Projekt

Daten zum Projekt

Vision: Envisioning Convivial Europe

Zur Projekt-Website

Initiative: Herausforderungen für Europa
Bewilligung: 01.07.2021
Laufzeit: 4 Jahre

Projektinformationen

The project will advance knowledge on two intertwined phenomena, which impede accomplishment of a convivial European society: life conditions in Europe's shrinking regions ('inner peripheries') and their connections to the transnational regime of mobile disposable work. The project is based on a combination of multi-sited, mobile and visual ethnography methods and utilises four complementary perspectives represented by the team members, namely geography, sociology, visual anthropology and gender studies. The team will draw the attention to the intersecting relations of gender and generation in understanding interregional linkages characterised by inequality. The project members seek to develop a new narrative around transformative Europe. The researchers privilege knowledge of people in inner-peripheries, which has been rendered invisible. They study inhabitants of these regions in Germany (Brandenburg), Poland and Romania, as well as temporary foreign workers filling labour shortages there. They will also co-create knowledge in dialogue with them. The project recognises that these places and people have resources to make Europe more convivial. The team uses visual ethnography (i.e. filmmaking) strategically as an optic alternative to old binary vocabularies of growth vs. decline, winners vs. losers. The produced films will be utilised to foster public engagement with various actors, including research participants, NGOs, local communities and politicians in fieldwork locations and beyond. Studying transnational/translocal interlinkages between Europe's 'inner-peripheries', it intends to add new perspectives significantly different from the conventional scholarship which focuses transfers between rich and poor regions.

Projektbeteiligte

  • Prof. Dr. Magdalena Nowicka

    Deutsches Zentrum für Integrations- und
    Migrationsforschung (DeZIM) e. V.
    Abteilung Integration
    Berlin

  • Prof. Dr. Kyoko Shinozaki

    Paris Lodron Universität Salzburg
    Department of Sociology
    Division of Political Science and Sociology
    Salzburg
    Österreich

  • Prof. Maggi Leung

    VU University Amsterdam
    Amsterdam Institute of Social Science Research
    Amsterdam
    Niederlande

Open Access-Publikationen