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Call for Papers

Theme: Migrations and Citizenship(s)
Type: International Conference
Institution: Indian Institute of Advanced Study (IIAS)
   Harpur College of Arts and Sciences, Binghamton University (SUNY)
   Chair in Migration and Force Migration Studies, Calcutta Research
Group
Location: Shimla (India)
Date: 30.5.–1.6.2016
Deadline: 15.1.2016

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Gruesome reports on migrants — of hundreds drowning as their rickety
boats capsized in unforgiving waters, of them being enslaved or
detained in squalid camps in Europe and Asia, even of their summary
executions on the high seas — have punctuated news headlines with
alarming regularity in recent years. What is novel about these
reports are not the tragic incidents themselves which have a long
history, but their scale as the magnitude of migratory flows across
the Mediterranean and the Bay of Bengal have risen exponentially in
recent years. The International Organization for Migration, to cite
just one figure, estimated that at least 30,400 migrants arrived in
Greece till May 12 this year compared to 34,000 in all of 2014.

If the immediate triggers for the rapid increase in migrations across
the Mediterranean are obvious — foreign intervention in civil wars
from Libya through Syria to Yemen and Iraq, and the continuing
instability in Afghanistan — the vast numbers involved raise several
questions. These streams of migrants themselves are part of a larger
chain of trans-African and trans-Asian migrations as people in places
further away move closer to the Mediterranean and Indian Ocean shores
to better situate them for the passage to Europe or to Southeast Asia
and beyond. While the direct results of Western (or Western-backed)
interventions are obvious, what are their indirect corollaries —
Boris Pasternak’s “the fruits of fruits, consequences of
consequences” — ranging from the structural adjustment policies that
wrecked African economies to the U.S. and European actions that
enable Israel to expel Palestinians from their homeland? Which
populations are more likely to see migration as a route to a more
secure future? How have foreign investments in land (and the
consequent expulsion of peoples) and environmental degradation (and
consequent loss of patterns of livelihood) fuelled these migrations?

This conference, sponsored by the Indian Institute of Advanced Study
and Binghamton University, is designed to explore some of these
contemporary issues of migration and citizenship(s) in Africa, Asia,
and Europe historically. The considerations outlined above raise a
series of questions:

- How have new technologies of communications both reshaped ways in
  which people look at migrations as a strategy for a more secure
  future? Which population groups are more likely to use migration as
  a strategy? How do these new technologies enable human traffickers
  to build trans-national networks?
- How have new technologies of communications reshaped African,
  Asian, and Middle Eastern diasporas in Europe? What are the
  implications of processes of assimilation into host communities
  versus demands to be participants in continually evolving cultural
  traditions for citizenship?
- How have processes of colonial rule configured contemporary
  conditions of ‘differentiated citizenship,’ victimhood, and
  migratory flows?
- Under what conditions do settlers become natives and under what
  conditions to they remain ‘outsiders’ despite living in an area for
  generations? How are we to conceptualize prolonged conditions of
  statelessness, especially in South Asia?
- What are the consequences of reporting and discussing conflicts
  using ethnic and religious categories rather than other frames?
- What are the implications of collective rights being accorded
  priority over individual rights?
- How have foreign interventions let to the intensification of
  conflicts in communities where relative peace had prevailed?
- How to manage the flow of migrants caused by war and persecution?
- What are the legal and human rights implications of the detention
  of migrants in off-shore camps such as the ones in Papua New Guinea
  by Australia?

Submissions 

A limited number of participants will be invited for the Conference.
Those interested in participating should send an abstract (500-700
words) of the proposed paper along with their C.V. to:

Professor Ravi A. Palat
Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
Binghamton University (SUNY)
Email: [email protected]

Professor Ranabir Samaddar
Distinguished Chair in Migration and Force Migration Study
Calcutta Research Group  
Email: [email protected]/ [email protected] 

Shri Kamal Sharma
Indian Institute of Advanced Study
Email: [email protected] 

The last date for submission of abstract (500-700 words) is 15
January 2016. The date for short listing of participants is 25
January, 2016. The Institute intends to send Invitation letters to
selected participants by 31 January, 2016. It is the policy of the
Institute to publish the proceedings of the seminars it organizes.
Hence, all invited participants will be expected to submit complete
papers to the Academic Resource Officer, Indian Institute of Advanced
Study, Shimla – 171005 by 17 May, 2016. 

IIAS, Shimla, will be glad to extend its hospitality during the
Conference period and is willing to reimburse, if required, rail or
air travel expenses from the place of current residence in India, or
the port of arrival in India, and back.


Contact: 

Shri Kamal Sharma, Academic Resource Officer
Indian Institute of Advanced Study
Rashtrapati Nivas
Shimla - 171005
India
Phone:  +91 177 2831385
Mobile: +91 94 18450024
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://iias.ac.in/event/migrations-and-citizenships/




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