Turkish Migration 2016 - Selected Papers - Compiled by Deniz Eroglu, Jeffrey H. Cohen, Ibrahim Sirkeci offers a selection of papers presented at the Migration Conference 2016 held in Vienna, Austria. The pieces collected here are just a sample of the work that was presented at the 2016 Turkish Migration conference. Our meeting, the 4th symposium on Turkish migration, brought together scholars from around the globe to share their research and debate mobility. As in our earlier symposia, we explored demography, sociology, culture and art as they are related to mobility. New this year was an increasing awareness of the “return” of Turks to Turkey from Germany, the challenges faced by Syrian refugees who have settled in Turkey or are passing through the country on their way to Europe as well as issues facing Kurdish minorities, Roma and other minority groups living in or transiting through Turkey. This collection is challenged by two competing poles. One pole is centered in xenophobic nationalism. Around this pole, migrants and refugees are described as criminals, religious fanatics and “moochers" who challenge the working class and the freedoms that come with life in the West. The second pole laments the insecurity that migrants and refugees face. Around this pole, movers are described as victims who lack so much at home. In this example, migrants and refugees are moving because there are no jobs and few prospects for work; civil liberties are proscribed and banned in the face of state imposed limits and there are no opportunities to strike out on a unique path to the future. Complicating both poles is the 24-hour news cycle that denies us the opportunity to understand and analyze. Instead, we are forced to pick one pole or the other. In either case, the outcome dehumanizes the mover, signals their pathos and emphasizes why they are different.
Turkey’s Syrians: Today and Tomorrow Edited by Deniz Eroğlu UTKU, K. Onur UNUTULMAZ, Ibrahim SIRKECI Since the first arrival of Syrian refugees, the issue has sparked considerable national and international interest. Political discourses concentrated on state ‘generosities’ to provide protection to those coming from insecurities and possibilities to reduce ‘burden of refugees’ to receiving countries via international solidarity. While these concerns focus on the effects of hosting refugees, what happens to refugees themselves, how they are affected by government policies and how they are perceived by host country people are questions yet to be answered. This book brings together a multidisciplinary set of contributions scrutinising the case of Syrian refugees in Turkey. Contents About the AuthorsChapter One: Syrian Communities in Turkey: Conflict Induced Diaspora – K. Onur Unutulmaz, Ibrahim Sirkeci, Deniz Eroğlu UtkuChapter Two: Biopolitical Problematic: Syrian Refugees in Turkey – H. Yaprak CivelekChapter Three: Deserving Refugee or Undeserving Migrant? The Politics of the Refugee Category in Turkey – Funda Ustek SpildaPART 2 CASE STUDIESChapter Four: Civil Society and Syrian Refugees in Turkey: a Human Security Perspective – Helen Macreath, M. Utku Güngör, S. Gülfer SağnıçChapter Five: Contesting Refugees in Turkey: Political Parties and the Syrian Refugees – Aslı Ilgıt, Fulya MemişoğluChapter Six: Syrian Refugees in a Slum Neighbourhood Poor Turkish Residents Encountering the Other in Önder Neighbourhood, Altındağ, Ankara – Tahire ErmanChapter Seven: Comparative Analysis of Public Attitudes towards Syrian Refugees in Turkish Cities of Ankara and Hatay – Güneş Gökgöz, Alexa Arena, Cansu AydınChapter Eight: Temporary Education Centres as a Temporary Solution for Educational Problems of Syrian Refugee Children in Mersin – Bilge Deniz ÇatakChapter Nine: Social Identity Motives, Boundary Definitions, and Attitudes towards Syrian Refugees in Turkey – Nagihan TaşdemirPART 3 FUTURE PROSPECTSChapter Ten: Demographic Gaps between Syrian and the European Populations: What Do They suggest? – M. Murat Yüceşahin, Ibrahim SirkeciChapter Eleven: Integration of Syrians: Politics of Integration in Turkey in the Face of a Closing Window of Opportunity – K. Onur UnutulmazCONCLUSION – K. Onur Unutulmaz, Ibrahim Sirkeci, Deniz Eroğlu Utku
The 10th Migration Conference, TMC 2022 was hosted by the Faculty of Law, Economic and Social Sciences Agdal of Mohammad V University, Rabat, Morocco and organised by AMERM (l’Association Marocaine d’Etudes et de Recherches sur les Migrations) and IBS (International Business School, UK. The TMC 2022 Rabat was the first time such a major conference on migration held in Africa. The Conference accommodated discussions involving ministers, politicians, practitioners, lawyers, academics, media, experts, young researchers and students, practitioners and wider public. This conference was the first in person event in the series after two years of COVID-induced virtual conferences.
This is a collection of self-selected papers presented at The Migration Conference 2021 London. COVID-19 pandemic and ongoing restrictions and difficulties in international travel forced us to run the TMC online for a second time. It is a new and improving experience for most of us and there is strong hints that the conference will continue in hybrid form in the near future. As usual we have invited participants to submit 2000 words papers for the proceedings book and this volume brings you these papers. Topics covered in the volume includes gender, education, mass movements, refugees, religion, identity, migration policy, culture, diplomacy, remittances, climate, water, environment and pretty much everything about migration. Most of the papers are in English, but there are some in French, Spanish and Turkish too. This is a great book for those who want short accounts on all aspects of migration and refugees.
Perhaps the fundamental question in CSR is: What are the responsibilities of businesses and business leadership to society? Moreover, do the responsibilities of business change in times of social and political turmoil? The chapters in this book tackle several aspects of these questions with chapters on business and politics, the environment, technology, and immigration; along with broader questions about leadership, governance, and the very nature of CSR.
Temporary migration is a human response to uncertain economic, ecological, political and socio-cultural environments. This book provides an important contribution to the literature on the rights, lived experiences and trajectories of temporary migrants. It focuses on the precarity of temporary migrants at different scales in urban settings, varying from the household, institution, and neighbourhood, to the city. Temporary migrants experience oscillations in precarity that vary with their categorization as skilled (professionals with valued skill sets, international students) or unskilled (domestic workers, labourers), their ambiguous legal status and the locales in which they reside and work. Individual chapters use case studies from around the world (USA, Canada, Ireland, Turkey, Singapore, China) to show how temporal and scalar precarity intersect and are mediated by national and local policies, civil society, as well as the personal and social attributes of migrants themselves such as gender, race, and country of origin. Although often overlooked due to their transitory status, the chapters demonstrate how temporary migrants are embedded in urban life and resist their categorization as disposable through individual and collective efforts. This book will be of interest to researchers and advanced students of Sociology, Politics, Human Geography, Urban Studies, and Social and Cultural Anthropology. It was originally published as a special issue of the Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies.
This book employs methods from comparative law to analyze voluntary migration, exploring the free movement of immigrants and their freedom of settlement under Brazilian and Mercosul law, as well as under German law and the European Union’s legal framework on migration. It discusses the level of protection granted to immigrants in terms of their right to enter and stay in Brazil and Mercosul, using German legislation and the EU’s legal framework on migration for comparison. Accordingly, the book will help migration researchers to understand not only the structure and rationale of migration law in Brazil, especially after the entry into force of its recent Migration Law in 2017, but also its relation to EU and German provisions on voluntary migration. It demonstrates how the differing natures of the migration law adopted by Brazil and Germany have led to different approaches and, consequently, different levels of protection for immigrants.
The Migration Conference 2023 Selected Papers includes short papers from several tracks that were included in the TMC 2023 Hamburg programme. Migration Conferences are annual scholarly gatherings accommodating debates about migration, migrants, refugees, asylum seekers, integration, diasporas and all other relevant topics from various social science disciplines while also hosting debates involving policy makers, media and third sector representatives. The Migration Conference 2023 was hosted by the Faculty of Law at Hamburg University in Germany. Details of the conference programme and the links to the online sessions can be inspected here. www.migrationconference.net | @migrationevent | fb.me/MigrationConference | Email: [email protected] Contents Summary Programme ECONOMICS, WORK AND MIGRATION... SPATIAL ANALYSIS OF YOUTH TVET EDUCATION, INSERTION, MIGRATION AND REGIONAL ECONOMIC GROWTH IN MOROCCO USING SPATIAL ECONOMETRICS - Mohamed Ennebch, Ahmed Bassibas, Youssef Haddou Amar, Meryem Ragbi, and Moubarek Amine Berdaa LOCAL POLICIES OF DIVERSITY IN (POST-) INDUSTRIAL CITIES: A RESEARCH AGENDA BETWEEN ITALY AND JAPAN.. - Magda Bolzoni and Silvia Crivello NEW ‘CRISIS’, OLD CHALLENGES AND RESPONSES: LABOUR IM(MOBILITIES) OF ALBANIAN MIGRANTS IN GREECE’S COVID-19 ‘CRISIS’ - Maria Panteleou THE EFFECTS OF LABOR MIGRATION FROM GEORGIA ON THE SOCIOECONOMIC STRUCTURE OF THE EASTERN BLACK SEA COASTAL CITIES - Kerim Taşkın and Selver Özözen Kahraman INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS OF MIGRANT DOMESTIC WORKERS AND THE KAFALA SYSTEM IN LEBANON - Nadine El-Dekmak EDUCATION AND SKILLED MIGRATION FROM MIGRANT WORKERS TO PROFESSIONAL TEACHERS: THE REINTEGRATION OF OVERSEAS FILIPINO WORKERS (OFWS) THROUGH “SA PINAS, IKAW AY MA’AM, SIR” (SPIMS) PROGRAM - Rowena R. Hibanada and Jocelyn O. Celero THE “NOT MIGRANT” NARRATIVE AND ITS CAUSES: SELF-CATEGORIZATION OF HIGHLY SKILLED MIGRANTS IN BUDAPEST - Pinar Dilan Sönmez Gioftsios TESTIMONIOS AS DECOLONIZING TOOLS IN EFL TEACHER EDUCATION PROGRAMS TO PROMOTE REFLECTION AND ACTION - Irasema Mora-Pablo BRAIN DRAIN OF HEALTH WORKERS FROM TURKEY TO GERMANY AND ITS RESULTS: POSSIBILITIES OF BRAIN GAIN - Fuat Güllüpınar and Gamze Kaçar Tunç WELLBEING AND MIGRATION DETERMINANTS OF SELF REPORTED POST TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER IN SYRIAN REFUGEES LIVING IN TURKEY BETWEEN 2011-2017: ANALYSIS BY SPATIAL PERSPECTIVE.. Alime Tombak A STUDY OF THE DETRIMENTAL IMPACT OF COVID-19: WITH SPECIAL EMPHASIS ON FEMALE MIGRANT WORKERS IN NEW DELHI, INDIA.. Niimisha Kaul OVERCOMING ADVERSITY: AN INVESTIGATION OF PSYCHOLOGICAL WELL-BEING AMONG SYRIAN REFUGEES IN TÜRKIYE.. Selen Subaşı MIGRATION, LAW AND POLICY.. THE CONNECTION OF DISCRIMINATION, ANGER, AND POLITICAL VIOLENCE.. Rebecca Endtricht DECENT LIVING CONDITIONS FOR ASYLUM SEEKERS AND REFUGEES. THE PROBLEM OF PROTECTION IN GREECE.. Styliani (Stella) Christoforidou THE SOLIDARITY’S PRINCIPLE IN THE GOVERNMENT OF MIGRATION BETWEEN CRIMINALIZATION AND SUSTAINABILITY.. Filomena Pisconti THE USE OF THE TRANSFORMATIVE INTERCULTUREL MEDIATION MODEL FOR IMMIGRANTS. Amel Ketani THE HUMAN RIGHTS OF REFUGEES: STATUS TRANSITION FROM ILLEGAL MIGRANTS TO ASYLUM SEEKERS REGARDING THE SUPRESSION OF MIGRANT SMUGGLING AS A TRANSNATIONAL CRIME.. Blerta Ahmedi, Bekim Nuhija, Stefani Stojchevska and Betim Jahja MIGRATION AND ENVIRONMENT.. ENVIRONMENTAL INEQUITIES AND URBAN MIGRATION: AN ANALYSIS OF CLIMATE INJUSTICE FOR SYRIAN COMMUNITIES IN ISTANBUL.. Elif Bengi Güneş and Osman Balaban ENVIRONMENTAL REFUGEES AND THE 1951 REFUGEE CONVENTION.. AlBaraa Quradi COMPATIBILITY OF THE EU-TURKEY STATEMENT TO EU LAW AND INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW... Havva Yesil MIGRATION AND INTEGRATION... PLURAL AGENCIES IN UNDERSTANDING 21ST CENTURY MIGRATION HISTORY IN EUROPE: UNVEILING MIGRATION PATTERNS THROUGH CONSTELLATIONS AND SYMMETRIZATIONS. Andres Otalvaro ESSENTIAL HANDS, INVISIBLE WORKER: THE LIVES OF BLACK MIGRANTS IN THE US. Yasin Kakande THE TRANSNATIONAL GENERATIONS AND EDUCATION: THE MODELS OF INTEGRATION IN QATARI SCHOOLS. Abdullah Noor Mohmmad Arbabi REFUGEE INTEGRATION IN GREECE AND ITALY (2010-2020): A COMPARISON STUDY.. Dimitris Georgiadis CHINESE MIGRATION AND ENGAGEMENT IN CAMEROON: A COMPREHENSIVE OVERVIEW... Jocelyne Kenne Kenne IRREGULAR AFRICAN IMMIGRANTS AND THEIR INTEGRATION IN THE LIBYAN COASTAL CITIES. Mohamed Ali Ahmed THE CRETAN REFUGEES IN THE PROVINCE OF ADANA.. Aslı Emine Çomu UNDERSTANDING TURKISH RETURN MIGRATION FROM GERMANY.. Funda Yıldırım MIGRATION AND GENDER.. WOMEN’S ESSENTIAL ROLES AS CHANGE AGENTS IN HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE, DEVELOPMENT AND POST-CONFLICT RECONSTRUCTION/ RECONCILIATION.. Nur Sultan Çırakman and Candost Aydın BEYOND VICTIMHOODTRANSFORMATIVE POTENTIALS IN QUEER HUMANITARIANISM... Valentina Massone YOUTH, CHILDREN AND FAMILIES. MUSIC AS A CATALYST FOR BIO-PSYCHO-SOCIAL TRANSFORMATION WITH REFUGEE YOUTH.. Eva Marija Vukich and Hala Hamdan COURT-TO-COURT DIALOGUES: CHALLENGES FOR THE PROTECTION OF CHILDREN IN MIGRATION PROCESSES. Laila Roxina Moliterno Abi Cheble INSECURITIES AND MIGRATION... PERPETUAL WAR LOGIC AND GLOBAL REFUGEES. Anas Karzai SECURITY, DISPLACED: UNDERSTANDING REFUGEES’ SENSE OF SAFETY AND SECURITY THROUGH THEIR RESETTLEMENT EXPERIENCES IN MONTREAL, CANADA.. Krystal Tennessee PERPETRATORS’ TRAUMA: EMOTIONAL STATE OF MIGRANTS FROM RUSSIA WHO DISAPPROVE OF THE INVASION OF UKRAINE.. Varvara Mukhina MIGRANTS, THE STATE AND HUMAN TRAFFICKING IN TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO.. Andel Andrew and Lue Anda Francis-Blackman MIGRATION MANAGEMENT AND BORDERING PRACTICES IN THAILAND AND VIETNAM.. Mary Rose Geraldine A. Sarausad and Reinaruth D. Carlos ARTS, LITERATURE AND MIGRATION... MEMORIES OF EMIGRATION AND THE PERCEPTION OF IMMIGRANTS IN ITALY.. Luana Franco-Rocha, Daniela Salvucci, and Dorothy Zinn HISTORY AND MIGRATION... HUMAN MIGRATIONS, HISTORY AND LAW ACCORDING TO “THE NOMOS OF THE EARTH”. Orazio Maria Gnerre THEORY AND METHODS IN MIGRATION STUDIES. A COLLABORATIVE OPEN-SOURCE MIGRATION RESEARCH PLATFORM... Jimmy Krozel, Mark Peters, Athina Bikaki, Shaili Dave, Luke Lorentzatos, and Ioannis A. Kakadiaris MIGRATION AND RADICALIZATION WITH VIOLENCE.. Merve Önenli Güven HATE SPEECH: DISPLACEMENTS OF THE MODERN HOMO SACER.. Laura Natalia y Rodríguez Ariano CLIMATE IM(MOBOLITY) UNDER THE LENS OF CLIMATE JUSTICE.. Marilia Papaleo Gagliardi L’ÈMIGRATION... CONTRIBUTION ET PLACE DES ONG DANS LE CADRE NORMATIF DE PROTECTION INTERNATIONALE DES RÉFUGIÉS. Samira Bikarden MIGRACIONES. MIGRACIÓN DE TRANSITO DE CENTRO Y SURAMERICANOS POR ZACATECAS MÉXICO HACIA ESTADOS UNIDOS 2022-2023. García Zamora Pascual G, J Lamberto Herrera M y Dellanira Ruiz de Chávez R DISCURSO DE ODIO EN CONTRA DE LA INMIGRACIÓN: DESPLAZAMIENTOS DEL HOMO SACER MODERNO LAURA.. Laura Natalia y Rodríguez Ariano PERCEPCIÓN NEGATIVA RESPECTO A LA INMIGRACIÓN VENEZOLANA POR LA MENDICIDAD. Jessica Ordóñez GÖÇ ÇALIŞMALARI. KAHRAMANMARAŞ DEPREMLERİ SONRASI ZORUNLU İÇ GÖÇ: ESKİŞEHİR ÖRNEĞİ. Filiz Göktuna Yaylacı and Gül Sevi Üçüncü GÖÇ SÜRECİNDE KESİŞİMSELLİK: SOSYAL PSİKOLOJİK BAKIŞ AÇISI. Betül Dilara Şeker KAHRAMANMARAŞ-TÜRKİYE DEPREMLERİ SONRASI YAŞANAN DEPREM GÖÇÜ ÜZERİNE SOSYOLOJİK BİR ÇALIŞMA.. Senem Gürkan and Erkan Perşembe EV SAHİBİ GRUBUN MÜLTECİLERE YÖNELİK TUTUMLARININ DEĞERLENDİRİLMESİ. Betül Dilara Şeker ve İbrahim Sirkeci
This book is a collection of selected papers presented at the 3rd Turkish Migration Conference (TMC). TMC 2015 was hosted by Charles University Prague, Czech Republic from 25 to 27 June 2015. The TMC 2015 was the third event in the series that we were proud to organise and host at Charles University Prague. This selection of papers presented at the conference are only a small portion of contributions. Many other papers are included in edited books and submitted to refereed journals in due course. There were a total of about 146 papers by over 200 authors presented in 40 parallel sessions and three plenary sessions at Jinonice Campus of Charles University Prague. About a fıfth of the sessions at the conference were in Turkish language although the main language was English. Therefore some of the proceedings are in Turkish too. The keynote speakers included Douglas Massey of Princeton University, Caroline Brettell of Southern Methodist University, and Nedim Gürsel of CNRS.