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Migrant and the City

Urban Studies and Practices Journal (JUSP), Special issue

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Published on Friday, December 02, 2016

Abstract

Cities worldwide are major magnets for migrants. Urban environments shape migrants’ experiences in a new locale, whereas migrants contribute to increasing diversity of the city. Due to its extreme complexity and dynamic nature, the reality under the “migrant and the city” interconnection is rarely considered in theoretical accounts, empirical methodologies, or  practical interventions in its full diversity. This special issue of the JUSP aims to harness the elusive reality of this interconnection by bridging both disciplinary and theory-practice gaps and inviting scholars and practitioners to share their reflections on the topic. In this issue, we are especially interested in creating a multifaceted account of integration (or assimilation, incorporation, acculturation) as one of the ways to talk about this interconnection.

Announcement

Argument

Cities worldwide are major magnets for migrants. Urban environments shape migrants’ experiences in a new locale, whereas migrants contribute to increasing diversity of the city. Due to its extreme complexity and dynamic nature, the reality under the “migrant and the city” interconnection is rarely considered in theoretical accounts, empirical methodologies, or  practical interventions in its full diversity. This special issue of the JUSP aims to harness the elusive reality of this interconnection by bridging both disciplinary and theory-practice gaps and inviting scholars and practitioners to share their reflections on the topic. In this issue, we are especially interested in creating a multifaceted account of integration (or assimilation, incorporation, acculturation) as one of the ways to talk about this interconnection.

Main topics

We welcome papers that reflect on the following (and related) questions: 

  1. How should the connections between migration and the city be accounted for today?  
  2. How do cities change under the influence of migration and vice versa? What are the mechanisms of such transformations?
  3. How is incorporation of migrants influenced by various urban settings? Which urban (social, economic, etc) structures contribute to which modes of migrant incorporation?
  4. How should migrants in the city be studied? What are the methodological challenges involved, and the possible solutions we can strive for?
  5. How and in what directions can/should migrant incorporation be influenced? What measures (policies, city- and neighborhood-level programs, grassroots initiatives) have proven to be (in)effective?

Submission guidelines

Deadline: January 15, 2017

Email for article submissions and questions: center.migration.ethnicity@gmail.com

For guidelines on article submission, please see:https://usp.hse.ru/en/articles

Journal of Urban Studies and Practices is a bilingual (English and Russian), open access and peer-reviewed journal. 

Special Issue editors 

  • Evgeni Varshaver, Director of the Center for Migration and Ethnicity Research, Senior research fellow at RANEPA, Member of the Editorial Board of the Journal of Urban Studies and Practices (Moscow, Russia)
  • Anna Rocheva, Senior fellow of the Center for Migration and Ethnicity Research, Research fellow at RANEPA, Member of the Editorial Board of the Journal of Urban Studies and Practices (Moscow, Russia)

Date(s)

  • Sunday, January 15, 2017

Keywords

  • city, migrant, urban setting, neighbourhood

Contact(s)

  • Anna Rocheva
    courriel : center [dot] migration [dot] ethnicity [at] gmail [dot] com

Information source

  • Anna Rocheva
    courriel : center [dot] migration [dot] ethnicity [at] gmail [dot] com

License

CC0-1.0 This announcement is licensed under the terms of Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal.

To cite this announcement

« Migrant and the City », Call for papers, Calenda, Published on Friday, December 02, 2016, https://doi.org/10.58079/we2

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