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MGSoG/UNU-MERIT Migration Seminar

MGSoG/UNU-MERIT Migration Seminar: ‘A clarion call for humanitarian social protection: From humanitarian aid to sustainable assistance in the Kakuma refugee camp’

The next migration seminar offered jointly by MGSoG/UNU-MERIT in collaboration with MACIMIDE, will take place on Wednesday, December 5th. In this seminar, Alexander Hunns and Francesco Iacoella from UNU-MERIT will present. The seminar will be held from 12:00-13:00 in room 0.16/0.17 of the UNU-MERIT building at Boschstraat 24. A sandwich lunch will be provided. 

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Migration Seminar: ‘Post-procedural mobility among asylum residence permit holders cohort 1995-1999’

First migration seminar of 2019 offered jointly by MGSoG/UNU-MERIT in collaboration with MACIMIDE. In this seminar, which will take place on Wednesday, January 16th, Prof. Dr. Arjen Leerkes from UNU-MERIT/ Erasmus University Rotterdam and Marloes de Hoon from the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, Maastricht University, will present.

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MGSoG/UNU-MERIT Seminar: “What does migrant decision-making mean for policy?”

The next migration seminar offered jointly by MGSoG/UNU-MERIT in collaboration with MACIMIDE, which will take place on tomorrow, Wednesday, April 3rd 

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Migration Seminar: Assessing the impact of international mobility on the development of Chinese science

Dr ir Koen Jonkers,  

This paper, co-authored by Cong Cao, Jeroen Baas, Caroline Wagner and myself, provides an analysis of the contribution of overseas Chinese and returned scholars on the output of the Chinese research system. China is the country with the most extensive set of programmes to promote the return of its overseas scientists. This study presents a novel approach to assessing the dimensions of the stocks of overseas and returned scientists. It also assesses the relative contribution these scientists make to China’s high impact publications and international co-publications. It thus provides quantitative evidence of the important contribution scientific mobility has made to the emergence of Chinese science. 
 

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MGSoG/UNU-MERIT Migration Seminar: “Naturalization in Context: Migrant Life Course and Institutional Change”

The next migration seminar offered jointly by MGSoG/UNU-MERIT in collaboration with , which will take place on Wednesday, February 20 n this seminar, Prof. Dr. Maarten Vink from the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences (Maastricht University) will present about Naturalization in Context: Migrant Life Course and Institutional Change. The seminar will be held from 13:00 – 14:00 in room 0.16/0.17 of the UNU-MERIT building at Boschstraat 24. A sandwich lunch will be provided 

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13/01/2021 – MGSoG/UNU-MERIT Migration Seminar: ‘Objective and subjective relative deprivation among Congolese refugees and Rwandan locals’

In this seminar, Dr. Özge Bilgili will present a study on ‘Objective and subjective relative deprivation among Congolese refugees and Rwandan locals’. The seminar will be held from 15:00 to 16:00 CET on Zoom. 

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17/02/2021 – MGSoG/UNU-MERIT Migration Seminar: Barriers to Humanitarian Migration, Victimisation and Integration Outcomes: Evidence from Germany

In this seminar, will present a study on barriers to humanitarian migration, victimisation and integration outcomes: Evidence from Germany’ The seminar will be held from 15:00 to 16:00 CET on Zoom. For more information and the link please click here. 

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10/03/2021 – MGSOG/UNU-MERIT MIGRATION SEMINAR: ‘THE IMMIGRANT-NATIVE WAGE GAP: IS THERE A GAP AND IS IT “FAIR”?’

The migration seminar of March 2021 offered jointly by MGSoG/UNU-MERIT in collaboration with MACIMIDE will take place on Wednesday, March 10th. 

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22/04/2021 – The spiralling of the securitisation of migration in the EU: From the management of a crisis to a governance of human mobility?

Since the end of the Cold War, securities studies have recognised the existence, in the field of migration governance, of a securitization process creating a migration-crime nexus as a consequence of political speech-acts and practices.

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07/04/2021 – The emergence of local responses to emigration: a case study in Romania

Local governments in origin countries have become increasingly active in creating their own strategies and policies in response to emigration. More and more are taking it upon themselves to address the human and material losses emigration entails and to ensure that emigration enhances rather than undermines collective welfare. Yet, despite the increasing relevance and rapid development of local responses to emigration, empirical and theoretical research has so far focused exclusively on the national level. We know nothing about the type of policies and strategies that local governments in origin countries devise, their objectives and how they go about implementing them. This article intends to address this research blind spot, by introducing the concept of local emigration policies, advancing an explanation for their emergence, and highlighting how they differ from national emigration policies. It argues that local emigration policies do not necessarily pursue the same objectives as national ones, tend to be more concrete and tailored to the needs of the locality and/or those of the emigrant population, with their effects being often more direct and immediate than those of national policies. This line of research has multiple (theoretical and policy) implications, including for our understanding of local development and migration, transnationalism, and integration in host societies.  

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