European Commission logo
español español
CORDIS - Resultados de investigaciones de la UE
CORDIS

Arrival infrastructures as sites of integration for recent newcomers

Resultado final

Promotion videos

Two promotion videos will be produced by MolenGeek and KU Leuven Leuven Institute for Media and Learning The first short video of 45 by M6 that will be available on YouTube and embedded in the project website will outline the project objectives present the research team and a teaser of what can be expected as result The second longer promotion video of 60 by M52 equally available on YouTube and embedded in the project website will include original visual material provided by the fieldworkers with research participants consent summarize key results and key policy recommendations Easy shareable imagery and video material collected by field researchers and with research participants consent will appear on the project website throughout the entire project time and will remain available on YouTube after the project

Website

Continuous updates from M2 onwards. Final update in M52In its final version, the project’s homepage will primarily highlight final research results and key policy recommendations

Training materials for analysis of regimes of integration, diversity and mobility

xx

EC policy brief

GeneralAlthough the 2015 ‘summer of migration’ was widely framed as a ‘refugee crisis’, new and unseen in post-war European history, policy makers across Europe should not make the mistake thinking that all our experiences with and insights in previous processes of migration and integration are no longer relevant. Europe has been built and continues to be rebuilt at the convergence of innumerable migration trajectories. In the past, the traces of migration processes were often effaced and sedimented into ‘native’ society. But many communities, civil society actors, public authorities, small businesses, religious institutions, leisure organisations, etc. have records and living memories of these migration processes, or indeed, are still actively engaged in forging the integration of relatively newly arrived and arriving migrants. While policy makers tend to focus on ‘big integration’ and follow these integration processes in the formal channels, agencies and programmes that channel migrants’ arrival and settlement processes, ReROOT brings into view a wider constellation of actors. A constellation of previous generations of migrants who, together with ‘natives’, produce and co-constitute living arrival infrastructures through which newcomers integrate ‘in practice’ into urban, suburban and rural communities in Europe. These living arrival infrastructures consist of shops as information hubs, religious sites (churches or mosques), local labour offices, language classes, hairdressers, leisure clubs etc. In order for such a perspective on integration to form a starting point for a new generation of integration and migration policies, policy makers need two things: 1) examples, concepts and methods to understand and gauge the local manifestations of arrival infrastructure and 2) examples of action schemes and strategies to intervene in this constellation of actors that build on their strengths.In a first part of the final policy brief, policy makers will be informed about examples of the arrival infrastructures we investigated in ReROOT. These examples will be based on the field work we develop in nine different pilot sites in Turkey, Greece, Hungary, France, Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, and the UK. The reader will learn which practical methods can be used to find and get access to local arrival infrastructures, how to document the dominant integration routes provided in these local constellations but also to understand which integration trajectories (for example into jobs, into the tax system, into language acquisition, into the embracing of Western European values - e.g. man/woman equality; gay rights; separation between Church and State etc. -) are more difficult or blocked. These concrete methods, developed by ReROOT and tested in a variety of settings across Europe are the first main outcome of the project: they consist of the mapping toolkit, a set of tools, techniques and instructive practices that will enable civil society actors and policy makers to identify, describe and map out arrival infrastructure actors, processes and ensuing social innovations. In the second part of the final policy brief, policy makers will then be informed about successful strategies to intervene in such a variety of settings. The reader will receive an evaluation of how, in the nine pilot sites in Turkey, Greece, Hungary, France, Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, and the UK, researchers have tested and experimented with a range of formats to negotiate between the important stakeholders that populate the local arrival infrastructure. More specifically, the reader will be introduced to the second main outcome of the project: the platform prototypes guidebook for organising, setting up and following-up negotiations between stakeholders which will allow civil society circles engaging with migration and integration to set up the appropriate type of platform to discuss and negotiate potential interventions in the a

Full reports on concept and methods training for site research

The training material to start the ethnographic fieldwork will be made available to all ReRoot particpantsUpdate M4colead KULeuven CNRS UU UGent MIM UTH Menedek

Training materials for researchers to set up interactive platforms

colead MEN PLAN

Buscando datos de OpenAIRE...

Se ha producido un error en la búsqueda de datos de OpenAIRE

No hay resultados disponibles