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2020 | 9 | nr 1 | 5--12
Tytuł artykułu

Brexit and Beyond: Transforming Mobility and Immobility

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Warianty tytułu
Języki publikacji
EN
Abstrakty
EN
This Guest Editorial introduces a special issue entitled Brexit and Beyond: Transforming Mobility and Immobility. The unfolding story of Brexit provided the backdrop to a series of events, organised in 2018 and 2019, which were the result of a collaboration between migration researchers in Warsaw and the UK, funded by the Noble Foundation's Programme on Modern Poland. The largest event - held in association with IMISCOE - was an international conference, arising from which we invited authors to contribute papers to this special issue on the implications of Brexit for the mobility and immobility of EU citizens, particularly - but not exclusively - from Central and Eastern Europe, living in the UK. As we outline in this Editorial, collectively, the papers comprising the special issue address three key themes: everyday implications and 'living with Brexit'; renegotiating the 'intentional unpredictability' status and settling down; and planning the future and the return to countries of origin. In addition, we include an interview with Professor Nira Yuval-Davis, based on the substance of her closing plenary at the conference - racialisation and bordering. Her insightful analysis remains salient to the current situation - in June 2020, as the UK enters the final months of the Brexit transition period - in the unexpected midst of a global pandemic and an imminent recession. (fragment of text)
Rocznik
Tom
9
Numer
Strony
5--12
Opis fizyczny
Twórcy
  • Department of Sociological Studies, University of Sheffield, UK
autor
  • Sheffield Methods Institute, University of Sheffield, UK
autor
  • London Metropolitan University, UK
Bibliografia
  • Askins K. (2016). Emotional Citizenry: Everyday Geographies of Befriending, Belonging and Intercultural Encounter. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 41(4): 515-527.
  • Botterill K., McCollum D., Tyrrell N. (2019). Negotiating Brexit: Migrant Spatialities and Identities in a Changing Europe. Population, Space and Place 25(1): e2216.
  • Castles S. (2010). Understanding Global Migration: A Social Transformation Perspective. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 36(10): 1565-1586.
  • Duda-Mikulin E. A. (2019). EU Migrant Workers, Brexit and Precarity: Polish Women's Perspectives from Inside the UK. Bristol: Policy Press.
  • Gawlewicz A., Sotkasiira T. (2020). Revisiting Geographies of Temporalities: The Significance of Time in Migrant Responses to Brexit. Population, Space and Place 26(1): e2275.
  • Grabowska I., Garapich M. P. (2016). Social Remittances and Intra-EU Mobility: Non-Financial Transfers between the UK and Poland. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 42(13): 2146-2162.
  • Grzymala-Kazlowska A. (2018). From Connecting to Social Anchoring: Adaptation and 'Settlement' of Polish Migrants in the UK. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 44(2): 252-269.
  • Guma T. and Jones R. D. (2019). 'Where Are We Going To Go Now?' European Union Migrants' Experiences of Hostility, Anxiety, and (Non-)Belonging during Brexit. Population, Space and Place 25(1): e2198.
  • Kilkey M. (2017). Conditioning Family Life at the Intersection of Migration and Welfare: The Implications for 'Brexit Families'. Journal of Social Policy 46(4): 797-814.
  • Kilkey M., Ryan L. (2020). Unsettling Events: Understanding Migrants' Responses to Geopolitical Transformative Episodes through a Life-Course Lens. International Migration Review, 3 March, doi: 10.1177/0197918320905507.
  • King R. (2020). 'Immigration, Stupid!' Or Was It? Re-Imagining Brexit as a 'Wicked Problem'. Sussex Centre for Migration Research Working Paper No. 97. Brighton: University of Sussex.
  • Lulle A., King R., Dvorakova V., Szkudlarek A. (2019). Between Disruptions and Connections: 'New' European Union Migrants in the UK before and after the Brexit. Population, Space and Place 25(1): e2200.
  • McGhee D., Moreh C., Vlachantoni A. (2017). An 'Undeliberate Determinacy'? The Changing Migration Strategies of Polish Migrants in the UK in Times of Brexit. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 43(13): 2109-2130.
  • Owen C. (2018). Brexit as Rupture? Voices, Opinions and Reflections of EU Nationals from the Liminal Space of Brexit Britain. Sussex Centre for Migration Research Working Paper No. 94. Brighton: University of Sussex.
  • Ranta R., Nancheva N. (2019). Unsettled: Brexit and European Union Nationals' Sense of Belonging. Population, Space and Place 25(1): e2199.
  • Stola D. (2010). Kraj bez wyjścia? Migracje z Polski 1949-1989. Warsaw: Instytut Pamięci Narodowej.
  • Sturge G. (2016). Migration Statistics. London: House of Commons Library Briefing Paper SN06077, 2 December 2016. Online: http://researchbriefings.parliament.uk/ResearchBriefing/Summary/SN06077 (accessed: 6 July 2020).
  • Thomassen B. (2014). Liminality and the Modern: Living Through the In-Between. Farnham: Ashgate.
  • Turner V. (1967). Betwixt and Between: The Liminal Period in Rites de Passage, in: V. Turner (ed.), The Forest of Symbols, pp. 93-111. New York: Cornell University Press.
  • Van Gennep A. ([1909] 1960). The Rites of Passage. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
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Identyfikator YADDA
bwmeta1.element.ekon-element-000171612785

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