On May 17th, 6-7:30pm CET, migration policy expert J. Hollifield presents some of his latest observations and ideas. His book “Varieties of Migration States”, which is based on 40 years of work around the globe, proposes a new interdisciplinary research agenda. It suggests expanding the notion of ‘migration states’ to a range of historical and comparative cases (beyond classical, liberal states in the Americas, Australia, and Western Europe). This ‘migration state’ concept points to the centrality of migration as a core state function and provides a framework for understanding competing interests that states face in managing migration, with a focus on the tradeoffs between economic openness and political closure — the so-called ‘liberal paradox’. Hollifield suggests to focus on ‘migration interdependence’ and to develop a truly global and postcolonial approach to understanding migration.
→ Download poster.
hybrid event: Senatssaal, Kollegienhaus Erlangen / tinyurl.com/migrationstates
No registration required.
Contact: lorenz.wiese@fau.de
This event is taking place in the framework of the joint project FFVT (Forced Migration and Refugee Studies: Networking and Knowledge Transfer), sponsored by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF).
On May 17th, 6-7:30pm CET, migration policy expert J. Hollifield presents some of his latest observations and ideas. His book “Varieties of Migration States”, which is based on 40 years of work around the globe, proposes a new interdisciplinary research agenda. It suggests expanding the notion of ‘migration states’ to a range of historical and comparative cases (beyond classical, liberal states in the Americas, Australia, and Western Europe). This ‘migration state’ concept points to the centrality of migration as a core state function and provides a framework for understanding competing interests that states face in managing migration, with a focus on the tradeoffs between economic openness and political closure — the so-called ‘liberal paradox’. Hollifield suggests to focus on ‘migration interdependence’ and to develop a truly global and postcolonial approach to understanding migration.
→ Download poster.
hybrid event: Senatssaal, Kollegienhaus Erlangen / tinyurl.com/migrationstates
No registration required.
Contact: lorenz.wiese@fau.de
This event is taking place in the framework of the joint project FFVT (Forced Migration and Refugee Studies: Networking and Knowledge Transfer), sponsored by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF).