Gaps filled
The project’s findings contributed to shed light on how religious, ethnic and gender differences are managed differently by the family members and what are the individual implications for them. Through different dedicated publications I contributed to fill different gaps in the current state-of-the-art showing:
- how partners can differently manage and re-construct their former religious identities;
- how gender, racialization and stigmatizations processes have an impact on these families;
- how offspring manage differently their ethnic and religious identities.
New gaps found
If the research results described above contributed to the analysis of how religious, ethnic and gender differences are managed differently by the family members, they also opened up some new crucial research questions on how the social context is reacting and changing as a consequence of a growing number of mixed marriages. Thanks to the ReMix project, I got access to a network of mixed families associations that consented me to detect a major research gap.
Partners’ and their offspring’s interviews, indeed, indicate that, during their life course, they have to deal with:
- Religious obstacles
- Legislative/administrative obstacles
- Social stigma
This last advancement in the state of the art was fundamental in identifying a major research gap, i.e. scholars still do not take into account these associations’ activities and their function as new social movements for family rights. Thanks to this in 2019 I elaborated new competitive research projects that built on the scientific results reached during the MC fellowship, obtaining some important results:
1) I won two competitive post-doctoral fellowships.
2) I wrote an ERC starting Grant to submit to the next call.
The set-up of a professional website (www.francescocerchiaro.com) to disseminate my research online, the organisation of various events with targeted audiences (policy-makers, religious leaders, teachers and mixed families) and my personal career growth testify how the MSCF Marie Curie project represented a two-way transfer of knowledge. A closer understating of these families’ everyday life represented a key to examine the whole of society facing family changes, Islam and religious diversity in Europe. The research project addressed, thus, the EU lines of Horizon 2020, studying one of the major challenges for an “inclusive and multicultural” Europe.