Round table “Intimacy, racialization and affects in contemporary migrations” — Friday, May 12, 2023, 17:30 p.m., Maison de l'architecture Île-de-France, Paris

Round table “Intimacy, racialization and affects in contemporary migrations” — Friday, May 12, 2023, 17:30 p.m., Maison de l'architecture Île-de-France, Paris

Collective

Observers' Tribune

Table of contents

Round table “Intimacy, racialization and affects in contemporary migrations” — Friday, May 12, 2023, 17:30 p.m., Maison de l'architecture Île-de-France, Paris

Read more  On the occasion of this round table, research and practice enter into dialogue to explore the scope of the “intimate” and its articulation with racialization and the affective economy in contemporary migrations.
Stéphanie Dadour, lecturer and architect, will discuss with:
Saskia Bonjour, political scientist, professor at the University of Amsterdam and leader of the Strange(r) Families project. Political Contestation over Family Migration Rights for Non-Normative Families;
Lynda Boutaleb, coordinator of a program for Unaccompanied Minors at Médecins du Monde in Toulouse and former coordinator of the Reception, Care and Orientation Center (CASO de Saint Denis) for the same organization, and
Jane Freedman, professor at the University of Paris 8, member of the CRESPPA laboratory, responsible for the projects Violence against women migrants and refugees: Analyzing causes and effective policy response, and Feminist Representations: Sexual Violence Against Women, Asylum and Testimony 
This round table is organized as part of the workshops of the IntRa project (Intimacy, racialization and affects in contemporary migrations), funded by the Convergences Migrations Institute.

On the occasion of this round table, research and practice enter into dialogue to explore the scope of the “intimate” and its articulation with racialization and the affective economy in contemporary migrations.

Stephanie Dadour, lecturer and architect, will discuss with:

Saskia Hello, political scientist, professor at the University of Amsterdam and leader of the project Strange(r) Families. Political Contestation over Family Migration Rights for Non-Normative Familiess ;
Lynda Boutaleb, coordinator of a program for Unaccompanied Minors of Médecins du Monde in Toulouse and former coordinator of the Reception, Care and Orientation Center (CASO of Saint Denis) for the same organization, and
Jane Freedman, professor at the University of Paris 8, member of the CRESPPA laboratory, project manager Violence against women migrants and refugees: Analyzing causes and effective policy response, and Feminist Representations: Sexual Violence Against Women, Asylum and Testimony 

This round table is organized as part of the project's workshops IntRa (Intimacy, Racialization and Affects in Contemporary Migrations), funded by the Convergences Migrations Institute.

.

 

"This post is a summary of information from our information monitoring"

Author

Right of reply and contributions
Would you like to respond? Submit an opinion piece proposal

You might also like:

When Télérama mocks traditions… but not all of them

The show "The Best Regional Cuisine" drew the magazine's ire for its stale praise of tradition. However, Télérama is not stingy with praise when it comes to distant traditions.

What can Polybius teach us about the current political crisis?

Polybius saw the history of regimes as a moral cycle: democracy degenerates into ochlocracy when virtue disappears. Today, the loss of elite training and the decline of universities recall this mechanism: without education, freedom collapses and the crowd rules in place of reason.
What you have left to read
0 %

Maybe you should subscribe?

Otherwise, it's okay! You can close this window and continue reading.

    Register: