RAPOŠ BOŽIČ, Ivana. “People like us?”: A reverse sociology of migration. In 20th IMISCOE Annual Conference MIGRATION AND INEQUALITIES. In search of answers and solutions. 2023.
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Basic information
Original name “People like us?”: A reverse sociology of migration
Authors RAPOŠ BOŽIČ, Ivana.
Edition 20th IMISCOE Annual Conference MIGRATION AND INEQUALITIES. In search of answers and solutions, 2023.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Presentations at conferences
Field of Study 50401 Sociology
Country of publisher Poland
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
WWW URL
Organization unit Faculty of Social Studies
Keywords in English reverse sociology; cultural sociology; migration sutdies
Changed by Changed by: prof. Bernadette Nadya Jaworsky, Ph.D., učo 370423. Changed: 6/10/2023 11:49.
Abstract
Residents with a migratory background have long faced a difficult (even if unspoken) question: are you “people like us”? The “us” is taken-for-granted, understood through terms like “majority society,” “mainstream society,” and “host society.” Even the study of migration has largely been a story that privileges the perspectives of the “us” in destination societies. This becomes most apparent with respect to the one-sided focus of most scholarly debates on migration attitudes and integration. We argue that in order to understand the complex patterns of boundary work that take place in post-migrant societies, we need to move beyond taking the perspective of “us” for granted. We propose a novel approach that “reverses” the perspective and makes the residents with a migratory background our sociological “mainstream. We are interested in the ways these residents engage in symbolic boundary work when imagining what “people like us” means to them. Our three-fold theoretical and methodological contribution is framed by a “reverse sociology,” allowing for deep and critical reflection upon boundary-work processes. First, we discuss possible ways to reflexively formulate questions that frame the research. Second, we pay close attention to labeling practices, emphasizing the need to understand how residents with a migratory background understand their positionality when engaging with established migration labels. Finally, we seek to upend the prevailing perspective on studying integration processes, often investigated from the perspective of the receiving society’s institutions. The goal is to understand how residents with migratory background see those institutions and the ways they interact with them.
Links
GA23-05449S, research and development projectName: Lidé jako my? Reverzní sociologie migrace v České republice
Investor: Czech Science Foundation, People Like Us? A Reverse Sociology of Migration in Czechia
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