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"Difficult to Settle" Refugees in Post-War Trieste
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Ayşe ÇağlarPamela Ballinger
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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As the West Goes to War, Crafting Peace Today
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Panels and Discussions
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Paula BanerjeeRanabir SamaddarMarcello Musto, Sandro Mezzadra
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Register Here (external)
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Series: Panels and Discussions
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Series: Panels and Discussions
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Borders and Mobility
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Lecture
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Ranabir SamaddarNasreen Chowdhory
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Series: Lecture
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Series: Lecture
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Cities and Human Mobility Research Collaborative Vienna Research Symposium
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Conferences and Workshops
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Achilles KallergisAyşe ÇağlarColleen Thouez, Alex Aleinikoff, Liav Orgad, Lucy Earle, Gianluca Gatta
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Series: Conferences and Workshops
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Series: Conferences and Workshops
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Contradictions in the Governance of Environmental Mobility: Evidence from African Cities
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Achilles KallergisAyşe Çağlar
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Covid-19 Pandemic and the Spectral Presence of Migrant Workers and Refugees
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Panels and Discussions
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Ayşe ÇağlarRanabir SamaddarAlex Aleinikoff, Roger Zetter
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Series: Panels and Discussions
The bordering processes unleashed by the Covid-19 pandemic has revealed the existing fault lines of our present-day societies and deepened the current fissures and dilemmas of global capitalist order, state sovereignty, and governance structures. On the basis of Calcutta Research Group’s book, Borders of an Epidemic: Covid-19 and Migrant Workers, edited by Prof. Ranabir Samaddar, which highlights the ethical and political implications of the pandemic, this round table addressed the changing landscape of visibility and invisibility of migrant workers, refugees as well as of national borders, which opens further questions about inequalities, public health, and politics of care.
Read more
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Series: Panels and Discussions
The bordering processes unleashed by the Covid-19 pandemic has revealed the existing fault lines of our present-day societies and deepened the current fissures and dilemmas of global capitalist order, state sovereignty, and governance structures. On the basis of Calcutta Research Group’s book, Borders of an Epidemic: Covid-19 and Migrant Workers, edited by Prof. Ranabir Samaddar, which highlights the ethical and political implications of the pandemic, this round table addressed the changing landscape of visibility and invisibility of migrant workers, refugees as well as of national borders, which opens further questions about inequalities, public health, and politics of care.
Read more
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Decolonizing Forced Migration Studies: Lessons from Borderlands
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Ayşe ÇağlarNergis Canefe
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Digitized Migrants
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Conferences and Workshops
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Giorgia DonàRanabir SamaddarAyşe ÇağlarAhmet İçudygu
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Series: Conferences and Workshops
The two Global Compacts on migration have advocated the increased use of digital technologies to enhance the protection, welfare, and development of refugees and migrants. The use of new technologies of surveillance that identify, track, and control the people crossing borders result in the increasing digitalization of borders, migrants, and their management. Biometrics and automated decision-making tools, as well as the surveillance of social media have increasingly become central to migration management technologies. These border security technologies are not simply technological improvement of existing forms of border control or governance. The militarization and computerization of borders raise important questions about the politics of data, data subjects, biopolitics, (scales of) sovereignty, regulation, and different forms of sovereign, regulatory, and disciplinary power. We are yet to fully grasp the social implications of this new regime of automated truth registration. Does it create new inequalities and/or reinforce old ones? Is it only a tool of oppression, appropriation and exclusion, or does it offer any opportunity for emancipation? How can we think about agency and solidarity in a digital word?
Read more
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Series: Conferences and Workshops
The two Global Compacts on migration have advocated the increased use of digital technologies to enhance the protection, welfare, and development of refugees and migrants. The use of new technologies of surveillance that identify, track, and control the people crossing borders result in the increasing digitalization of borders, migrants, and their management. Biometrics and automated decision-making tools, as well as the surveillance of social media have increasingly become central to migration management technologies. These border security technologies are not simply technological improvement of existing forms of border control or governance. The militarization and computerization of borders raise important questions about the politics of data, data subjects, biopolitics, (scales of) sovereignty, regulation, and different forms of sovereign, regulatory, and disciplinary power. We are yet to fully grasp the social implications of this new regime of automated truth registration. Does it create new inequalities and/or reinforce old ones? Is it only a tool of oppression, appropriation and exclusion, or does it offer any opportunity for emancipation? How can we think about agency and solidarity in a digital word?
Read more
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Digitized Migrants
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Conferences and Workshops
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Speakers:
Series: Conferences and Workshops
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Speakers:
Series: Conferences and Workshops
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Europe-Asia Research Platform: Forced Migration
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Conferences and Workshops
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Ayşe ÇağlarRanabir Samaddar
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Series: Conferences and Workshops
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Series: Conferences and Workshops
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