the humanitarian model of refugee relief. Where abundant knowledge is produced in studying the containment of refugees in camps, studying the transnationalism of the humanitarian industry and the mobility of humanitarian workers contextualizes spaces
Search Results
Expat, Local, and Refugee
“Studying Up” the Global Division of Labor and Mobility in the Humanitarian Industry in Jordan
Reem Farah
Fashioning Masculinities through Migration
Narratives of Romanian Construction Workers in London
Alexandra Urdea
relations of gender, thus contributing to transformations of models of masculinity” ( Gallo and Scrinzi 2016: 5 ). While for high-skilled Romanians, gender is not always the main factor affecting the industries where they find work (Moroşanu 2013), the
Rihab Azar
politically speaking. If we take as a starting point that anthropology “must become as fully as possible a possession of the people of the world” (Hymes 1969, cited in Frisby, 2013 ), the relational model of anthropology 2 that underpins Western's work and
Notes around Hospitality as Inhabitation
Engaging with the Politics of Care and Refugees’ Dwelling Practices in the Italian Urban Context
Camillo Boano and Giovanna Astolfo
shared housing accommodations within SPRAR and is based on the “diffused hospitality” model. Such a model is neither new nor novel, as it stems from the bottom-up initiatives of Italian residents and volunteers. Its origin has been alternatively
The Position of “the South” and “South-South Migration” in Policy and Programmatic Responses to Different Forms of Migration
An Interview with Francesco Carella
Elena Fiddian-Qasmiyeh and Francesco Carella
” models of regional cooperation, such as the European Union, in the “global South.” This can be seen clearly with Mercosur in South America, CARICOM in the Caribbean, ECOWAS in West Africa, and at an earlier stage with the African Union itself. It could be
Introduction
Recentering the South in Studies of Migration
Elena Fiddian-Qasmiyeh
concepts and models imposed from the ‘global North’” (interviewed by Fiddian-Qasmiyeh, this volume). Indeed, as many contributors argue throughout this volume, there are multiple ways of knowing, including epistemological perspectives and methodological
Living Through and Living On?
Participatory Humanitarian Architecture in the Jarahieh Refugee Settlement, Lebanon
Riccardo Luca Conti, Joana Dabaj, and Elisa Pascucci
, humanitarian bureaucracies and logistics are often incompatible with the implementation and scalability of locally produced, adaptable shelter models ( Mubarak and Hafeez 2017 ). Thoroughly participatory design and building processes are achievable for a young
Julien Brachet, Victoria L. Klinkert, Cory Rodgers, Robtel Neajai Pailey, Elieth Eyebiyi, Rachel Benchekroun, Grzegorz Micek, Natasha N. Iskander, Aydan Greatrick, Alexandra Bousiou, and Anne White
family model as the Cape Verdean one could be considered particularly well adapted to the conditions of the beginning of the twenty-first century. The author shows how the Cape Verdean family, both in an abstract and concrete sense, is formed at a
Introduction
Reconceptualizing Transit States in an Era of Outsourcing, Offshoring, and Obfuscation
Antje Missbach and Melissa Phillips
emerging economies, and destination countries wealthy and highly sought-after. Such a framework reinforces what have been seen as inaccurate portrayals of the contemporary political world through center-periphery models, as promoted by adherents of long
Places of Otherness
Comparing Eastleigh, Nairobi, and Xiaobei, Guangzhou, as Sites of South-South Migration
Neil Carrier and Gordon Mathews
ways, moving away from the “low-end” model, with new malls built with slicker designs and incorporating mainstream Kenyan chain stores and banks too: in some ways, the Eastleigh economy is formalizing. Somalis have also expanded well beyond Eastleigh