Project Details
Reframing arrival. Transnational perspectives on perceptions, governance, and forced migrants’ practices from 2015/16-2022/23
Applicants
Professorin Dr. Birgit Glorius; Dr. Annegret Haase
Subject Area
Human Geography
Empirical Social Research
Social and Cultural Anthropology and Ethnology
City Planning, Spatial Planning, Transportation and Infrastructure Planning, Landscape Planning
Empirical Social Research
Social and Cultural Anthropology and Ethnology
City Planning, Spatial Planning, Transportation and Infrastructure Planning, Landscape Planning
Term
since 2023
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 528026063
Recurrent large movements of forced migrants from sub-Sahara Africa, the Middle East, Asia, and Eastern Europe in the last decade, and since February 2022, from Ukraine, show how displacement has become part of an increasingly protracted condition and an unfolding moment rather than a single time-bounded event. Whether related to conflict, disaster, persecution, or climate change - displacement is defining our time and is entangled with crises related to housing, energy, democracy, and care. REFRAME takes this notion as a starting point and aims at reframing the paradigm of forced migrants’ arrival as both a policy framework and a discursive realm, through systematic analysis and transnational comparison of different arrival situations of forced migrants since 2015. The research collaboration between the three partner institutions Chemnitz University of Technology (Germany), University College London (United Kingdom), and Helmholtz-Centre for Environmental Research, Leipzig (Germany) is grounded in their extensive preliminary research activities related to the discursive constructions and co-production of knowledge around the arrival of forced migrants. REFRAME looks at arrival through the example of housing and will conduct a comparison around three interrelated strands: a) discourses on and perceptions of arrival and their impact on policy approaches to housing and social cohesion in the neighborhood; b) governance of arrival and housing, its inherent conflicts and opportunities to strengthen urban citizenship; c) the co-constitution of forced migrants' practices and housing regimes. The project seeks to compile and compare existing and newly collected data, discursive and policy considerations on the arrival and housing of refugees in 2015/16 and in 2022, and the time in between, in seven localities in four countries: Leipzig, Ibbenbüren, and Dessau-Roßlau (Germany), London and Hastings (United Kingdom), Istanbul (Turkey) and Brescia (Italy). The transnational multi-sited comparative analysis of seven reception contexts across Europe and the Middle East in cities of different sizes and structural conditions will help us to disentangle locally specific factors from more universal phenomena, thus supporting a nuanced reframing of arrival in the sense of the 'local turn'. Overall, REFRAME contributes to a critical problematization of arrival and reception around their processual and relational dimension and examines the spatial and colonial implications of arrival and reception, both historically, socially, and emotionally. The project aims at bringing forward theoretical development in migration research, human geography, and anthropology and it will inform policy debates on new foundations for urban citizenship.
DFG Programme
Research Grants
International Connection
United Kingdom
Partner Organisation
Arts and Humanities Research Council
Cooperation Partners
Harriet Allsopp, Ph.D.; Dr. Giovanna Astolfo; Professor Camillo Boano; Estella Carpi, Ph.D.