The project's most important, innovative findings concern the role of the welfare state in the negotiation of everyday citizenship in Europe today. Reproducing Europe demonstrates the need to go beyond the citizenship agendas spelled out in the media or policies to understand everyday citizenship. It shows the importance of (site-specific) welfare landscapes as a setting for the formation and negotiation of such lived forms of citizenship (De Koning et al. 2020; Marchesi 2020; Vollebergh 2020; De Koning and Ruijtenberg 2019). It thereby highlights the necessity of considering two major changes in the configuration of citizenship in Europe together: the heated debates and anxious politics concerning the ethnoracial diversification of the population (De Koning and Modest 2017; De Koning and Vollebergh 2019), and the reconfiguration of state-citizenship relations in the context of welfare reforms (Vollebergh et al. fc 2021). While the former foregrounds difference and racialized belonging, latter is conceptualized in terms of generic citizens. They, however, articulate in significant, but often implicit ways in the shaping of everyday citizenship. It is only through in-depth study of actual welfare encounters and practices that we can trace how they together shape everyday citizenship in various European settings.
These findings are published in a range of (forthcoming) articles, books and PhD-theses (see a selection of the references below). Our early findings have also been published in accessible form in the bi-lingual book Reproducing Europe: Migrant Families, Professionals and the Welfare State (in English/French/Italian/Dutch and Arabic), freely available at www.reproducingeurope.nl.
References cited
Chakkour, Soukaina. 2020. “Mothering in the space of hesitation: the case of Egyptian Mothers in Paris.” Presented at the ‘Mothering practices in times of legal precarity’ workshop organised by the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity (30 Nov-1 Dec 2020).
Koning, Anouk de, Milena Marchesi, Anick Vollebergh, Wiebe Ruijtenberg, Lucrezia Botton and Soukaina Chakkour (2018). Reproducing Europe: Migrant Families, Professionals and the Welfare State. Open Access public book available in English/Arabic, Dutch/Arabic, French/Arabic and Italian/Arabic (www.reproducingeurope.nl).
de Koning, Anouk. n.d. “The Will to Care: States and Subjects of Welfare in the Netherlands.” Under review with American Ethnologist.
de Koning, Anouk, and Anick Vollebergh. 2019. “Ordinary Icons: Public Discourses and Everyday Lives in an Anxious Europe.” American Anthropologist 121(2): 390–402.
de Koning, Anouk, Mette-Louise Johansen, and Milena Marchesi. 2020. “Introduction Special Issue ‘Paradoxical Orders: Parenting Encounters, the Welfare State, and Difference in Europe.’” Ethnography [Online First].
De Koning, Anouk, and Wayne Modest. 2017. “Anxious Politics in Postcolonial Europe.” American Anthropologist 119(3): 524–26.
de Koning, Anouk and Wiebe Ruijtenberg. 2019. “Welfare, Social Citizenship, and the Spectre of Inequality in Amsterdam.” Ethnography [Online First].
Marchesi, Milena. 2020. “The Intimate Public of Relational Welfare in Milan.” Ethnography [Online First].
Pettit, Harry and Wiebe Ruijtenberg. 2019. “Migration as Hope and Depression: Existential Im/Mobilities in and beyond Egypt.” Mobilities 14(5): 730–44.
Vollebergh, Anick. 2020. Circuiting parents’ voice: Parenting discussion groups and institutional healing in northeast Paris. Ethnography [Online First].
Vollebergh, Anick, Anouk de Koning and Milena Marchesi. fc 2021. “Intimate States: Techniques and Entanglements of Governing through Community in Europe.” Current Anthropology.