VERSCHOBEN: Conference "Spaces and Locations of Migration"

12.11.2021

Die für 2. und 3. Dezember 2021 an der Universität Wien geplante internationale Konferenz "Spaces and Locations of Migration", organisiert von Annemarie Steidl (Wiso), Oliver Kühschelm (IGLR) und Anne Unterwurzacher (IAI) sowie Mirjam Milharčič Hladnik und Aleksej Kalc (Slowenische Akademie der Wissenschaften), MUSS LEIDER VERSCHOBEN WERDEN.

ABGESAGT aufgrund der Pandemie-Situation!
Neuer Termin: 12./13. Mai 2022!!
Date:
Thursday, 2 December 2021, 13.30 - 19.00,
          Friday, 3 December 2021, 9.00 - 18.00
Venue: Alte Kapelle, Campus, University of Vienna, Spitalgasse 2-4, 1090 Wien


Keynote: 2 December, 17.40 - 19.00 Uhr
Janine Dahinden, "From a ‘Mobility Lens’ towards the Concept of Entangled Mobilities: Reflecting on Forms of Knowledge Production within Migration Studies"

Flyer/Programme (pdf)

From a historical perspective, spatial mobility was/is part of daily practices. When people moved, they often did so because of better opportunities somewhere else; they repeatedly migrated due to economic circumstances, for cultural and individual reasons (e.g., lifestyle migration, educational migration), or in reaction to political emergencies, as a result of persecution, physical violence, or other kinds of repression. People were (and are) mobile in more complex ways than the once in a lifetime move from one social and cultural context to another. Their movements include ongoing, circular, or return migrations. Moreover, migration cannot be reduced to cross-border movements. A more flexible definition of migration is needed that does not overlook the relevance of permanent or semipermanent changes of residence. Its scope cannot be limited to movements over long distances or across state borders. Permanent changes of residence are a worthy object of analysis but so are short-term stays, recurrent patterns of seasonal and circular mobility, and the practices of being constantly on the move of vagrants and traveling people. Even sedentariness does not constitute a clear-cut opposite to migration. The life course of many people includes at different times mobility as well as sedentariness – and many practices that lie somewhere in between.

The conference will therefore make an effort to capture the multidimensionality and the blurred/contested boundaries of migration, mobility, and sedentariness. Our conference will raise the question if and how a stronger reflection about space and the spatial dimensions of migration/mobility can contribute to de-nationalize, de-‘ethnicize’ and de-‘migranticize’ migration research.