Tag Archives: belonging

Event: Intersectionality and the Spaces of Belonging

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CMRB

Details taken from the Centre for Migration, Refugees and Belonging (CMRB) website at the University of East London:

Intersectionality and the Spaces of Belonging

28-29 June 2012 Bangor University, UK

Keynote Speakers:
Prof. Nira Yuval-Davis, Director of the Research Centre on Migration, Refugees and Belonging, University of East London, UK.   Nira Yuval-Davis will speak on the subject of her recent book, The Politics of Belonging: Intersectional Contestations.
Prof. Jie-Hyun Lim, Director of the Research Institute of Comparative History and Culture, Hanyang University, Seoul, Korea/ Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin.  Jie-Hyun Lim will speak on his current research project, ‘A transnational history of victimhood nationalism: national mourning and global accountability’. Dr Gurminder K. Bhambra, Director of the Social Theory Centre, University of Warwick, UK .  Gurminder K. Bhambra will speak on her current research on early African-American sociologists and their conceptions of identity, inequality, and social theory.

Overview:
Current debates on gender, nation, sexuality, religion and other categories of social divisions and belonging often address the relations between these categories with the term ‘intersectionality’: intersecting in an infinite variety of ways, each of these categories helps construct all the others. What we are, what we suffer, what we belong to, or what we long to be, is multifaceted and contradictory. Our longings, or aversions, are related to our belongings in but complicated and ambiguous ways, and what social group or category we belong to does not determine our political or cultural values, goals or dreams. And yet: the former inform the latter, if only to the extent that we do not wish to remain tomorrow what we are today. Nor do our positionings, situatedness and belongings simply add up to an ‘identity’ (a being so and not other) – as if my hold of ‘ethnicity no. 7’ plus ‘gender no. 2’ plus ‘citizenship in state no. 11’ etcetera could ever equate to exactly what ‘I am’: ‘citizenship in state no. 11’ does not mean the same depending on whether I am of this or that sex, or sexuality, or age, or ethnicity. These intersections complicate, perhaps thwart, any efforts to ground the cultural and political projects, coalitions, emancipation that we long for in the spaces (physical, virtual, rhetorical) we belong to. The organisers welcome critical contributions on all aspects of ‘spaces of belonging’ under the perspective of the concept of intersectionality. Theoretically informed contributions from scholars in all disciplines in the social sciences and humanities, broadly conceived, are invited, as well as from social and community activists or artists. Key themes of interest to the conference include, but are in no way limited to:

• Citizenship, cultural and state membership • Nation, race, ethnicity, nationality • Indigeneity •         Diasporas •  Religion •  Cosmopolitanism and human rights • Longing and the non-space of utopia • Majority-minority relations • Class and belonging •  Sex, gender and sexuality • Standpoints, dialogues and politics of recognition •   Virtual spaces of belonging • Belonging, feeling, intimacy •  Belonging and equality •   Age-spaces and ability-spaces

Abstract Submission:

Please submit, by January 22nd 2012, a proposal of between 300-500 words, including title and references, prepared for blind review, alongside a brief biographical note (max. 100 words), in separate electronic files to berg@bangor.ac.uk<mailto:berg@bangor.ac.uk>

Contacts for questions:

Prof. Howard Davis  h.h.davis@bangor.ac.uk

Dr. Sally Baker :s.baker@bangor.ac.uk

Dr. Marcel Stoetzler:m.stoetzler@bangor.ac.uk

Dr. Robin Mann:  r.mann@bangor.ac.uk

A conference website containing programme and registration details will be launched in January 2012. The conference is sponsored by the Belonging and Ethnicity Research Group (BERG), the Bangor University School of Social Sciences and the Wales Institute of Social and Economic Research Data and Methods (WISERD).

Migration: a joint Birkbeck College/University of East London Symposium

Migration: a joint Birkbeck College / University of London Symposium

Event type:  Seminar

Date:  4 February 2011

Further Details:

Symposium to be held at the Bishopsgate Institute on Friday 4th February 2011, 1.00pm to 5.30 p.m.

All welcome, no need to book.

Speakers:

‘Migration and Citizenship in Modern Asia’, Dr Sunil Amrith, Lecturer, Department of History, Classics and Archaeology, Birkbeck College.

‘Sanctuary past and present’, Professor Philip Marfleet, Professor of Migration and Refugee Studies at the University of East London.

‘Transnational health seeking strategies: a study of Latin American migrants in London’, Dr Jasmine Gideon, Lecturer in Development Studies, Birkbeck College.

‘Exile, diaspora and the politics of belonging’, Dr Nira Yuval-Davis, Director of the Research Centre on Migration, Refugees and Belonging (CMRB) at the University of East London.

Followed by a panel discussion with Dr Karen Wells.

Convened by the Raphael Samuel History Centre.

URL:

http://www.raphael-samuel.org.uk/events/Refugee_Migration_Seminar.php

Organiser(s):

Katy Pettit, Administrator, Raphael Samuel History Centre

Event Location:

Goss Room, Bishopsgate Institute

230 Bishopsgate

London EC2M 4QH

United Kingdom

Contact details

Katy Pettit

k.pettit@uel.ac.uk

Secularism, racism and the politics of belonging: a conference on race, religion, and public policy

A quick reminder for the upcoming conference to be held at UEL on Thursday 27 January, 2010.  Full details are below and in the attached flyer:

Secularism, racism and the politics of belonging: a conference on race, religion, and public policy

Information and conference schedule

Welcome to the conference on Secularism, Racism and the Politics of Belonging, organised by the Centre for Research on Migration, Refugees and Belonging (CMRB), and Runnymede Trust: Thursday 27 January 2010.

Location: Docklands Campus, University of East London, University Way, London E16 2RD.

The campus is adjacent to Cyprus Station on the Docklands Light Railway. Trains from Canning Town (Jubilee Line) run at five-to-10 minute intervals: the journey takes some 30 minutes from Central London. Full details and map at:  http://www.uel.ac.uk/campuses/docklands.htm

Refreshments and Lunch: will be provided for all participants.

Resources: organisations are invited to bring literature and other resources. Display tables will be provided.

Record of proceedings: presentations will be recorded on video, with permission of participants.

Themes: discussion will be wide-ranging but the organisers ask you to consider your contributions on a number of key issues:

•           how matters of faith are constructed in relation to old and new forms of racism;

•           implications of ideas about ‘faith communities’ for citizenship and social solidarity;

•           the place of religion in equality legislation and legal pluralism;

•           debates about religious traditions and dress codes;

•           effects of particular forms of religious education, including faith schools.

The conference aims to engage participants in a discussion which encompasses secular, religious, academic and activist discourses.

Further details on the CMRB website:  http://www.uel.ac.uk/cmrb/news.htm