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Interdisciplinarity in Migration Research: Combining law and anthropology

News archive for Interdisciplinarity in Migration Research: Combining law and anthropology

What follows are mid-term reflections from a human geographer and a legal researcher about their experience working together on the interdisciplinary project TemPro.
In the following, we want to reflect on what it means for interdisciplinary studies of migration to understand time as multiple, uneven, and relational.
In this blog post, anthropologist at the University of Bergen (UiB), Christine M. Jacobsen, reflects on interdisciplinarity across law and anthropology in migration studies.
A social scientist’s perspective on the legal theories of immigration detention reviews.
After almost exactly a year structured by physical distancing, home office and online communication, it was finally possible to organize a hybrid workshop for immigration scholars.
The significance of time and temporality for migration processes and governance has received increasing attention within migration research in recent years.
What and where is home? The answer to this question is far more complex than the quotidian use of the word suggests.
What does it mean to have ‘attachments’ to a country or a community?
Questioning the boundaries of legal research.
Some years ago, Jeremy J. Kingsley and I put together a ‘forum’ in the Journal of Legal Anthropology (2018).