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Lehrende

Ringvorlesung/Lecture Series:“Citizenship and Mobility“


DozentIn: Prof. Dr. Helen Schwenken

Veranstaltungstyp: Vorlesung

Ort: 15/E16: Mo. 12:00 - 14:00 (14x) Mittwoch, 06.12.2023 18:00 - 20:00, 15/318: Donnerstag, 26.10.2023 18:00 - 20:00

Zeiten: Mo. 12:00 - 14:00 (wöchentlich), Ort: 15/E16, Termine am Donnerstag, 26.10.2023, Mittwoch, 06.12.2023 18:00 - 20:00, Ort: 15/318, 15/E16

Beschreibung: This is a 2 credit (ECTS) lecture series. There are no exams and no papers to be written. Just participation.

The program is online (Stud.IP) or here: https://www.imis.uni-osnabrueck.de/fileadmin/5_Studium/IMIB/Ringvorlesungen/IMIB_Ringvorlesung_WS23-24.pdf

The hybrid Eumigs events can be joined here: https://unine.webex.com/webappng/sites/unine/dashboard/pmr/eumigs with readings and abstracts here: https://eumigs.eu/news-and-events/events/eumigs-events/107-eumigs-lecture-series-2023-on-citizenship-and-mobility

The lecture series will be held in English (with one lecture in German). Most lectures will be within the assigned time slot (12-14h), but we will also have evening lectures (that are open to the public) and four lectures that start already at 11am and run until 1pm (6.11., 20.11., 4.12., 11.12.), because they are part of an international lecture series held together with our Eumigs partners.

Citizenship and Mobility: Two Entangled Sides of a Segmented Order?

This lecture series will examine how different citizenships and citizenship constellations impact mobility and how the pursuit of mobility influences the propensity of different migrant groups to seek citizenship. In a liberalized globalized world, international mobility of labour is a major issue that has important implications for source and destination countries, as well as for migrants themselves. However, not all individuals have equal rights to move and attain full inclusion at their desired place of residence. The recent COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted how European governments have selectively restricted mobility rights based on nationality, revealing a hierarchy of citizenship that extends globally.
The series will also include analyses of different periods in distinct countries, addressing the nation-building process and, where applicable, the effects of decolonization, the creation of an international human rights regime, and the segmented transformation it has provoked regarding mobility and citizenship.

The Lecture Series 2023 (as well as the EuMIGS Blended Mobility Course, which is linked to the lecture series, but the lecture series can be taken independently), offered jointly by several EuMIGS partner universities, will discuss research thematically related to policies of (im)mobility both in the EU and on a global scale, while considering citizenship hierarchies in a segmented global order.


zur Veranstaltung in Stud.IP