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Call for Papers

Theme: Migrations
Type: 3rd Global Interdisciplinary Conference
Institution: Progressive Connexions
Location: Prague (Czech Republic)
Date: 1.–2.12.2019
Deadline: 31.5.2019

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International migrations are an intricate part of a more
interconnected world in terms of trade, communications and cultural
exchanges. There is no question that migrations help improve people's
lives in both sending and receiving states, offering new
opportunities for millions of people worldwide to better their lives.
However, the causes, scope and complexities of international
migrations in the XXI Century are also impacting the lives of
millions of people worldwide in ways that many states and communities
were ill prepared to deal with. The persistence of extreme poverty in
large areas of the world, the impacts of climate change, the
continuation of internal conflicts, regional wars and religious or
sectarian inspired violence have forcibly displaced a record number
of over 68.5 million people worldwide. According to the UNCHR's 2018
Global Trends, "31 people are newly displaced every minute of the
day." Economic and survival migrants, as well as refugees from the
Global South, are desperately looking for new routes and ways to
reach a place they can call a safe haven. At the same time receiving
and transit states are struggling to balance their immigration and
asylum policies between their obligations to uphold the fundamental
human rights of migrants and the growing pressures of xenophobic
sentiments and nativist attitudes.

The irony of today's globalisation is that goods and services can
move with more freedom, yet the cherished right to freedom of
movement for people has come to a dramatic halt: Migrants are
perceived as a threat to the security of the state or as criminals if
they dare not follow the everyday more restrictive immigration laws
and policies. For those migrants who cannot meet the increasing legal
requirements, restrictions, barriers, and costs to cross borders,
their options to migrate legally have become practically impossible.
Those looking for a better life or refuge are being pushed to find
new and more perilous journeys putting their lives and those of their
loved ones at the mercy of inhospitable environments or unscrupulous
smugglers or human traffickers. This includes persons being pushed to
use false identities, and otherwise misrepresenting their
circumstances to get their foot in the door. According to the
International Organization for Migration (IOM), in 2017 the number of
migrants who disappeared or died during such journeys were estimated
to be more than 5,000 with most incidents occurring in the
Mediterranean.

Regardless of the challenges that migrants face, international
migrations have not decreased. According to the UN and the IOM, there
are around 260 million international migrants worldwide and the
number is quickly rising. The push and pull factors that are at the
core of such large number of migrants have become more complex and
require new perspectives to better understand them. Migrations and
the social and economic impacts that accompany them have climbed to
the top of the political agendas of most receiving states. While many
political and social institutions see in migrations an asset to the
economic well-being of ageing societies, others perceive migrations
as a threat to the dominant values and institutions of the
nation-state. One thing is certain and that is that international
migrations will continue to increase and reshape the world as we know
it. Moreover, the way governments and societies decide to deal with
its causes and impacts will open new debates on the need to redefine
the existing international human rights instruments to protect the
most vulnerable of our humanity.

Our third interdisciplinary Migrations conference seeks to build on
the success of past events and forge a lasting network of
professionals in all fields related to this topic. Our aim is to
discuss and explore the main issues, pressing matters and recent
developments in this field of research and activity, to identify
areas to be subsequently explored in further depth and to generate
collaborative action that will lead to real, lasting change in the
way migration and migrants are perceived and approached in
institutional and informal settings with a view to forming a
selective publication to engender further research and collaboration.

Some of our suggested main issues to be approached include (but are
not limited to):

- Defining and measuring migration – identifying past, present and
new push and pull factors for migration, analysing trends in
migration, understanding the political economies of migration,
defining categories of migration and migrants, presenting relevant
data and instruments in migration studies.

- The current refugee crises – refugee situation, struggles,
profiles, stories, efforts for integration, international responses,
conditions in refugee camps, conditions for receiving asylum,
policies, best practices, international responsibilities, human
rights issues, media coverage.

- Policy and politics – migration policy trends in Western societies
and worldwide, impacts and effectiveness of existing policies, the
resurgence of xenophobia and nativism, centralized vs decentralized
policies, "immigration federalism," geopolitical ramifications of
national and international migration policies.

- Legal and political aspects of migration – legal vs illegal
immigration, the criminalization and securitization of migration,
national and international migration laws, legal provisions for
crossing borders, obtaining residency or asylum, migrants’ rights in
theory and practice, legal status of EU citizens in post-Brexit UK,
legality of US travel bans, new and old barriers to migration.

- Smuggling and Human trafficking – definitions, international,
regional and domestic instruments combating smuggling and human
trafficking, the political economies of human trafficking.

- Climate change and migration – Natural disasters and forced
migration, the need for regional and international regimes dealing
with those forced to migrate as a result of climate change.

- Local responses to migration – attitudes towards refugees and/or
economic migrants, social and political movements, debates and
controversies based on immigration/emigration related issues,
exclusion vs inclusion, "sanctuary" policies, compassionate migration.

- Global and local implications of migration – social, political,
demographic, and economic impacts for sending and receiving
countries, for the migrants themselves and for their host communities.

- Sex, gender, and sexual orientation – the significance of these
factors in the experience of the migrant; how is migration
experienced by women, trans and non-binary individuals, and those
identifying as queer, for instance?

- Integration vs assimilation – debating the differences between
integrating immigrants to their new communities, including their
language and culture or creating policies to assimilate them into
their new environments.

- Policies of exclusion vs inclusion - increasing formal and informal
barriers and restrictions vs embracing migrants as new members of the
state and their host communities

- Discourses and depictions of migration – Migrants are being
"othered" or demonized when depicted as "illegal aliens," "criminal
aliens," "invaders," "murderers," and "rapists."

- Narratives of displacement – migration stories, folklore, art,
community building.

- Migration and the media – depiction of refugees, migrants and
migration in the media, the role of social media and new technologies
in facilitating migration and maintaining transnational migrant
networks, the role of the press in creating the "other" and
increasing/defusing social tension between migrants and locals.

- Looking into the future – scenarios for future trends in migration,
challenges for the future generations of today’s migrants, future
challenges for the sending and receiving countries.

- Working in the Field of Migration – issues, hardships,
frustrations, communication needs, big and small victories and
bright, hopeful moments of professionals working towards the
integration and aid of refugees or migrants in general, studying
migration and migrants, drafting or applying migration policies or
legislation.

Our main goal is to facilitate dialogue and spark innovative
collaborations and discussions at an international level, in a
dynamic and interactive setting. Thus, we welcome participants from
all relevant disciplines, professions and vocations (NGO personnel,
aid workers, researchers, mental and physical health professionals,
educators, human rights activists, counselors, social workers, policy
makers, journalists, lawyers, judges, politicians, business owners,
military personnel, customs workers and members of the border patrol,
labour specialists, historians, sociologists, psychologists,
economists, anthropologists, ethnographers social media experts,
artists and many more).

What to Send

The aim of this inclusive interdisciplinary conference and
collaborative networking event is to bring people together and
encourage creative conversations in the context of a variety of
formats: papers, seminars, workshops, storytelling, performances,
poster presentations, panels, q and a's, round-tables etc. Please
feel free to put forward proposals that you think will get the
message across, in whatever form.

300 word proposals for participation should be submitted by Friday
31st May 2019. Other forms of participation should be discussed in
advance with the Organising Chair.

All submissions will be minimally double reviewed, under anonymous
(blind) conditions, by a global panel drawn from members of the
Project Development Team and the Advisory Board. In practice our
procedures usually entail that by the time a proposal is accepted, it
will have been triple and quadruple reviewed.

You will be notified of the panel's decision by Friday 14th June 2019.

If your submission is accepted for the conference, a full draft of
your contribution should be submitted by Friday 13th September 2019.

Abstracts and proposals may be in Word, PDF, RTF or Notepad formats
with the following information and in this order: a) author(s), b)
affiliation as you would like it to appear in the programme, c) email
address, d) title of proposal, e) body of proposal, f) up to 10
keywords.

E-mails should be entitled: Migrations Submission.

Where to Send

Abstracts should be submitted simultaneously to the Organising Chair
and the Project Administrator:

Dr William Arrocha: [email protected]
Project Administrator: [email protected]

Registration Fees

The cost for attending the conference is £295/€335.

Conference website:
http://www.progressiveconnexions.net/interdisciplinary-projects/cultures-and-societies/migrations/conferences/




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