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Migrants and solidarities: Negotiating deservingness in welfare micropublics

Abstract

The project explores the fundamental question of who is, and who is not, considered deserving of welfare services, how deservingness is negotiated and with what implications, in a context of increasing diversity driven by migration, welfare restructuring, and austerity. Such negotiations serve to draw boundaries between those migrants who have access to the support and services of the welfare state, or are believed to have access, and those who are excluded, e.g. because they are deemed as not belonging or are seen as responsible for their own neediness. Variation will be made visible and comparable by exploring how solidarities are informed by different constellations of welfare and migration regimes, in both urban areas and rural / small towns with varying degrees of diversity and migrant settlement. Our multi-sited ethnography in Denmark, Sweden, and the UK will focus on six welfare micropublics, local spaces where entitlements to support and services are negotiated. We focus on how deservingness is constituted according to migrants' generational status and according to spatial dimensions of the neighbourhood where migrants settle.

Keywords:

Diversity, Intersectionality, Migration, Deservingness, Micropublics

Description

More information about the project: SOLIDARITIES: negotiating migrant deservingness
The project breaks new ground by exploring how solidarities are imagined and practiced in negotiations of migrant deservingness. It explores the fundamental question of who is, and who is not, considered deserving of welfare services, how deservingness is negotiated and with what implications, in a context of increasing diversity driven by migration, welfare restructuring, and austerity. Such negotiations serve to draw boundaries between those migrants who have access to the support and services of the welfare state, or are believed to have access, and those who are excluded, e.g. because they are deemed as not belonging or are seen as responsible for their own neediness. Setting out from the understanding that solidarities are imagined and practiced in diverse ways, explores MigSol emerging forms of conviviality, friction and contestation. Variation will be made visible and comparable by exploring how solidarities are informed by different constellations of welfare and migration regimes, in both urban areas and rural / small towns with varying degrees of diversity and migrant settlement. Our multi-sited ethnography in Denmark, Sweden, and the UK will focus on six welfare micropublics, local spaces where entitlements to support and services are negotiated. We focus on how deservingness is constituted according to migrants' generational status e.g., as children, working-age adults, or elders; and according to spatial dimensions of the neighbourhood where migrants settle e.g., in private, public or social housing; in major cities or in rural areas; together with, or apart from, majority populations. We aim for a deep and nuanced understanding of how deservingness is negotiated, and how different forms of in encounters between migrants, frontline government workers, and advocates who offer solidarities are practiced, and provide support for migrants. is characterised by a commitment to promoting dialogue, reflection, and mutual learning. The project brings MigSol together an international team of anthropologists and sociologists with an expert Academic Advisory Board and key stakeholder representatives. Results will be disseminated through scientific publications, stakeholder reports, a documentary film, exhibit, and a multi-media website, contributing fresh insights to public debates on deservingness, welfare, and migration.

Publications

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Other Academic Output

Project homepage: here

2019 - 2023

Funding

NordForsk

REMESO Project Leader

Anders Neergaard, Professor

Participants from REMESO

Pouran Djampour

Participants not from REMESO

  • Co-Investigator, Mikkel Rytter, Aarhus University Denmark
  • Co-Investigator, Rachel Rosen, University College London, United Kingdom
  • PhD student, Line Gruner, Aarhus University Denmark
  • Principal Investigator, Mette Louise Berg, University College London, United Kingdom
  • Research assistant (PhD) Eve Dickson University College London, United Kingdom

Contact for project

anders.neergaard@liu.se


Last updated: 2021-01-21



Page responsible: erik.berggren@liu.se
Last updated: 2020-05-27