CeMig Newsletter

01 March 2023

This is the newsletter of the Centre for Global Migration Studies (CeMig). It provides regular information about events, research projects and publications on the subject of migration at Göttingen Campus and within the region.

---

New research projects by CeMig members

---

Intercultural dementia care in culturally diverse settings: An ethical analysis informed by a qualitative study with the Turkish immigrant community in Germany

by Zümrüt Alpinar Sencan, Ph.D. (Department of Medical Ethics and History of Medicine, University Medical Center Göttingen)

The inclusion of culturally diverse individuals in healthcare settings will be inevitable as people’s mobility increases. Culture-specific demands can raise conflicts between the dominant culture’s medical system and individuals from minority cultures. The adoption of standardized procedures of informed consent and decision-making in healthcare settings is being challenged, among other reasons due to increasing cultural diversity. The project will reflect on culture’s role in decision-making and impact on bioethical-decision-making. Dementia-related healthcare will be referred to as a specific context, as dementia care ethics is rife with culturally loaded ideas of (family) responsibility, illness understanding, a good life ad a good death. Besides, the person with dementia becomes dependent on their caretakers as they lose their decision-making capacities. The project will engage this topic on ethical-philosophical and empirical levels. It will reflect on the conventional ethical standards used for decision-making in dementia care, investigate empirically areas in which these standards diverge from ethical standards more common to members of the Turkish-German minority culture and then finally will recommend paths for avoiding or reconciling potential conflicts in ethical standards in Germany specifically and in culturally diverse populations generally.

Funded by German Research Foundation (DFG).

---

New Publications by CeMig Members

---

Transnational Biographies: Changing We-images, Collective Belongings and Power Chances of Migrants and Refugees

byProf. Dr. Gabriele Rosenthal

with contributions by Dr. Eva Bahl & Dr. Arne Worm

Abstract:

Every day many people leave the place where they live and move to some other place, where they settle permanently or stay for many years. The contributions to this volume are based on the results of three empirical research projects which set out to investigate the situation of migrants in Jordan, Brazil, Germany and other European countries. The articles focus on migrants at their place of arrival and ask questions such as: How do they look back on their life histories and migration paths? What dynamics and processes led up to their migration projects and how do they explain their motives? The studies in this volume show that leaving and arriving are interrelated: leaving one’s home region is part of a long process, partly planned and partly unplanned, which is determined by complex collective, familial and individual constellations, and which has significant consequences for the action patterns and participation strategies of migrants in their arrival societies. This book also shows which constellations enable some migrants to realize their goals in their present situation, and which constraints or obstacles make it impossible for others to do so.

In: Göttingen University Press (2022), DOI: 10.17875/gup2022-2187

---

FLP and homescapes: Employing walking tour methodology in researching children’s and parents’ perspectives

by: Yin Yu (Intercultural German Studies)

Abstract:

Children’s view of family language practices and their agency therein is regarded as important in the study of family language policy (FLP). This work extends the notion of the linguistic landscape to the private family domain and uses the innovative methodological approach of “homescape walking tour” to engage young children (6 to 7-years-old) in the data generation process. During the walking tours, children in Chinese-German families guided the researcher through their homes, taking pictures of objects containing “languages” and sharing their lived experiences with these resources. In a further step, parents were invited to share their opinions about their FLP and the objects photographed by their children.

More than 120 pictures gathered from the walking tours and transcribed interviews were analyzed in order to comprehend the multimodal linguistic practices of the families and the individual experiences family members create with such practices and resources. The results show that the application of the concept of homescape with its discursive constructions from both “user” (the children) and “designer” (the parents) perspectives can powerfully open up spaces for the co-construction of the family spaces. The homescapes are represented both as opportunities for language learning and as identity presentation. While parents tend to emphasize the intention behind the design of the homescapes and their wishes for their children to learn languages, children concentrate on their way of using different linguistic resources and playful activities.

In: Journal of Home Language Research, 5(1), 6. DOI: http://doi.org/10.16993/jhlr.46

---

“I Was a Stranger and You Welcomed Me”. The Role of Religion and Faith-Based Organizations in Refugee Accommodation

by: Prof. Dr. Alexander-Kenneth Nagel (Institute of Sociology)

Abstract:

Support for strangers is deeply anchored in the social ethics of various religious traditions. Based on a qualitative content analysis of interviews with refugees and immigration executives. the article focuses on the role of religion and religious communities in refugee accommodation in Germany between 2011 and 2018. It sheds light on different schemes and measures of support offered by religious communities and explores the significance of religious and cultural differences for processes of accommodation and early integration. The empirical analysis is embedded in conceptual debates on the re-emergence of faith-based service providers in the crisis of the late modern welfare state. The findings suggest that the so called ‘refugee crisis’ has served as an opportunity structure for Christian refugee aid. At the same time, refugee accommodation centres in Germany have responded to an increase of non-Christian refugees (notably: Muslims) by a more restrictive handling of religious freedom.

In: Interdisciplinary Journal for Religion and Transformation in Contemporary Society (published online ahead of print 2023). DOI: https://doi.org/10.30965/23642807-bja10066

---

On Current Occassion

---

What do objects do in an asylum centre?

Unpacking forced (im)mobility, (dis)connectedness, inertia and potential futures through the semi-domesticity of migration

The keynote lecture by Prof. Dr. Paolo Boccagni (University of Trento) is available now online via YouTube. The lecture was held on 17 November 2022 as as part of the accompanying program of the exhibition “Moving Things”, a special exhibit at the Forum Wissen by the Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Göttingen, Museum Friedland, the exhibition agency “Die Exponauten. Ausstellungen et cetera” and Kunstverein Göttingen. 

You can find the video here.

Centre for Global Migration Studies (CeMig)
Heinrich-Düker-Weg 14
37073 Göttingen
Tel.: +49 551 39-25358
If you would like to unsubscribe, please send an e-Mail to cemig@uni-goettingen.de