senior Advocacy Adviser, Asylum and Migration/Children on the Move, Save the Children International
Joachim Roth, EU Project Officer, Network of Associations of Local Authorities in South-East Europe (NALAS)
Peter Van der Auweraert, Western Balkans Coordinator, Representative/Chief of Mission in Bosnia and Herzegovina, International Organization for Migration (IOM)
Moderator:
Hanne Beirens, Acting Director, Migration Policy Institute (MPI) Europe
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8.
The Society for the Study of Social Problems 69th Annual Meeting
Friday-Sunday, August 9-11, 2019
Roosevelt Hotel
45 E. 45th Street
New York, NY 10017
https://www.sssp1.org/index.cfm/m/745/2019_Annual_Meeting/
Immigration-related sessions:
Friday, August 9, 2019
8:30–10:10 a.m.
Integration of Immigrants and Refugees into Local Communities in the New Immigration Era
Papers:
Civic Participation of Undocumented Immigrants in California
Kevin Beck and Karina Shklyan, University of California, San Diego
‘No Borders, No Nations’ Stopping Deportation? Municipal Strategies and Activism in an Age of Deportation
Amy C. Foerster, Pace University
‘The Greatest Pain’: The Structural Violence of Intergenerational Immigrant Family Separation
Florencia Rojo, University of California, San Francisco
Impact of Sanctuary Policies on Victimization and Discrimination among Latino Immigrants
Jacqueline E. Groccia, The George Washington University
Multiple Expulsions: An International Humanitarian Migration Crisis in Europe
Karin A. C. Johnson, University of California, Riverside
Race, Crimmigration, and Policing
‘Ask Him If You’re Being Detained’: Bystander Resistance in Street Police Encounters
Katherine D. Hilson, Carthage College
‘This Could Be You!’ Political Organizing and Resource Dependence in the Wake of Police Violence
Theresa Rocha Beardall, Cornell University
E-race the Database: Big Data Policing in Chicago
Andy Clarno and Michael De Anda Muñiz, University of Illinois at Chicago
Police-Native American Community Relations: Living in the Shadows of Rural America
Janice A. Iwama, American University and Jack F. McDevitt, Northeastern University
10:30 a.m.–12:10 p.m.
Integration of Immigrants and Refugees into Local Communities in the New Immigration Era II
Papers:
As Civic Society Agents and Mediating Structures: How Nonprofits Advance Immigrant Political and Civic Integration
Tian Wang, University of Massachusetts Boston
Screening for the ‘Good Life’: Nurses’ Insights into the New Era of Refugee Health Care and Integration in Minneapolis, St. Paul
Christopher Levesque, University of Minnesota
States of Exception: The Biopolitics of (Non)Citizenship in the Contemporary United States
Meredith Van Natta, Duke University
The Political Participation of African Immigrants in the United States: A Theoretical Analysis of Nonprofits’ Involvement
Olanike Ojelabi, University of Massachusetts Boston, Winner of the Community Research and Development Division’s Student Paper Competition
Trends and Patterns in the Residential Segregation of Middle Eastern and North African Immigrants in the United States, 2000-2016
Sevsem Cicek-Okay, University of Cincinnati
2:30–4:10 p.m.
CRITICAL DIALOGUE: The Politics of Migration and Reflections on the Ground
Papers:
‘Do I Have a Choice?’ Migration and Asylum Policies and Unfree Labor
Secil Ertorer, Canisius College
A 21st Century Border: Designing Deathly Traps for the Global Poor
Heidy Sarabia, California State University, Sacramento
Attitudes toward Refugees: The Case of Bolu, Turkey
Nahide Konak, Abant Izzet Baysal University, Turkey
Economic Security, Immigrant Threat, and Preferences for Restrictionism
Noel Strapko and Lynn Hempel, Colorado State University
The Effects of Culture and Economic Prosperity on Mexicans’ Attitudes towards Central and South American Immigration
Antonio Paniagua Guzman, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
4:30–6:10 p.m.
Race, Crimmigration and Policing II
Papers:
Defending the ‘Bad Immigrant:’ Aggravated Felonies, Deportation, and Legal Resistance at the Crimmigration Nexus
Sarah Rose Tosh, The Graduate Center, CUNY
Self-preservation amidst Rising Threats: Immigrant Internalization of Anti-immigrant Narratives and Its Effects on Community Solidarity
Carly Offidani-Bertrand, University of Chicago
Carceral Migration as Theory and Method: The Sociologies of Race, Space, and Legal Punishment
Susila Gurusami, University of Toronto and Rahim Kurwa, University of California, Los Angeles
Immigrant Youth: The Social Facets of Being (Un)American
Papers:
‘I Became a Mom Overnight’: How the Deportation of a Parent Affects Immigrant Young Adults’ Educational Experiences and Outcomes
Carolina Valdivia, Harvard University
California as the Promise Land: Local Context and Growing up Undocumented in North Carolina
Alessandra Bazo Vienrich, University of Massachusetts Boston
Contextualizing Assimilation: Assimilation, Discrimination, and Depression of Children of Immigrants
Jienian Zhang, University of Wisconsin-Madison
My Goals and Dreams Deserve the Right to be Heard: Applicants’ Expressions about the Value of DACA
Yvonne M. Luna and T. Mark Montoya, Northern Arizona University
Second-generation Canadian Muslim Women and Their Work Experiences
Awish Aslam, University of Western Ontario
Saturday, August 10, 2019
10:30 a.m.–12:10 p.m.
Complexities of Immigration
Papers:
Is the US Really a Melting Pot or More of a Vegetable Tray? Consciousness Matrix vs Power of Assimilation
Rafia Javaid Mallick, University of Oklahoma
South Asian Migration to the U.S. South: Alternate Pathways in the Pursuit of the American Dream
Praveena Lakshmanan, Michigan State University
The Myth of Swedish National Identity and the Symbolic Politics of the Refugee
Beiyi Hu, The Graduate Center, CUNY
Forcibly Removed: Homeland Detachments of International and Indigenous Refugees
Lory Janelle Dance, University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Selma Hedlund, Boston University
Neither from Here nor There: A Mixed Methods Evaluation of the Impact of Discrimination on the Employment Prospects of Deported and Voluntary Return Migrants in Mexico.
Rodrigo Dominguez-Villegas, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Sunday, August 11, 2019
8:30-10:10 a.m.
Race, Crimmigration and Policing III
Papers:
Crisis, Capital Accumulation, and ‘Carceral Keynesianism’ in the Aftermath of the Global Slump
Jessica Evans, Ryerson University
Legal Status Fluidity and Filipino Immigrants
Daniela Pila, University at Albany, SUNY
Rohingyas the ‘Racialized Other’: Creation of the Biopolitical State
Morsaline Mojid, University of Hawai'i at Manoa
The Colonial/Modern Gender System of Migration: Intersections of Race, Patriarchy, and Criminalization
Abigail Perez Aguilera and Leonardo Esteban Figueroa Helland, The New School and Debbie Samaniego, University of Sussex
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9.
114th American Sociological Association Annual Meeting
Sunday-Tuesday, August 10-13, 2019
Sheraton New York Times Square
New York Hilton Midtown
New York, NY
https://www.asanet.org/annual-meeting-2019
Immigration-related sessions:
Friday, August 9, 2019
1:00-5:00 p.m.
Migration Data and Models for a Better World: Perspectives from Academia, Data Science, and International Organizations
Migration plays a central role in population processes, becoming an increasingly important component of social, economic and political change across the globe. Given its often unjust causes and socially transformative consequences to origin and destination communities alike, migration continues to demand the scholarly attention of sociologists, especially those invested in overcoming social injustices. However, despite the growing importance of migration phenomena, migration data remain expensive and difficult to collect. Different institutions use different definitions to meet their various needs, and time after time difficulties comparing data across context limit wider understanding.
The goal of this preconference is to facilitate a conversation about improving migration data by bringing sociologists familiar with the conceptual pitfalls of migration research together with two groups: (1) data scientists with strategies for inferring migration from new forms of digital data and (2) representatives from international organizations (like the UN, located in New York City) with specific needs for particular kinds of migration estimates.
This interdisciplinary conversation will be organized around three substantive issues in migration data and measurement. First, there is a need for data than can improve the lives of migrants. Understanding the conditions migrants face is a key priority of the UN’s Global Compact on Migration. Second, there is a need to better understand the uses of migration data by government and the salience of migration data to the public. Preventing distorted views that may lead to unjust immigration restrictions or violence against migrants requires research into how data are interpreted and shared. Third, there is a need for comprehensive tools for comparing different kinds of migration data. Sociologists, in particular, can help international organization and data scientists decide how to prioritize the types of data that are most useful to understand societal processes and migration.
Saturday, August 10, 2019
8:30-10:10 a.m.
Deportation Threats and Realities in the United States
Local Immigration Enforcement and Latino Segregation
Matthew Hall, Cornell University; Jacob S. Rugh, Brigham Young University
“No such thing as sanctuary”: How Fear and Uncertainty are Transforming Immigrant Lives
Florencia Rojo, UCSF
The Effects of Deportation and the Threat of Deportation on Food Insecurity among Latino Immigrant Families
Sarah Bowen, North Carolina State University; Sinikka Elliott, University of British Columbia; Annie Hardison-Moody, North Carolina State University
“When it’s an emergency, we take that risk”: Biopolitical assemblages and U.S. immigrant health
Meredith Van Natta, Duke University
10:00 a.m.-12:10 p.m.
Belonging among Refugees
Lives on Hold: The Costs of Waiting for Refugee Resettlement
Molly Fee, University of California-Los Angeles
A New Regime of Transnational Labor in the Meatpacking Industry: Haitian Refugees in North Carolina
Salvador Rangel, University of California at Santa Barbara
Forced Migrants and Secure Belonging: A Case Study of Syrian Refugees Resettled in the United States
Michelle Sara Dromgold-Sermen, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
They tell me I am a (damn) refugee
Bernadette Ludwig, Wagner College
U.S-Refugee Integration Dynamics and Offspring Education: Looking Beyond Context of Reception
Ngoc-Thoa Khuu, University of California-Irvine; Frank D. Bean, University of California-Irvine
10:30-11:30 a.m.
Section on Latina/o Sociology Refereed Roundtables
Citizenship, Politics and Trust
Redefining engagement through exclusion: How undocumented Latinx immigrants define political participation
Nicolaus Espitia, University of Michigan
Educational Challenges and Success
Undocumented and Distracted: The Everyday Effects of Immigration Laws on the Academic Success of Undocumented College Students
Daniel Millán, University of California, Irvine
2:30-4:10 p.m.
Regular Session. Immigrant Inclusion and Exclusion during the Trump and Obama Eras
Abuses and Discrimination Against Mexican Immigrants: An Empirical Assessment of the Obama and Trump Administrations
David Scott FitzGerald, University of California-San Diego; Gustavo López, University of California-San Diego
Becoming A Citizen in the Age of Trump: Citizenship Motivations of Latinx Residents in Texas
Nancy PlankeyVidela, Texas A&M University; Mary Elizabeth Campbell, Texas A&M University; Diana Mercado, Texas A&M University; Alejandro Salas, Texas A&M University
Dynamic Modes of Incorporation Through Mobilization: Evidence from American Muslim Immigrant Communities
Hajar Yazdiha, University of Southern California
Local immigration policy and crime: A county-level investigation in the United States
Marta Ascherio, University of Texas at Austin
Section on Sociology of Population. Health and Mortality in Midlife
Migrant Integration and the Health Status of Current and Returned Mexico-U.S. Migrants
David P. Lindstrom, Brown University; Kathryn Klaas, El Colegio de Mexico
Regular Session. Immigrant Communities/Families
Determinants of Social Support in Racialized Immigrant Networks: The case of the Roma in France.
David Cañarte, University of Florida; Raffaele Vacca, University of Florida; Tommaso Vitale, Sciences Po, CEE
Effects of Police Stop-and-Frisk on the Educational Outcomes of Undocumented Youth
Amy Hsin, Queens College, CUNY; Linna Marten, Stanford; Nikolas Harder, Stanford
Legal Power in Action: How Latinx Adult Children Mitigate the Effects of Parents’ Legal Status through Brokering
Isabel Garcia Valdivia, University of California Berkeley
Self-Preservation Amidst Rising Threats: Immigrant Internalization of Anti-Immigrant Narratives and its Effects on Community Solidarity
Carly Offidani-Bertrand
Transnational Queer Refugees: Gay Iranian Men Navigating Refugee Status and Cross-Border Ties in Canada
Ahmad (Aryan) Karimi
4:30-6:10 p.m.
Regular Session. Legal Entanglements in Immigration Enforcement
A study of migrant shelters, violence, and deportation on the Texas-Tamaulipas border.
Bertha Alicia Bermudez Tapia, University of Colorado, Boulder
Immigrant Detention as a Surveillance Hub: The Monitoring of Families In and Out of Detention
Luis Romero, Southwestern University
La Charla: Documenting the experience of unaccompanied minors in immigration court
Jennifer Huynh, University of Notre Dame
Legal Consciousness Among Asylum-Seeking Immigrants in the US: From Expectations of Fairness to Increasing Legal Cynicism
Tania E. DoCarmo, University of California-Irvine; Rocio Rosales, University of California-Irvine
Regular Session. Care Work/Caring Labor
A Care Convergence? Quantifying Wage Disparities for Migrant Care Workers Across Three Welfare Regimes
Naomi Lightman, University of Calgary
Diverse understandings of family framings in paid household and care work
Anna Rosinska, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Intersectionality, Gendered Immigrant Care Economies, and New Forms of Servitude in Privatized Care
Jennifer Nazareno, Brown University; Cynthia J. Cranford, University of Toronto
Regular Session. Gender and Immigration
Gendered effects of a Toxic Environment: Legal Violence and the Health of Latina Immigrants
Andrea Gomez Cervantes, University of Kansas; Cecilia Menjivar, University of California-Los Angeles
“These Women Will Revolt:” Defining Gender Equality in the French Immigrant Integration Program
Elizabeth Onasch, SUNY Plattsburgh
Believing Asylum-Seeking Women: Constructing Credibility in Asylum Narratives of Sexual and Gender-Based Violence
Abigail Stepnitz, UC Berkeley
Sunday, August 11, 2019
8:30-10:00 a.m.
Migrant Youth Navigating (Il)Legality
Beyond Dreamers: The Under-analyzed Complexity of the Undocumented Youth Population
Sofya Aptekar, University of Massachusetts Boston; Amy Hsin, Queens College, CUNY
DACA’s Mixed Impacts on Education and Employment among Young Adult Immigrants in California
Erin R. Hamilton, University of California, Davis; Caitlin Patler, University of California, Davis; Robin Savinar, University of California, Davis
Inherently Violent: Unaccompanied Minors from Central America and the Immigration Adjustment Status Process
Kati Barahona-López, University of California, Santa Cruz
Moral career of migrant il/legality: Undocumented youths in NYC and Paris negotiating deportability and regularization
Stephen P. Ruszczyk, Montclair State University
The Integration Paradox: Immigrant Children Coping in the Age of Mass Deportations
Patricia Fernandez-Kelly, Princeton University
8:30-9:30 a.m.
Section on Comparative-Historical Sociology Refereed Roundtables
Borderline Racism: Ethnoracial Domination in U.S. and Israel through the rhetorical production of “border security”
Fae Chubin, Bradley University; Manuel Ramirez, University of Connecticut
Mexico “shed American blood upon American soil!”: American Nationalism and the Mexican American War
Jon Williams, University of New Mexico
Migration and the Medieval Transition to Capitalist Production in Florence
Nestor P. Rodriguez, University of Texas at Austin
Unpacking the Suitable Enemy: Predictors of attitudes toward immigration and immigrants
Luis F. Nuño, California State University, Los Angeles
Section on Peace, War, and Social Conflict. White Nationalism, Racism, and Xenophobia
The Rise of Nationalism and Anti-Immigrant Hate Online
Matthew Costello, Clemson University; James E. Hawdon, Virginia Tech University; Salvatore J. Restifo, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley
Regular Session. Health, Inequality, and the Affordable Care Act
Identifying the Undeserving Poor: The Effect of Racial, Ethnic, and Anti-Immigrant Sentiment on State Medicaid Eligibility
Daniel Lanford, Georgia State Unviersity and Emory University; Jill Quadagno, Florida State University
8:30-10:10 a.m.
Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities Refereed Roundtables
Table 1: Race & Higher Education
It is Very Dominated by Latinos Here”: How Places Perpetuate Meanings of Racialized Illegality
Karina Santellano, University of Southern California
Table 4: Interracial Relationships
Middle Eastern Immigrant Intermarriage and Boundaries of Race and Belonging in the United States
Elyas Bakhtiari, College of William and Mary; Deenesh Sohoni, College of William & Mary
Table 6: Understanding Trends in Racial Identity
Accruing Whiteness: Power and Resistance in Prerequisite Cases of Immigrants from the Middle East
Hadi Khoshneviss, Kenyon College
Table 7: Multi-Racial & Mixed Race Identity
The Mixed-Race Children of Immigrants: Intermarriage, Assimilation, and New Immigrant Trajectories in the United States
Alyssa Marie Newman, Harvey Mudd College
Table 12: Race & Belonging
Contextual Whiteness: Spanish Immigrants’ Panethnic White Identity in the United States, Argentina, and the United Kingdom
Jose G. Soto-Marquez, New York University
Table 13: Reception & Perceptions of Migrants
Racialization of Latinx Immigrants: The Role of (Seemingly) Positive Newspaper Discourse
Emily P. Estrada; Emily R. Cabaniss, Sam Houston State University
Re-evaluating inter-group dynamics in the South: Racial attitudes of Latino immigrants in Durham, NC
Angie Nathaly Ocampo, University of Pennsylvania; Chenoa Flippen, University of Pennsylvania
Table 14: Migration, Race & Economics
Glass Ceiling and Earnings Disadvantages Against Immigrants and Racial/Ethnic Minorities
Scott Tuttle, University of Kansas; ChangHwan Kim, University of Kansas
Reinforcing Ties to Ethnicity: Second-Generation Entrepreneurs in an Ethnic Community
Janet Muñiz, University of California, Irvine
The Moderating Role of Elements of Assimilation in First- and Second-Generation Asian Americans’ Socioeconomic Attainment
Dylan Simburger, University of Houston
“Who needs and deserves it the most”: Effects of immigrant narratives on giving-behavior
Victoria Shantrell Asbury, Harvard University
Table 15: Race & Economics
The immigrant health paradox and immigrant status: Differences in mortality of chronic conditions in California
Josefina Flores Morales, University of California-Los Angeles; Ka-yuet Liu, University of California, Los Angeles
Table 20: Social Service Workers Navigating Race
The importance of discretion for welfare services to minorities: Examining workload and antiimmigration attitudes.
Carolin Schütze, Lund University; Hakan Johansson, Lund University
Table 21: Issues of Race in the Criminal Justice System
Arresting (Non)Citizenship: The Policing Migration Nexus of Nationality, Race and Criminalization
Alpa Parmar, University of Oxford
Silencing Sexual Abuse and Assault: Immigration Detention Failure to Survivors
Beatriz Aldana Marquez, Texas State University
Table 22: Criminalizing Race
Carceral Migration as Theory and Method: The Sociologies of Race, Space, and Legal Punishment
Susila Gurusami, University of Toronto; Rahim Kurwa, UIC
From Migration Pathways to Highly Securitized Schools: Wrap-around Carcerality and Racialization
Erin Michaels, University of North Carolina Wilmington
10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.
Regular Session. Racialized Assimilation of Immigrants and their Children
Becoming Black and African-American: Race, Ethnicity and the Children of African Immigrants
Dialika Sall, Columbia University
Being "Black twice": Black and Migrant Identities among Haitian Diaspora in South Florida
Jamella Nefetari Gow, University of California Santa Barbara
Discriminatory Transformations: The Racialized Assimilation of Asian Immigrants to the U.S.
Ryan Gibson, Emory University
Does Skin Tone Matter? Immigrant Mobility in the U.S. Labor Market
JooHee Han, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.
Special Sessions. Privatization of Prisons and Prison Labor
Death and the Use of Tools of Authority in Private U.S. Immigrant Detention Centers
John Major Eason, University of Wisconsin-Madison
The Politics of Prison and Detention Bed Space
Patrisia Macias-Rojas, University of Illinois, Chicago
10:30-11:30 a.m.
Family Section Roundtables
Immigrant Families and Relationships Effects of Illegality on Immigrant Families: What the Relationships of Legal Status-Discordant Siblings Reveal
Heidemarie Castaneda, University of South Florida
Family Formation under the Law: An Overview of Contemporary Latino/a Immigrant Families in the United States
Vanessa Delgado, University of California, Irvine
Refugee mothers' struggles raising children in the United States
Hermeet Kaur Kohli, University of Southern Maine; Susan Fineran, University of Southern Maine
Dating Across Nativity Lines? Mate Selection Among Immigrant and Native-Born Online Daters in Vancouver
Yue Qian, University of British Columbia; Siqi Xiao, University of British Columbia
12:30-2:10 p.m.
Regular Session. Theories and Measures of Forced and Voluntary Return Migration
Precarious citizenship: How kinship-based gift economies shape mobilities of undocumented Mexican migrants
Christine Wheatley, NewAge Environmental Development of Africa
Rediscovering Home: Theorizing Return Migration Among 1.5-generation Returnees and Deportees in Mexico
Alexis Silver, Purchase College - SUNY
Return migration among older Mexican immigrants
Mara Getz Sheftel, The Graduate Center
12:30-2:10 p.m.
Student Forum Refereed Roundtable
Housing and Immigration in a Global Context
A Historical Analysis of “immigrant”: In the style of a Foucauldian genealogy
Leslie Savatsky Reynolds, Bowling Green State University
Immigration and Robots: Is the Absence of Immigrants Linked to the Rise of Automation?
L. Larry Liu, Princeton University; Alejandro Portes, Princeton University
12:30-1:30 p.m.
Section on the Sociology of Religion Referred Roundtables
Religion, Race, and Immigration
Experiencing Sikhism: The Intersection of Religion and Race in the US and UK
Simranjit Khalsa, Rice University
Race Unity Efforts among American Bahá’ís: Institutionalized Tools and Empirical Evidence
John McMullen, University of Houston-Clear Lake
Transmitting Racism Through Religion? Racial Ideology and Racism Among Members and Leaders of Latina/o Multiracial Congregations
Rodrigo Serrao Santana de Jesus, University of South Florida
Social Capital, Islam, and Labor Force Outcomes: Explaining Labor Force Outcomes among Muslim Immigrants in France
Chang Zhe Lin, University of Toronto
12:30-2:10 p.m.
Regular Session. Latino/as
Latinx Immigrant Divisions: The Radio and Digital Media during Rumored ICE Raids
Beatriz Aldana Marquez, Texas State University; Apryl A. Williams, Harvard University; Nancy PlankeyVidela, Texas A&M University; Selene Diaz, Texas A&M Univeristy
Making Noncitizens’ Rights Real: Evidence from Legal Services Fraud Complaints
Juan Manuel Pedroza, University of California, Santa Cruz
MS-13, Moral Panics, and Forced Migrations: Theorizing Deportability and Carceral Studies
Kenneth Sebastian Leon, Rutgers University; Maya P-Money Barak, University of Michigan - Dearborn
Racial Stratification among Latinos in the Mortgage Market
Jose Loya, University of Pennsylvania
Undocumented and Racialized: Mexican undocumented women racialized in the U.S. through interactions in institutions
Heidy Sarabia, California State University, Sacramento
2:30-4:10 p.m.
Regular Session. Theorizing Migration Flows
A Model for Studying Selection Processes in International Migration
Guillermina Jasso, New York University
An Analysis of High Skilled and Low Skilled Migration from Mexico to the US, 1970-2010
Gabriela León-Pérez, Virginia Commonwealth Universtiy
International (im)mobility and global justice in times of gated globalism: toward an institutional migration theory
Arjen Leerkes
Whom Do U.S. Consular Officers Perceive As “NonImmigrants”? How Cultural Habitus Stratifies Legal Mobility From China
Jacob Richard Thomas, University of California-Los Angeles
2:30-4:10 p.m.
Thematic Sessions. Labor Migration
The Return of the Bracero Program: The Migration Industry in the Recruitment of H2 Visa Workers
Ruben Hernandez-Leon, University of California, Los Angeles
Whitewashing Abolition: Racial Vigilantism, Redemptive Labor, and the Global Fight to Combat Human Trafficking
Elena Shih, Brown University
On the Move: Global Care Migration
Heidi Gottfried, Wayne State University
Open Refereed Roundtables
Migration and Adaptation: Legal Immigrants with Undocumented Spouses
Nina Michalikova, University of Central Oklahoma
Symbolic Assailants, Crimmigration and the Immigration Industrial Complex
Denise N. Obinna, Mount St Mary's University
Multicultural coexistence without immigrants: Foreign labor and contemporary Japan
Noriko Matsumoto, University of Vermont
Multiple Expulsions: A Case Study of the Precipitation of an International Humanitarian Migration Crisis in Europe
Karin A.C. Johnson, University of California-Riverside
2:30-4:10 p.m.
Section on Environmental Sociology. Environment, Oppressions, and Justice II
Environmental Injustices in Immigrant Detention: How Absences Are Embedded in the NEPA Process
Michelle L. Edwards, Texas State University; Briana Luna, Texas State University; Hannah Edwards, Texas State University
2:30-3:30 p.m.
Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work Refereed Roundtables
Representation and Inclusivity II
Contact or Conflict? The Effect of Immigrant Colleagues on Attitudes Towards Immigrants
Alicia Sheares, University of California, Berkeley
Regular Session. Sociology of Law
Immigrant Workers, Their Lawyers, and Notions of Procedural Justice
Shannon Marie Gleeson, Cornell University
Monday, August 12, 2019
8:30-10:10 a.m.
Thematic Sessions. New Social Movements
Beyond the Good Immigrant: How Identity Politics have Come to Dominate the Dreamer Movement
Walter Nicholls, University of California-Irvine
Social Justice in the Desert: Faith-Based Mobilizing to Save the Lives Along the Arizona-Sonora Desert
Kraig Beyerlein, University of Notre Dame
Regular Session. Borders and Boundaries in Asia and Asian America
Transborder Ethnic Economy: Korean Immigrants on the U.S.-Mexico Border
Minjeong Kim, San Diego State University
Section on International Migration. Understanding the Social, Legal, and Political Ramifications of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA)
DACA and Resetting of Inclusion and Exclusion at Federal and Local Levels/Evolving Impacts on Immigrant Families
Robert Courtney Smith, City University of New York-Baruch College, Graduate Center; Guillermo Yrizar Barbosa, CUNY Graduate Center
DACA Rescission and Ontological Security: Anticipatory and Ambiguous Loss Among Undocumented Young Adults
Elizabeth M. Aranda, University of South Florida; Girsea Martinez, University of South Florida; Elizabeth Vaquera, George Washington University; Heidemarie Castaneda, University of South Florida
Heterogeneous Effects of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) on Undocumented College Students’ Educational Outcomes
Keitaro Okura, Yale University; Amy Hsin, Queens College, CUNY; Sofya Aptekar, University of Massachusetts Boston
Uncertainty about DACA May Undermine its Positive Impact on Health for Recipients and their Children
Caitlin Patler, University of California, Davis; Erin R. Hamilton, University of California, Davis; Kelsey Meagher, UC Davis; Robin Savinar, University of California, Davis
10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m.
Thematic Sessions. Immigration Policy and the Dilemmas of Justice in the Age of Trump
Expanding Sanctuary: Decriminalization and Resistance in the Trump Era
Amada Armenta, UCLA
The Illiberal Turn: Immigration and the Paradox of American Sovereignty in the Age of Trump
Rick A. Baldoz, Oberlin College
U.S. Immigration and Border Policies: A Series of Unfortunate Events
Douglas S. Massey, Princeton University
Dis-Inegrating Nation: The Impossible Politics of Immigration
Roger Waldinger, Univ of California-Los Angeles
10:30-11:30 a.m.
Section on International Migration Refereed Roundtables
Anti-Immigrant Discourses
Feeling fear in times of polarization: A systematic analysis of bureaucrats’ commentary about migrants.
Carolin Schütze, Lund University
Stigma and Belonging Among the Rising Immigrant Elite in France
Lucas Germain Drouhot, Cornell University
Straddling Insider/Outsider Statuses: Puerto Ricans’ Attitudes Toward Undocumented Immigration
Ariana Jeanette Valle, University of California Los Angeles
Women as Fair Game? Why Some Feminists Support Anti-Immigrant Politics
Janina Selzer, CUNY Graduate Center
Economic, Cultural Threats and Chinese Residents’ Attitudes toward Foreigners in Yiwu, China
Tao Xu
Asian Immigrants, Citizenship, and Belonging
Negotiating “Americanization”: Adaptation and Segmentation of Chinese Restaurants in an American City
Jinpu Wang, Syracuse University
Hispanics and Asians in the New South
Christopher Maggio, City University of New York-Graduate Center
I am You, as You are Me: Citizenship and Belonging in the South Asian chhitmohols
Surya Sankar Sen, National Institute of Advanced Studies
Politics of Citizenship and International Migration: An Exploratory Study of Pak Hindus at the India-Pakistan Borderlands
Srishtee Sethi, Tata Institute of Social Sciences
Saving Face: A mismatch in educational cultural capital among undocumented Chinese Immigrants in the US
Jia-Lin Liu, New York University; Hua-Yu Sebastian Cherng, New York University
Attitudes Towards Immigrants
Skills or Origins? Results from a Survey-Based Experiment on Europeans’ Support for Immigration
Sevsem Cicek-Okay, University of Cincinnati; Jeffrey M. Timberlake, University of Cincinnati
Anti-immigrant sentiment as lack of awareness on how unequal global trade flows privilege developed countries
Caroline M. Schoepf, Hong Kong Baptist University
Determinants of Anti-Immigrant Attitudes: A Quantitative Analysis using the 2014 General Social Survey (GSS)
Darnell Calderon, California State University Fullerton
Getting Schooled: Egotropic and Sociotropic Effects of Educational Attainment in the Formation of Immigration Attitudes
Raul S. Casarez, Rice University
Civic Incorporation and Belonging
Civic Inequality and Civic Stratification in Immigrant Communities
Irene H.I. Bloemraad, University of California, Berkeley
Finding Spaces of Inclusion: Schools, Latina Immigrant Mothers, and the Politics of Belonging
Sarah Bruhn, Harvard University
Living out the Illegality: Strategies of Undocumented Migrants in an Immigrant Enclave of South Korea
Dasom Lee, University of California San Diego
Comparative Immigrant Integration
UK immigrants’ relative income and life satisfaction – The relevance of comparison frames from a multi-generational perspective
Jing Shen, University of Mannheim; Irena Kogan, University of Mannheim
The isolation paradox: A comparative study of social support among migrants and natives
Basak Bilecen, University of Groningen; Raffaele Vacca, University of Florida
Negative Attitudes toward Immigrants in Japan and the United States
Daisuke Ito, Toyo University; Makoto Todoroki, Kanazawa University
Food in Italian Migration to Argentina and the United States: Gender, Racial, and Labor Differences
Katharine Marina Waldmann
National immigration ‘models,’ social welfare regimes, and Muslims’ economic incorporation in France and Canada
Jeffrey G. Reitz, University of Toronto; Emily J. Laxer, Glendon College, York University; Patrick Simon, INED
Drivers and Dynamics of Migration
Are They Deterred by Welfare? Digging into the Drivers of Highly Skilled Migrants in Europe
Hector Cebolla-Boado, UNED; María Miyar Miyar, Uned
Connecting the Dots: Using Social Network Analysis to Untangle the Factors Driving International Migration
Cassie McMillan, Pennsylvania State University; Sarah Miller, Pennsylvania State University
Chinese Assimilation in Zambia: Testing Migration Theories in the Global South
Yao Lu, University of California-Davis
Methodological challenges in relation to quantitative research on migrant populations
Dominic Kudlacek, Criminological Research Institute of Lower Saxony
Dynamics of Incorporation
The effect of socioeconomic integration on life satisfaction among immigrants in Japan
Hiromi Ishizawa, George Washington University; Hirohisa Takenoshita, Keio University; Jie Zhang, Waseda University
The Vietnamese Boat People in Canada: 30 Years Later
Monica Boyd, University of Toronto; Shawn Perron, University of Toronto
Age at Migration and Poverty among Post 1990 Immigrants in Israel: Do Welfare Transfers Matter?
Alisa C. Lewin, University of Haifa; Rebeca Raijman
Pathways to success in an egalitarian institutional context: The second generation in Norway
Arnfinn H. Midtboen, Institute for Social Research, Oslo; Marjan Nadim, Institute for Social Research, Oslo
Understanding Immobility: Moving Beyond the Mobility Bias in Migration Research
Kerilyn Schewel, University of Amsterdam
Family Dynamics of Migration
Indo-Caribbean Women Challenging Motherhood through Migration for Reproductive Health
Tannuja Rozario, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Marriage Migration and Gender Role Attitudes of Husbands in a Receiving Country: Korean Case
Seokyoung Kim, Ewha Womans University; Minzee Kim, Ewha Womans University
Possibilities and Constraints in Opportunity Structures: Filipina Marriage Immigrants’ Associational Lives in South Korea
Ilju Kim, Tohoku University; Minjeong Kim, San Diego State University
The Homeownership Attainment of LGB Immigrants: The Role of Social Relationships
Sagi Ramaj, University of Toronto
Gender and Migration
New Residents, New Inequalities? Integrating Male and Female Immigrants in Gender Unequal Japan
Hilary J. Holbrow, Harvard University
Can’t Depend on Love: The Gendered and Classed Effects of Dependency in Canadian Immigration Policy, 1982-2015
Naomi Lightman, University of Calgary; Jennifer Elrick, McGill University
Gender Structure Which Causes Immigration: Postwar Immigrant Japanese Women and Gender Discrimination in Japan
Yuko Nakanishi, Musashi University
Forced Time-Out: The Effects of “Dependent” Visa Status on the Gendered Division of Labor
Hansini Munasinghe, University of Iowa
Migrant Youth
Precarious immobility: DACAmented and longterm unauthorized immigrants in the Bronx, Queens and Long Island
Guillermo Yrizar Barbosa, CUNY Graduate Center
DACA youth travel to Mexico and discover a new dual frame of reference
Emir Estrada, Arizona State University; Alissa Ruth, Arizona State University
Leaving and Finding Home: Youth Migration and Family Reunification
Emily Navarro, Elmhurst College
Assimilation and Household Instability among Children in Immigrant Families
Maria Carolina Mota Pereira Aragao, University of Texas at Austin; Inbar Weiss, University of Texas at Austin
First-generation Circular Migrants’ Involvement in the Upbringing of their Grandchildren: Turkish Immigrants in Germany
Tolga Tezcan, University of Florida
Gender and Work
Making it Work: Migration, Motherhood and Employment in Australia
Rennie Lee, University of Melbourne; Leah Ruppanner, University of Melbourne; Francisco Perales, University of Queensland
The Great Equalizer? Education, Gendered Migrant Networks, and the Occupational Attainment of Highly Skilled Immigrants
Elizabeth Jacobs, University of Pennsylvania; Brown University
Mothers’ Employment when Children are in Preschool: Variations by Race, Ethnicity, and Immigrant Origin
Christel Kesler, Colby College
Reason for Migration and Economic Integration of Male and Female Immigrants in the Swiss Labor Market
Dina Maskileyson, University of Cologne; Moshe Semyonov, Tel Aviv University; Eldad Davidov, University of Cologne and University of Zurich
Doing Gender, Doing Culture: Gendered Labor and Intersectional Identities in Diasporic Community Building
Debadatta Chakraborty, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Global and Transnational Perspectives
Transnationally Contextualized Citizenship: Multi-layered Factors Affecting Chinese Immigrant Workers’ Political Participation in NYC
Tianlong You, Arizona State University
Diasporic Political Parties
Michel S. Laguerre, Univ of California-Berkeley
Beyond mechanistic and material approaches to migration: Transnational subjectivity, cultures of migration and notions of modernity and normality
Karolina Barglowski, Technical University Dortmund
Using Family Migration Histories to Facilitate the Teaching of International Migration from a Global Perspective
Steven J. Gold, Michigan State University
Labor Market Incorporation
Migration and Informal Employment: Case of Russia as a second top world receiving country
Tatiana Karabchuk, United Arab Emirates University; Daria Salnikova, National Research University Higher School of Economics
The Great Recession, Labor Market Segmentation and Immigrant Unemployment
Patricia A. McManus, Indiana University
Immigrants in the Labor Market: Examining Change in Labor Market Structure and Immigrant Occupational Outcomes from 1970-2017
Ilana Ventura, University of Chicago
The role of lifelong human capital in the entrepreneurial success of Mexican immigrant women
Veronica Montes, Bryn Mawr College
Earnings of Foreign-born Doctoral Engineers in the United States: Intersection of Immigration Status and Gender
Yu Tao, Stevens Institute of Technology
Legality and Irregular Migration
Legal Exclusion, Civic Exclusion: How Legal Status Stratifies Latino Immigrants’ Civic Engagement
Tianjian Lai
Frictional Identities: How Young Asylum Seekers and the German State Coproduce Liminal Legality
Ulrike Bialas, Princeton University
Nongovernmental Organizations Serving Deported Migrants from the United States
Claire E. Altman, University of Missouri; Sergio Chavez, Rice University; Kendal Lowrey, Pennsylvania State University
Deportation USA: Exploring State-Level Social, Economic, and Political Factors in Judicial Outcomes
Shiyue Cui, University at Buffalo, SUNY; Yulin Yang; Robert M. Adelman, State University of New York-Buffalo
Life Course and Historical Perspectives
Life Events and Timing of Emigration: A Case Study of Foreign Domestic Workers in Hong Kong
Jing Song, Chinese University of Hong Kong; Weiwen Lai, Chinese University of Hong Kong; Eric Fong, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Engendering the life cycle of migration and Elderly Support: Strategies among Latino immigrants in South Philadelphia
Edith Yolanda Gutierrez-Vazque, Universidad de Guadalajara; Chenoa Flippen, University of Pennsylvania
Economic security and structured ambivalence among immigrant seniors
Ann H. Kim, York University; Nancy Mandell, York University
Immigration and Urban Growth, 1990-2000
Michael Joseph Upchurch, Texas A&M University
Migration and Health
Health Without Papers: Immigrants, Citizenship and Health in the 21st Century
Brian Tuohy, University of California, Los Angeles
Migrant Donations and Healthcare Across Borders
Jose Luis Collazo, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona; José A. Muñoz, CSU San Bernardino
Acculturation and Depressive Symptoms among Latino Immigrants: Examining the Role of Social Support
Elif Bulut, Florida State University; Mathew D. Gayman, Georgia State University
Migration and Social Mobility
“What would my future be?”: Conceptualization of the “future” among Syrian newcomer mothers in Canada
Laila Omar, University of Toronto
Perceptions of Upward Social Mobility Among the Children of Immigrants
Dalia Abdelhady, Lund University; Amy Lutz, Syracuse University
“One Improves Here Every Day”: Occupational and Learning Journeys of “Lower-Skilled” European Migrants in London
Laura Morosanu, University of Sussex; Russell King, University of Sussex; Aija Lulle, University of Loughborough; Manolis Pratsinakis, University of Oxford
Refugees in Europe and the U.S.
Educational Selectivity among Refugees and Labor Migrants in Western Europe
Cornelia Kristen, University of Bamberg; Christoph Spörlein, University of Bamberg
Female refugee migration: How do survivors of gender-based violence decide to flee?
Zofia Agnieszka Wlodarczyk, UC Davis
Civic-Ethnic Nationalism and the Refugee: Examples from Sweden
Beiyi Hu, CUNY Graduate Center
Value differences amongst refugees and the native German population: Insights from a representative panel study
Lukas Marian Fuchs, Freie Universität Berlin; Christian von Scheve, Freie Universität Berlin
Local refugee integration policies in New York City
Karolina Janina Lukasiewicz, New York University; Tanzilya Oren, Fordham University; Saumya Tripathi, Fordham University
Schools and Education
School Tracking of Migrant-Ethnic Youth in Germany
Max Reason, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill
Post-1965 Immigration and STEM Faculty in Island Communities
Nathalie P. Rita, University of Hawaii; Marina Karides, University of Hawai'i at Hilo
Sending Contexts
I See Where You’re Coming from...and It Matters: How Migrant Origin Shapes Support for Social Programs
Selen Güler, University of Washington; Mark Igra, University of Washington
Migrating Beyond Networks: The Mechanisms of Sending State Intervention
Suzy K. Lee, Binghamton University
Oil’s Ripple Effects: Remittances’ Impact on Female Labor Participation in the Arab World
Caitlin Ella Wind, New York University
"The thirsty man goes to the well" Aspired Migrants and Brokers: A Case of Pakistan
Tauqeer Hussain Shah, University Bielefeld
2:30-4:10 p.m.
Thematic Sessions. Illegality and Social Justice Research
Sanctuary for Whom? Cities, Policing, and Local Immigration Policy
Amada Armenta, UCLA
Understanding the Impact of Immigrant Detention
Rocio Rosales, University of California-Irvine
Undocumented, Refugees, or Asylees? Solidarity across Legal Boundaries
Leisy Janet Abrego, University of California, Los Angeles
The Changing Scales of Immigrant Youth Organizing: Exercising Power in the Electoral, Local, and Cultural Arenas
Veronica Terriquez, UC Santa Cruz
Regular Session. Children, Youth, Adolescents: Scholar Activism on Behalf of Children and Youth
Unaccompanied migrant children in Sicily: Caught between international and humanitarian ideals and nativist populism
Ravinder Barn; Roberta Di Rosa, University of Palermo
Section on International Migration. Migration Crises: Case Studies and Comparative Analyses from Across the World
Assimilation or exclusion? Refugee access to health in Germany after the migrant crisis
Christopher Levesque, University of Minnesota
Asylum seekers welcome? Multilevel analysis of attitudes towards asylum seekers in Europe
Egle Gusciute
From US Request to Mexico Engagement: An Ethnographic and Visual Study of Immigration Enforcement by Proxy
Juan José Bustamante, University of Arkansas; Eric Gamino, California State University, Northridge
4:30-5:30 p.m.
Section on Race, Gender, and Class Refereed Roundtables
Immigration Presider: Emma-Claire LaSaine, University of Wisconsin-Madison An Economy of Safety: Racialized Citizenship, Family and U.S. Immigration
Emma-Claire LaSaine, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Mental Health, Immigration, and Race - Case of Asian American
Doreen Hsu, University of California, San Diego
4:30-6:10 p.m.
Section on International Migration. Immigrant Resistance: Collective Action and Everyday Contention
Arenas of Fragile Alliance (Un-)Making? The Case of Precarious Migrant Activism in Berlin and Vienna
Ilker Ataç, Hochschule RheinMain; Elias Steinhilper, DeZIM Institut e.V.
Civic Participation of Undocumented Immigrants in California
Kevin Beck, University of California, San Diego; Karina Shklyan, University of California, San Diego
The Nexus between Diaspora Mobilization and Immigrant Resistance: A Case Study of the Arab Spring Abroad
Dana M. Moss, University of Pittsburgh
“We Have Rights:” Low-Income Collective Identity and Immigrant Claims-Making in San Francisco
Melanie Jones Gast, University of Louisville; Dina G. Okamoto, Indiana University; Emerald Thai Han Nguyen, University of California Davis
4:30-6:10 p.m.
Special Sessions. State Policies: Evasion, Implementation and Impact on Livelihood and Welfare of Refugees and Recent Migrants
Refuge Beyond Reach: How Rich Democracies Repel Asylum Seekers
David Scott FitzGerald, University of California-San Diego
State Policies: Evasion, Implementation and Impact on Livelihood and Welfare of Refugees and Recent Migrants
Cecilia Menjivar, University of California-Los Angeles Unauthorized
Tuesday, August 13, 2019
8:30-10:10 p.m.
Section on Race, Gender, and Class. Sexual Violence and Intersectional Inequalities
Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell: The Gendered Politics of Service Provision for Women with Precarious Immigration Status
Salina Abji, Carleton University
Thematic Sessions. Critical Sociology and Public Policy
Immigration Policy as a Social Determinant of Health
Edward D. Vargas, Arizona State University
The Other Side of Assimilation: How Immigrants Change American Life
Tomas R. Jimenez
Methodological and Empirical Advances in Global and Transnational Sociology
The Relationship between Assimilation and Cultural Transnational Ties among New Immigrants in the U.S.
Sou Hyun Jang, University of Washington; Sejung Sage Yim, The Graduate Center
Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance Refereed Roundtables
Responses to Gendered Violence
Caught Between a State and a Family-Place: Immigrant Women’s Experiences of U-Visas
Ghazah Abbasi, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Effects of Race & Place on Policing Policy and Practice
Protecting Immigrants and Punishing Gangs: Crafting the crimmigration police in Chicago’s sanctuary city regime
Enrique Alvear, University of Illinois at Chicago
Section on Aging and the Life Course. Current Debates in Aging and the Life
US Immigration Policies and Health of Older Immigrants
Zoya Gubernskaya, University at Albany
10:30 a.m.-12:00 p.m.
Special Sessions. Social Factors and Suicide: New Developments
How Does Immigration Affect Suicide? Analysis of U.S. Metropolitan Areas
Julie A. Phillips, Rutgers University
12:30-2:00 p.m.
Section on Altruism, Morality, and Social Solidarity
Borders of Compassion: International Migration and Parochial Altruism
Alexander Kustov, Princeton University
Migratory Aspirations: How Aspiring Migrants and Refugees Decide to Leave
Mexicans’ Migration Intentions in an Era of Heightened U.S. Enforcement
Joshua Thomas Wassink, Princeton University
Religion as a migratory aspiration: The case of the migration of Filipina Muslim domestic workers
Julien Debonneville, University of Geneva
Why Ethiopian women migrate to the Middle East
Kerilyn Schewel, Universityof Amsterdam; Tilah Alemayehu, Sher Ethiopia PLC
12:30-1:30 p.m.
Section on Global and Transnational Sociology Refereed Roundtables
Citizenship and MigrationCitizenship: What Money Can Buy
Kristin Surak, SOAS, University of London
Global Citizenship amid Transitional Periods of Increased Importance of STEM: Illustrations of Contemporary Sociocultural Challenges
Beverly Lindsay, University of California; Eric Jason Simeon, Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency
Making a Market in Citizenship
Kristin Surak, SOAS, University of London
Mapping Digital Nomads Globally: The New Urban Networks of Remote Work
Jeffrey L. Sternberg, Northeastern University
The GMP Travel Dataset: A Global Source on Transnational Human Mobility
Emanuel Deutschmann, European University Institute; Ettore Recchi, European University Institute and Sciences Po Paris
12:30-2:10 p.m.
Section on Asia and Asian America Roundtables
International Migration
Mental Health, Immigration, and Race: Case of Asian Americans
Doreen Hsu, University of California, San Diego
Re-examining hyper-selectivity: Occupational niches as ethnic capital
Brenda Gambol, CUNY-The Graduate Center
The Health Implications of Foreign Domestic Helpers’ Family and Friendship Network in Hong Kong
Jing Ye, University of Maryland, College Park; Feinian Chen, University of Maryland
Toward An Embodied Dynamics Model to Migration
Jing Zhao, University of British Columbia
2:30-4:10 p.m.
Regular Session. Challenges and Barriers in Health Care Delivery
Access to the Health Care Safety Net for Hispanic Immigrants in Established Gateways and New Destinations
Emily Anne Parker, Cornell University
Special Sessions. Migration Protections, and Justice
Transnational Social Protection: Moving Forward the Agenda
Peggy Levitt, Wellesley College; Erica Dobbs, Pomona College; Ruxandra Paul, University of Massachusetts-Amherst
Intersecting Transnational Social Protection: Chinese Emigrants in Canada
Sara R. Curran, University of Washington; Lake Ching Wu Lui, Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Transforming Gender Expectations? Experiences of Transnational Indian Women Entrepreneurs
Manashi Ray, West Virginia State University
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10.
16th Annual Immigration Law and Policy Conference
Monday, October 7, 2019
Georgetown University Law Center
Bernard P. McDonough Hall
Hart Auditorium
600 New Jersey Ave. NW
Washington, D.C. 20001
https://www.migrationpolicy.org/events/16thannual-immigration-law-policy-conference
Description: This annual conference put on by MPI and its partners, the Catholic Legal Immigration Network, Inc., and Georgetown University Law Center, features thoughtful policy and legal analysis and discussion of the most important immigration topics from leading government officials, attorneys, researchers, advocates, and others.
Check back for more information. Registration will open in late June.
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11.
Diaspora and Homeland
Thursday-Friday, October 10-11, 2019
Zagreb, Croatia
https://croatiandiasporacentre.com/english/
Description: In today’s globalized world we are witness to the fact that, as never before in history, diasporas have a major role in the political, ecoonomic, cultural, religious, social and sporting life of their countries of origin. The fact that over 258 million people live outside of their country of birth and that they send more than 625 billion dollars in remittances to their country of origion perhaps best illustrates the huge potential of diasporas for their home countries. While the major focus of diasporas and homeland is on their remittances, there are many examples of how diasporas can and do through their various activities contribute to the advancement and success of their homelands both internally and in foreign affairs.
One such example which illustrates the success of a diaspora in creating economic success in the homeland is that of Chilean immigrants who returned to their homeland at the call of then Chilean leader Pinochet. These returning immigrants brought their know-how and experience to practically empower in a short period of time the economic upturn of the Chilean economy.The recent world cup of football in Russia is another example of diaspora contributions to homeland. Many football teams had diaspora players as part of their starting lineups. The best example of this was the Croatian national team which played in the finals of the world cup and which had two thirds of its players born outside of Croatia. These examples not only manifest on the one hand the strength and power of diasporas, but on the other hand also evidence of its huge potential and role in the developmental strategy of their countries of origin. Following the disintegration of the former Soviet Union, millions of citizens of Poland, Bulgaria, Romania, Croatia and other countries of the former Yugoslavia moved to the more developed countries of the democratic world, especially Europe. Faced with this new process of emigration, these countries were overnight faced with the task of developing national strategies and programs of cooperation between diaspora communities and their homelands.
In light of this new situation and the relations between diaspora and homeland, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe in 2015 accepted Resolution 2043 titled “Democratic participation for migrant diasporas”. Among other things this resolution recommended that its members introduce policies which would facilitate diaspora members’ involvement in political life, review national legislation with a view to granting special status to members of diasporas in their countries of origin and facilitating the return process where appropriate, and promote diaspora members’ contribution to the development of their country of origin through the transfer of their knowledge, education and experience. The main focus of the conference is to examine the strategies and programs of individual countries towards their diasporas and in turn the relationships of diaspora with their home countries.
Conference themes include:
1. Diaspora relations – government
2. State policy and practice relating to the diaspora
3. The return of emigrants and their integration into the country of origin – success or failure
4. Direct diaspora investments
5. The influence of the diaspora on the country of origin
6. Immigrant tourism
7. Diaspora in international relations
8. Diaspora as a safety factor
9. Diaspora – media, radio programs, newspapers and publications
10. Emigrant literature
The conference organisers would like to emphasise that presenters have the opportunity to present on a different theme that is related to the general purpose.
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12.
Migration Control - Book Panel
2:00-4:00 p.m., Thursday, November 14, 2019
Center for Comparative Immigration Studies
University of California, San Diego
Eleanor Roosevelt College Provost’s Building, Conference Room 115
9500 Gilman Dr. La Jolla, CA 92093
https://ccis.ucsd.edu/events/Seminars.html
Speakers:
John Torpey, Presidential Professor of Sociology and History, Graduate Center, City University of New York
Director, Ralph Bunche Institute for International Studies, Graduate Center, City University of New York
Invention of the Passport, 2nd Edition
Daniel Martinez, Assistant Professor of Sociology, University of Arizona
The Shadow of the Wall: Violence and Migration on the US-Mexico Border
David FitzGerald, Theodore E. Gildred Chair in US - Mexican Relations, UC San Diego
Professor of Sociology and Co-Director, Center for Comparative Immigration Studies, UC San Diego
Refuge Beyond Reach
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13.
14th Homeland Security Week
Wednesday-Friday, November 20-22, 2019
Grand Hyatt Washington
1000 H St NW
Washington, DC 20001
https://www.idga.org/events-homelandsecurityweek
Overview: Preparing, Protecting & Maintaining Resiliency for Homeland Security
We are living during complex times with growing advancements in technology alongside the global presence of evolving terrorists operations. Homeland Security Week has been designed to provide the necessary dialogue to help drive homeland security initiatives to protect our homeland.
The 13th Annual Homeland Security Week will bring together 250+ individuals ranging from DHS officials, industry executives, elected officials, and academia from across the U.S. and global stakeholders to discuss the challenges at the forefront of homeland security operations, policy and procurement's.
Key themes running throughout the summit include:
Government and Active Military Attend for Free
Border Management and Surveillance
Cyber Security
Critical Infrastructure
Processing, Exploiting and Disseminating Intelligence and ISR Platforms
Counter Terrorism and Safe Cities
With interactive discussion groups and panels you will have the opportunity to be a part of the summit sharing your expertise whilst learning about the DHS, TSA, CBP, FEMA (just to name a few) agencies priorities, strategies, requirements and future operations.
Conference agenda to be added soon.
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