Labnet: Cfp FAMILIES, CONSTRUCTIONS OF FOREIGNNESS AND MIGRATION
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Wed Jun 20 15:07:59 CEST 2007
Call for Papers FAMILIES, CONSTRUCTIONS OF FOREIGNNESS AND MIGRATION IN
20th CENTURY WESTERN EUROPE
Conference at Leuven University, Belgium, May 15-16 2008
Historians increasingly compare migration across specific periods as
well as societies. So far, the comparisons have mainly dealt with either
ethnic groups or societies of settlement. This conference aims to deepen
the comparative endeavour by adding a comparison from a new angle.
Instead of comparing ethnic groups or nation-states as a whole, which
runs the risk of overemphasizing ethnic and national differences, it
invites researchers to compare time-specific policies and experiences of
migration and family. In other words, at the heart of the comparison
will be conditions of migration - with or without relatives - and their
impact on experiences of migration and settlement.
One striking difference between then and now, and here and there, is
indeed the meaning attached to the 'migrant family', i.e. the close or
less close relatives of the recognized central actor (male or female) of
the migration process. Family boundaries widen and narrow, of course,
according to circumstances. Like gender, family is first of all a social
construction. Specifically, it is the construction of meaningful
relationships with regard to sex as well as generation. Since the 1970s,
studying family has lost significance in migration research in favour of
the analysis of gender dynamics. Bringing family back in is important,
however, for two reasons. First of all, 'family' was and is an
experiential category of both migrants themselves and policy makers. For
most of the twentieth century, 'family' was far more central to people's
thoughts, conversations and experiences than gender. Secondly, it is
time to analyze the interrelationship of gender and generation more
thoroughly. In that way, we will get to know more about age- and
kin-related changes in gender roles.
Three perspectives will receive particular attention at the conference.
Firstly, policies and their implications on positions and identities of
migrants or their relatives will be discussed. Societies, whether
sending or receiving nation states or smaller social environments,
define and redefine their boundaries in ethnocultural, biological,
economic, legal and other terms. These changing constructions of who is
one of 'us', what 'we' need and who is 'foreign' imply time-specific
policies of family and migration. Importantly, in the course of the
twentieth century Western European nation-states have increasingly
affected migrants and their families, as states became the principle
regulators of migration as well as the main providers of welfare.
Welfare regimes entailed new categorisations, like the category 'second
generation'.
Secondly, the conference will draw attention to the relationship between
the family situation and the stereotyping of migrants or their
descendants. Constructions of foreignness have been highly gendered in
the last century, as several scholars have shown. As such, in the
heydays of male guestworker migration female migrant workers remained
largely invisible in Western European societies. Less explored is how
children or elders and singles versus families have been constructed as
'foreign'. Participants are invited to discuss different ways of
perceiving migrants according to their family situation and the ways in
which people of migrant origin negotiated those stereotypes.
Thirdly, we are interested in research starting from the perspective of
migrants or their relatives themselves. How did they construct family
and how did family cultures affect their experiences and self-identities
as migrants or relatives of migrants? Family cultures, which were of
course embedded in changing social and political contexts, have given
way to different patterns of (network) migration as well as to specific
forms of economic, social and political participation in societies of
arrival and/or in societies of departure. Instead of treating
transnational ties as a side issue, the conference encourages to look at
the involvement of migrants in receiving and sending societies alike.
Conference papers may deal with migration for family reasons as such,
for instance migration in the case of adoption, marriage or family
reunion, as well as with labour migration, colonial migration or refugee
migration, as long as the experiences of family involved in these
migrations are highlighted. In other words, rather than starting from
the given categories of migration research, the aim is to explore
possible new ones.
You are cordially invited to send proposals of approx. 500 words to Leen
Beyers, Leuven University (Belgium), leen.beyers at arts.kuleuven.be, by
October 1st, 2007. All people submitting proposals will be informed by
the end of October 2007. Papers will be due on April 14 2008. A
selection of the conference proceedings will be published.
Leen Beyers
Postdoctoral researcher
Department of History, Modernity and Society 1800-2000
Leuven University, Belgium
e-mail leen.beyers at arts.kuleuven.be
Disclaimer: http://www.kuleuven.be/cwis/email_disclaimer.htm
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