Projektdetaljer

Beskrivelse

People keep moving across borders. A recent study shows that 12 million people may want to
leave Ukraine permanently. The number of people crossing the Mediterranean irregularly is the highest in years. This project looks into how people manage to move across and within border regimes? What kind of support do they meet and what makes them stay?Developing the interrelated concepts corridors of migration and infrastructures of hospitality we investigate how corridors of migration are formed and how they shape, enable, or hinder mobilities? We look at how migrants and refugees meet hospitality in two migration corridors: Ukraine-Croatia/Poland-Denmark and the North African-Spanish corridor. This allows us to develop both empirical findings and theorize. The project draws on ethnographic fieldwork as well as critical cartography to understand how migrants and refugees navigate in the European border regime and looks at how knowledge is formed and mobilized and on how knowledge shape mobilities.

Lægmandssprog

What: CORRIDORS investigates how migration corridors are formed and how the former, enable or hinder mobility? We look at how migrants and refugees encounter hospitality and solidarity in two migration corridors: Ukraine-Poland-Denmark and the North African-Spanish corridor.
This allows us to develop both empirical foundations and theorize further.
Why: Despite increased controls, people continue to move across borders both with and without the necessary papers that require. A recent study shows that up to 12 million people want to leave Ukraine permanently. The number of people crossing the Mediterranean irregular, is the highest in years. The project looks at how people manage to move across border regimes? What informs their knowledge, strategies and mobilities? What kind of support
do they meet? And what makes them stay? How: CORRIDORS examines how hospitality infrastructures are constituted in two migration corridors in two different European geographical contexts. The project drags on
ethnographic fieldwork as well as critical cartography to understand how migrants and refugees navigate in the European border regime and looks at how knowledge is formed and mobilized and at how knowledge previous mobilities.
AkronymCORRIDORS
StatusIgangværende
Effektiv start/slut dato01/09/202431/08/2028

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