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Decentering knowledge in researching migration of the Global South


A one-day Workshop


Migration is a complex phenomenon as it affects not only individuals and families but also their communities and countries in an interdependent way. However, migration research and discourses are currently dominated by scholars in the Global North while Global South perspectives remain less visible. To illuminate Global South perspectives in researching migration, a one-day workshop on decentering knowledge in researching migration from the Global South will be organized in Melbourne, Australia. The workshop is to explore perspectives (including theoretical insights, methodological innovations and empirical research findings) of the Global South, with a focus on four relevant themes:

(i) Politics of migration from Global South perspectives;

(ii) emerging issues in researching translocal and transnational migration;

(iii) methodological innovations in researching translocal and transnational migration; and 

(iv) future international research collaboration between the Global North and Global South in researching translocal and transnational migration.

REGISTER BY JUNE 15  CLICK HERE TO REGISTER

Keynote Speakers


Keynote 1: Migration and (im)mobilities in the Global South


Speaker: Lan Anh Hoang, Associate Professor in Development Studies

Organisation: Deputy Head of School (Teaching and Learning), School of Social and Political Sciences, Faculty of Arts, the university of Melbourne

Email: lahoang@unimelb.edu.au

Short bio: Lan Anh Hoang is Associate Professor in Development Studies, the School of Social and Political Sciences, the University of Melbourne. Her research has been published in many prestigious journals (e.g., Gender and Society, Gender, Place and Culture, Global Networks, Population, Space and Place, Geoforum, Ethnic and Racial Studies, Asian Studies Review, and Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies). She is author of ‘Vietnamese migrants in Russia: mobility in times of uncertainty’ (Amsterdam University Press 2020) and co-editor of ‘Transnational Labour Migration, Remittances, and the Changing Family in Asia' (2015) and ‘Money and Moralities in Contemporary Asia’ (2019). Lan’s current project examines brokerage and migrant networks in the Vietnam-Australia migration corridor.

The link:
https://findanexpert.unimelb.edu.au/profile/350058-lan-anh-hoang



Keynote 2. Contesting the Uncontestable: Migration Research through Non-Western Concepts


Speaker: Xiaoying Qi, Associate Professor

Organisation: School of Arts and the Research Centre for Social and Political Change, Australian Catholic University

Email: Xiaoying.Qi@acu.edu.au

Short bio: Xiaoying Qi is Associate Professor of Sociology, Australian Catholic University. Her publications include Remaking Families in Contemporary China (Oxford University Press 2021) and Globalized Knowledge Flows and Chinese Social Theory (Routledge 2014), as well as numerous articles in sociology and allied journals, including American Journal of Cultural Sociology, British Journal of Sociology, Current Sociology, International Sociology, Journal of Sociology, Sociological Review, and Sociology. Xiaoying’s current research is focused on aspects of economic relations and reconceptualization of core sociological properties of economic life.

The link: Xiaoying Qi | ACU Researcher


Keynote 3: Future research collaboration on Migration between the Global North and Global South: Lessons from the Past


Speaker: Professor S Irudaya Rajan, Chairperson

Organisation:
International Institute of Migration and Development (IIMAD)

Email: rajan@iimad.org 

Short bio: S. Irudaya Rajan is Chair of the International Institute for Migration and Development, and also chair of the KNOMAD (The Global Knowledge Partnership on Migration and Development) World Bank working group on internal migration and urbanization. Prior to this, he was Professor at the Centre for Development Studies (CDS), Kerala. He has published in international journals on social, economic, demographic, psychological and political implications of migration on individuals, community, economy and society. He is the editor of the annual series India Migration Report since 2010 and South Asia Migration Report since 2017 published by Routledge and Founding Editor in Chief, Migration and Development.

The link: S. Irudaya Rajan - IIMAD | The International Institute for Migration & Development

Event Details


Date: Saturday 24 June, 2023
Time: 9:30 am – 4:30 pm (9:30 – 10:00: registration; 10:00 – 10:30: Acknowledgement of Country & Addresses; 10:30 – 13:00: Keynote 1 & 2 and Group activity; 13:00 – 14:00: Lunch break; 14:00 – 16:00: Book launch, Group activity, and Keynote 3; 16:00: Discussant; 16:30: Closing remarks)
Venue: Mary Glowrey Building 420.2.80 (i.e., building 420, level 2, room 80) at 115 Victoria Road, Fitzroy, Victoria 3605

Registration Types:

In-person participation:
$20 for non-TASA members
$15 for TASA members
$0 (FREE) for PhD students and early-career researchers

Online participation:
$0 (FREE) for all participants.

Due date of registration: BY 15 JUNE 2023.

Organisers:
(i)Prof Loretta Baldassar, ECU Vice Chancellor Professorial Research Fellow, Vice President of the ISA Research Committee (RC31) on Sociology of Migration;

(ii) Dr Catriona Stevens, ECU Forrest Prospect Research Fellow, Co-convenor of TASA Migration Ethnicity and Multiculturalism Thematic Group;

(iii) Dr Simone Marino, ECU Research Fellow, TASA Migration, Ethnicity and Multiculturalism Thematic Group;

(iv) Hien Thi Nguyen, Post-Doctoral Research Fellow, ECU; and

(v) A/Prof. Xiaoying QI, ACU

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This event is being proudly supported by: 

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XX ISA World Congress of Sociology

Melbourne, Australia | June 25 - July 1, 2023