Posted on behalf of Maureen Hickey Putnam:

Apologies for cross-posting - please distribute widely! 
CALL FOR PAPERS - Crossing Borders, Traversing Boundaries: Bridging the 
Gap between International and Internal Migration Research and Theory
http://www.ari.nus.edu.sg/events_categorydetails.asp?
categoryid=6&eventid=1159

Feel free to contact me directly with any questions.

Best,
Maureen

Maureen Hickey, Ph.D.
Postdoctoral Research Fellow
Asia Research Institute
National University of Singapore
[email protected]
---------------


CALL FOR PAPERS - Crossing Borders, Traversing Boundaries: Bridging the 
Gap between International and Internal Migration Research and Theory
Date: 13 Oct 2011 - 14 Oct 2011  

Venue: Asia Research Institute 

 469A Tower Block, Level 10 Bukit Timah Road 

 National University of Singapore @ BTC 
Organisers: Prof YEOH Brenda
Dr HICKEY Maureen Helen 

Description:   
CALL FOR PAPERS (DEADLINE: 31 MAY 2011)

Within the inter-disciplinary field of migration studies, the division 
between internal and international migration research and theory has 
persisted over the past three decades, despite increasing calls to bring 
these two bodies of literature into engaged scholarly conversation with 
one another. It is undeniable that a distinction between internal and 
international migration is important in a world in which national 
sovereignty is determined both by a state's ability to determine who might 
enter and leave, as well as by the ability to enact and enforce the laws 
that regulate those within its geographic boundaries. Nevertheless, the 
internal/international division within migration studies is a problematic 
one, given the highly varied kinds of migration that take place within 
each of these categories. For example, an internal migrant in China may 
move thousands of kilometers from a northern village to work in a factory 
in one of the country's prosperous southern provinces, while a Shan 
highlander may move only a short distance across the unmarked Thai-Myanmar 
border to become an international migrant and refugee in Thailand. 
Furthermore, internal and international migration, like other migration 
categories, are linked through complex chains of political, economic, 
social and cultural processes that shape migration and the experiences of 
migrants. 

Given this complexity and the growing importance of migration in the 
contemporary world, this conference will provide an important forum for 
bridging the persistent academic "gap" between these two migration 
literatures and for working towards more nuanced and theoretically rich 
research of migration that crosses disciplinary and categorical 
boundaries. The primary aim of this workshop is to provide an important 
intellectual space for scholars working on internal and international 
migration in the region to come together to exchange knowledge, share 
research findings, explore theoretical points of convergence and 
divergence within migration studies, and to map possible pathways for 
future collaboration. Participants will work together in a workshop 
setting order to:

Critically interrogate the conceptual divide between internal and 
international migration through a close investigation of both "macro" 
processes and "micro" decisions that drive and shape migration within and 
across national boundaries.
Identify and develop "nodes" of theoretical convergence where internal and 
international migration can be linked, compared, and conceptualized as 
part of larger political-economic processes, particularly in discussions 
of the relationship between migration and development.
Promote collaborative exchange, research and writing between scholars 
working on issues of internal and international migration in Asia by 
fostering innovative methodological and conceptual approaches to bridge 
the internal/international migration divide.
Carefully map out the changing, contradictory and still crucial role of 
the nation-state in contemporary migration of all kinds, in order to 
create a more nuanced picture of the ongoing relevance and power of the 
state (and the limits to state power) in shaping migration in Asia in the 
current "age of migration."
We encourage submissions from scholars and researchers working in all 
aspects of migration research; participants may focus primarily in either 
international or internal migration, but should have a strong interest in 
exploring the empirical and theoretical linkages between these two areas 
while at the conference. Papers from scholars in the region, particularly 
from China, South Asia and Southeast Asia, are especially welcome.

Among other topics, we are actively seeking papers that address one or 
more of the following four themes:

Underlying Political-Economic Drivers of Internal and International 
Migration across the Region and World-Wide 
Within this theme, we seek contributions on the role of structural 
political-economic processes operating at and through different spatial 
scales in "driving" both internal and international migration and in 
identifying the linkages between them (for example: uneven development, 
internal displacement and landlessness, national development policies 
designed to encourage/discourage migration, political turmoil, and 
regional and global financial crises over the past several decades).
Empirical Linkages between Different Groups of Migrants and between 
Different "Waves" of Migration, Both Within and Between Countries
Participants presenting within this theme will have an opportunity to 
engage directly with other scholars researching different types of 
migration in different locations and to explore the intersections, 
parallels and divergences of migrants' decision-making processes, 
migration across the life-cycle, and migrant household strategies. Such an 
engagement could strengthen theories of migration decision making (for 
example: whether to migrate internally or internationally, or which 
household members should migrate and when). Scholars investigating direct 
and indirect linkages between internal and international migrants, whether 
through processes of chain migration or "knock on" effects are 
particularly encouraged to participate under this theme.
The Increasingly Complex Role of the State and of National Borders in 
Contemporary Global Migration
How is the role of the state changing – within borders, at borders, and 
across borders - in contemporary migration? Papers within this theme will 
investigate and complicates the role of national borders in migration 
studies through an examination of the theoretical linkages, parallels and 
divergences in considerations of citizenship, identity, integration and 
rights for international and internal migrants.
The Need for Critical Evaluation of "Migration and Development" Programs 
and Policies in Both National and International Settings
The so-called "Migration and Development Nexus" is a major theme in both 
internal and international development research and policy. This 
conference will provide an opportunity to critically evaluate the ongoing 
linkage of migration and development in international development policy 
and scholarship by utilizing empirical data and current research in two 
key areas that cross-cut internal and international migration, namely: (a) 
economic remittances and economic development impacts, and (b) social 
remittances, social costs, and the global "care crisis."

SUBMISSION OF PROPOSALS

Academics, researchers, policy-makers and graduate students are encouraged 
to submit paper proposals to the conference. Proposals should include a 
title, an abstract (300 words max.) and a short bio-note of the author(s) 
(200 words). Please submit and address all applications and enquiries to 
Dr Maureen Helen Hickey ([email protected]) and Dr Melody Lu Chia-Wen 
([email protected]) by 31 May 2011. Please click here for the Paper 
Proposal Submission Form. Partial funding will be available for some 
presenters, particularly from within the region, depending on need and the 
availability of funds.

Successful applicants will be notified by 30 June 2011 and will be 
required to send in a completed paper (5,000-6,000 words) by 20 September 
2011. Selected papers will be developed and included in an edited journal 
issue or book.


CONTACT DETAILS

Convenors:

Prof Brenda Yeoh 
Head of Migration Research Cluster, Asia Research Institute, Dean, Faculty 
of Arts and Social Sciences, Professor, Department of Geography, National 
University of Singapore

Dr Maureen Hickey ([email protected])
Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Migration Research Cluster, Asia Research 
Institute, National University of Singapore

Secretariat:

Ms Valerie Yeo
Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore
469A Tower Block, Level 10, Bukit Timah Road, Singapore 259770
Email: [email protected]
Tel: (65) 6516 5279 
Fax: (65) 6779 1428
 

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