2022 - CITY College, University of York Europe Campus
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Summer School 2022

Summer School 2022 - Migration and the crises of solidarity in Europe

 

“Migration and the crises of solidarity in Europe”

When: Starting on Friday, July 1st until Friday, July 8th 2022

Where: Thessaloniki, Greece

Οrganised by CITY College, University of York Europe Campus

Ιn cooperation with:

  • The University of York Migration Network (MIGNET)
  • The Department of Politics of the University of York
  • The Department of Politics of the University of Sheffield
  • The Department of Sociological Studies of the University of Sheffield
  • The University of Sheffield Migration Research Group

 

Description of the programme

This summer school asks – what do different crises of solidarity look like in Europe today? What central struggles and tensions are shaping practices and acts of solidarity? And ultimately, what could solidarity look like in the context of the continual movement of people to Europe in large numbers?

The summer school offers participants theoretical and practical insights into this state of continuous and successive crises that Southeast Europe has been experiencing and how this reflects on the idea of solidarity, within the Eurozone ‘crisis’, the ‘crisis’ of liberal democracy, the ‘migrant crisis’ and the COVID-19 pandemic.

Crucially, the programme offers participants direct hands-on experience ‘on the ground’ through the opportunity to participate in volunteering activities with an NGO. (Note: a list of NGOs will be disseminated among the participants interested in volunteering before the start of the summer school).

The summer school will be carried out in the form of lectures and workshops on migration, integration and solidarity, listening to real life experiences, views and insights from people working in NGOs and public authorities managing migration flows and integration in Greece, as well as volunteering on site with an NGO.

Read here the full description of the programme

 

Main Themes and Activities

Lectures - Workshops - Experiential Learning - Group Work - Coaching Sessions - Volunteering

The summer school focuses on making students aware of the wider political, economic and social implications of migration flows and border regimes and the new challenge arising from the COVID-19 pandemic, through the lens of solidarity, via a series of lectures, workshops, guest speeches and volunteering.

By the end of this summer school students will have the chance to:

  • Expand their knowledge on migration and border regimes, integration and solidarity post- 2014;
  • Understand how mobility and migration regimes, practices and representations affect every aspect of modern society;
  • Familiarize themselves with solidarity in theory and practice and related challenges;
  • Volunteer on site with an NGO and understand how the lives of refugees and migrants are shaped by the new realities

 

Programme Information

When: Friday, July 1st to Friday, July 8th 2022
Where: Thessaloniki, Greece
Duration: 8 days
Language of instruction: The programme is taught and delivered in English.
Maximum number of participants: 35

Who can apply:
Applicants must be registered on a university course (undergraduate or postgraduate) and be fluent in English. Due to the experiential nature of the programme, applications will also be considered from PhD candidates or practitioners in the field of migration or related Social Sciences (e.g. Law, Psychology, Sociology, Politics, Developmental Studies, Post-colonial Studies, International Political Economy, Communication Studies, Business Studies etc).

Summer School certificate:

Upon completion of the programme students will receive a Certificate of Attendance from CITY College, University of York, Europe Campus.


Credits:

The course is worth 15 UK credits or 7.5 ECTS or 3 US credits. To earn credits interested students will have to complete a written assignment.

 

Why Thessaloniki?

Why Thessaloniki?

Thessaloniki is now a modern European city in Northern Greece, situated in the Gulf of Thermaikos of the Aegean Sea. It is the second largest city in Greece and the capital of the region of Central Macedonia. Throughout its fascinating and continuous history of 2500 years, the city welcomed and accommodated a significant number of refugees and migrants; Jewish, Armenian, Turkish, Slavic and Greek populations have co-existed for many years, creating a vibrant metropolis. Read more about Thessaloniki

 

Summer School 2022 - Photos

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View photo gallery from Summer School 2022

 

Description of the programme

Dubbed from the start as a 'migrant crisis', post-2014 migration related challenges had been framed within the neoliberal notion of crisis management. Seven years on, the framing of ‘migrant crisis’ still features prominently in the public debate and is central to policy making at both the EU and the national level of the countries impacted by it. Crisis seems to have become a central logic of migration governance in Europe and beyond. However, it is becoming increasingly evident that this is not a migrant crisis per se. Instead, rather a crisis of hosting, of humanitarianism and ultimately a crisis of solidarity. That is a ‘crisis’, some might argue, produced not so much by the movement of people but the often violent and hostile response of states and EU agencies to this movement and a crisis produced by underlining social forces of war, global inequality, climate change, nationalism and racism. In this context, this summer school asks – what does the crises of solidarity look like in Europe today? What central struggles and tensions are shaping practices and acts of solidarity? And ultimately, what could solidarity look like in the context of the continual movement of people to Europe in large numbers?

The summer school offers participants theoretical and practical insights into this state of continuous and successive crises that Southeast Europe has been experiencing and how this reflects on the idea of solidarity, within the Eurozone ‘crisis’, the ‘crisis’ of liberal democracy, the ‘migrant crisis’ and the COVID-19 pandemic. Participants further learn from people ‘on the ground’, practitioners and internationally-acclaimed experts how these ‘crises’ re-enact each other, how they create the environment in which migration governance is currently formulated and how related narratives are constructed feeding into existing ones. Solidarity is understood among EU member states, as well as, from the host society towards migrants, among various migrant groups, or from migrant groups towards the host society. Furthermore, this summer school will offer critical engagement with moves to curtail and discipline acts of solidarity between host communities and people on the move. Radical acts and everyday forms of solidarity are increasingly criminalized across Europe, often under the pretence of stopping ‘human trafficking’. Students will consider how the ‘migrant crisis' has morphed into a crisis of not only movement but also democracy.

During the course of the summer school, students will address the following topics, along with the guidance and input of experts and practitioners: What are the long-term implications for a ‘new’ European politics of the language of 'migration crisis' and solidarity, given the rise in populism and far-right political movements across many European countries? What is life like now for those who moved a few years ago and remain in precarious living settings with insecure immigration status? How has discourse about the ‘migrant crisis’ penetrated narratives on existing ‘crises’, including the notion of solidarity? What has been the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on different expressions of solidarity? How are local organizations and institutions, in the places where numbers of recent international incomers peaked in 2015-2016, moving on from the 'crisis' of arrival to longer term questions of solidarity, integration and settlement? What is the view from the field, shared by policy makers and practitioners?

Crucially, the programme offers participants direct hands-on experience ‘on the ground’ through the opportunity to participate in volunteering activities with an NGO.(Note: a list of NGOs will be disseminated among the participants interested in volunteering before the start of the summer school).

The summer school will be carried out in the form of lectures and workshops on migration, integration and solidarity, listening to real life experiences, views and insights from people working in NGOs and public authorities managing migration flows and integration in Greece, as well as volunteering on site with an NGO.

 

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