New directions in migration studies: towards methodological de-nationalism

Abstract In this paper I consider how the construction of migration as a problem poses both ethical and epistemological challenges to migration scholars and how this is related to political and methodological nationalism. I briefly outline two paradigm shifts that have been highly generative in our...

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Main Author: Bridget Anderson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2019-09-01
Series:Comparative Migration Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40878-019-0140-8
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spelling doaj-dcd768baf52b41b18ff1479714d94f0e2020-11-25T03:19:16ZengSpringerOpenComparative Migration Studies2214-594X2019-09-017111310.1186/s40878-019-0140-8New directions in migration studies: towards methodological de-nationalismBridget Anderson0School of Sociology, Politics and International Studies (SPAIS), University of BristolAbstract In this paper I consider how the construction of migration as a problem poses both ethical and epistemological challenges to migration scholars and how this is related to political and methodological nationalism. I briefly outline two paradigm shifts that have been highly generative in our field and beyond – methodological transnationalism and the mobilities turn, both of which have as their starting point a critique of the nation state as a container of social processes. Building on these critiques and alternatives to methodological nationalism I go on to propose an approach I’m calling ‘methodological denationalism’ which takes as its starting point the migrant/citizen distinction. Key to this approach is to ‘migrantize’ the citizen, and I go on to give some examples of how this is done, not only to citizens of colour, but also to those who support non-citizens or who are the partners of non-citizens. Finally, I suggest that migrantizing the citizen enables us not only to look at the ways in which immigration controls affect citizens, but also how we might begin to make connections between the formal exclusions of noncitizenship and the multiple, and sometimes informal exclusions within citizenship.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40878-019-0140-8CitizenshipMethodological nationalismMethodological transnationalismMigrationMigration studiesMobilities
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bridget Anderson
spellingShingle Bridget Anderson
New directions in migration studies: towards methodological de-nationalism
Comparative Migration Studies
Citizenship
Methodological nationalism
Methodological transnationalism
Migration
Migration studies
Mobilities
author_facet Bridget Anderson
author_sort Bridget Anderson
title New directions in migration studies: towards methodological de-nationalism
title_short New directions in migration studies: towards methodological de-nationalism
title_full New directions in migration studies: towards methodological de-nationalism
title_fullStr New directions in migration studies: towards methodological de-nationalism
title_full_unstemmed New directions in migration studies: towards methodological de-nationalism
title_sort new directions in migration studies: towards methodological de-nationalism
publisher SpringerOpen
series Comparative Migration Studies
issn 2214-594X
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Abstract In this paper I consider how the construction of migration as a problem poses both ethical and epistemological challenges to migration scholars and how this is related to political and methodological nationalism. I briefly outline two paradigm shifts that have been highly generative in our field and beyond – methodological transnationalism and the mobilities turn, both of which have as their starting point a critique of the nation state as a container of social processes. Building on these critiques and alternatives to methodological nationalism I go on to propose an approach I’m calling ‘methodological denationalism’ which takes as its starting point the migrant/citizen distinction. Key to this approach is to ‘migrantize’ the citizen, and I go on to give some examples of how this is done, not only to citizens of colour, but also to those who support non-citizens or who are the partners of non-citizens. Finally, I suggest that migrantizing the citizen enables us not only to look at the ways in which immigration controls affect citizens, but also how we might begin to make connections between the formal exclusions of noncitizenship and the multiple, and sometimes informal exclusions within citizenship.
topic Citizenship
Methodological nationalism
Methodological transnationalism
Migration
Migration studies
Mobilities
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40878-019-0140-8
work_keys_str_mv AT bridgetanderson newdirectionsinmigrationstudiestowardsmethodologicaldenationalism
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