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Environmental Studies & Social Sciences

Climate Change, Migration and Social Control

When:

13 January - 17 January 2025

School:

VU Graduate Winter School

Institution:

Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

City:

Amsterdam

Country:

Netherlands

Language:

English

Fee:

ā‚¬630 - ā‚¬930

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Climate Change, Migration and Social Control
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About

This course examines migration control policies, including labor market access and deportation, to understand acceptance and rejection in Europe. It covers climate refugees, racialised group integration, and advanced control methods. Organisational processes for inclusive societies amid climate change are emphasized. Students can explore topics like migration enforcement, freedom of movement, labour rights, refugee status, and identity in mobility.
Climate-induced migration is an urgent topic of research and policy triggering hot debates around border control, detention and deportation, labour market inclusion, and refugeesā€™ recognition. Policymakers, civil society, and academics have reached some corners in assessing how people on the move are perceived, managed, or rejected by host societies.

This course focuses on migration control policies and practices, from access to the labor market to deportation measures in order to investigate who is more likely to be welcomed (or rejected) from Europe and why. The course dives deep into scholarly discussions on the refugeesā€™ recognition (whoā€™s a climate refugee?), (differentiated) integration of racialized groups, and methods of migration control (e.g., smart borders). Special attention is paid to the processes of organizing at different international, national, and local levels that respond to the needs of more inclusive societies in an era of mass mobility and climate change.

Bringing together sensitive aspects of migration control, the course encourages students to challenge their understanding of migration and state borders, as well as the role of organizations in shaping our understanding of mobility. The course offers students the chance to focus on their own subject within the field of migration management, choosing between enforcement of migration control, moral and legal debates on the freedom of movement, labour rights and social provisions for non-citizens, refugeesā€™ legal status, or the hierarchization of identities during cross-border mobility.

Course leader

Dr. Ioana Vrăbiescu

Target group

The course is suitable for anyone interested in climate change transformations of migration control, and the policies and practices developed by the hosting states. The course welcomes a wide range of MA students, PhD candidates, and professionals in the field.

If you have doubts about your eligibility for the course, please contact us: graduatewinterschool@vu.nl

Course aim

At the end of the course:

The student will have acquired knowledge and understanding of:
The intertwined role of various decision-makers in public and private organizations who shape identities and ethics or implement laws that regulate migration in Europe.
The multifaced dynamics between migration, identities and labour organization
Debates around the current strategies and policies for migrantsā€™ inclusion/exclusion.

The student has acquired the competencies to:
Analyse several aspects and insights from various perspectives to specific case studies pertaining to the identities shaped during cross-border mobility and in the labour market.
Take multiple, sometimes opposing interests into account when addressing problems such as migration laws and state borders, perceived identities, or organizational change.

The student demonstrates:
A critical attitude towards the theory and practice of migration control, based on the assigned literature and the lectures.
Ability to build an argument in support of a migration management strategy that is based on ethical grounds and aims to improve as much possible human livelihoods.

The student has acquired the skills to:
Formulate critical questions in relation to literature and case studies presented in the course.
Present in a creative form a team product that reveals the knowledge acquired or opens-up new debates in the field.
Express knowledge and insights obtained in this course by writing a well-grounded essay.

Fee info

Fee

ā‚¬630 - ā‚¬930 , Students, PhD students and employees of VU Amsterdam, Amsterdam UMC or an Aurora Network Partner: ā‚¬630. Students and PhD students: ā‚¬730. Professionals: ā‚¬930. Applications received before 15 October get a ā‚¬50 Early Bird Discount.

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