Events

Advancing Transnational Migration Studies through “Home”: A Conceptual Inquiry by Assoc Prof Paolo Boccagni

Date: 14 Aug 2019
Time: 16:00 - 17:30
Venue:

AS8, Level 4, Seminar Room 04-04
10 Kent Ridge Crescent, Singapore 119260
National University of Singapore @ KRC

Contact Person: TAY, Minghua
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CHAIRPERSON

Dr Sylvia Ang, Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore


ABSTRACT

My presentation introduces a research agenda centred on the “home-migration nexus”, as a way to renovate the theoretical, methodological and empirical bases of transnational migration studies. Home – as a material setting, a special relationship with place, and a source of distinctive emotions and social practices – is significantly affected by human mobility. It also provides a unique research venue on the transnational facets of migrants’ everyday life over space and time. Based on an in-depth overview of the interdisciplinary literature on home, I argue for a comparative analysis of migrants’ homing experience, of the underlying infrastructures, and of the processes through which they negotiate the meanings, functions and boundaries of home vis-à-vis their groups of reference. Much transnational literature makes a case for migrants’ unprecedented connectedness with home (societies), or for their novel scope to “emplace home” in several locations simultaneously. However, these evocative claims are not always substantiated through empirical research. The very notion of home has been subject to relatively little elaboration in a transnational optic. Nevertheless, there is a remarkable potential in using home, literally and metaphorically, as a prism to investigate migrant ability to retain, circulate and emplace significant aspects of the “other worlds” they are connected to, while being physically away from them. Building on a variety of case studies and on the preliminary findings of ERC HOMInG, I show how and why a better understanding of home, and of the ways of extending and reproducing it across countries, marks a turning point in transnational migration studies.


ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Paolo Boccagni is a sociologist with an expertise in international migration, transnationalism, social welfare, care, diversity and home. His current research is on home-making and home-feeling processes, primarily concerning migrants and ethnic minorities, as a strategic issue for understanding the everyday negotiation of boundaries between native and foreign-born populations. As the PI of ERC StG HOMInG (homing.soc.unitn.it), he is leading a team of seven postdoctoral research fellows, doing multi-sited fieldwork on home and migration in nine different countries. Based on this large-scale collaborative project, Paolo is elaborating on “homing” as a lifelong set of processes through which individuals and groups try to make themselves at home. In recent years he has also done fieldwork on the ways of framing and approaching immigrant and refugee clients among social workers; on the lived experience and the sense of home of international students; on the everyday practices and material cultures in refugee reception initiatives. Paolo has published his work in about 30 international peer-reviewed journals in migration studies, diversity, housing, social policy and qualitative research methods. His recent publications include Migration and the Search for Home. Mapping Domestic Space in Migrants’ Everyday Lives (Palgrave, 2017).


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