ICM Western Balkan

ICM Western Balkan Industrial Citizenship and Migration from the Western Balkans: Migration from Albania and Kosovo towards Greece, Germany and Switzerland

Industrial Citizenship and Migration from the Western Balkans: Migration from Albania and Kosovo towards Greece, Germany and Switzerland

Project Coordinator: Erka Caro
Contact: [email protected]

Involved Institutions:
1. University of New York Tirana
2. University of Pristina
Duration: September 2014 – August 2016

Short Description of the Project :
The project investigates the experience of

Industrial Citizenship (IC) of labour migrants coming from the Western Balkans (WB) to the European Union (EU). IC implies both labour rights and participation of workers in the economic decision-making system via democratic institutions. It is thus embedded in the (power) relationship between workers and employers, based on the creation of structural political power through class-driven collectivism, and using this power to advance workers’ interests. The project relies primarily on accounts by the migrants themselves, trying to grasp their motives, strategies and the ways in which they benefit from migration. The majority of Albanian migrants reside in Greece, Germany and Switzerland, while the Albanians from Kosovo live mainly in Germany and Switzerland, rendering such case selection feasible. The project looks also at the returned migrants, especially in the case of return migration from Greece as a relevant trend in the last years. The underlying questions of the research are as follows: How do migrant workers define and understand the IC? How can labour lead to the achievement of the IC? Main Objectives:
Bearing in mind the Western Balkans` aspiration to become part of the EU, the project aims to investigate the process of IC rights actualization from bottom-up i.e. rights actualization through a process of interpretation by migrants from the WB to the EU. The project will explore the relationship between citizenship, territoriality and states, by looking both at the protection of rights, as well as identity construction, and perceptions of opportunities for participation and belonging. The particular focus will be to determine to what extent transnational work and mobility (forth and back) is a vehicle for European integration from the bottom-up perspective, and to what extent it results in segmentation, alienation, and differentiation of access to rights and participation. Expected Outputs:
• An article on how to conduct a biography-based ethnography of migration for a methodological journal such as Qualitative Research or Ethnography. • An article on migrants’ perspectives on IC, showing its effect on countries of origin, within such journals as Work, Employment and Society or Industrial and Labour Relations Review. • An article comparing the outgoing migration and return migration, negotiation of IC practices by the returnees within Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies or International Migration Review. • An article on the role of gender in migration process, return and IC in a journal such as Gender & Society or Gender, Place & Culture. • A book aimed at a major academic press house such as Cornell, exploring the relationship between migration, citizenship, and territory, focusing on the problem of achieving IC in a post-national environment (this will be incorporated with the data and the team member of IC-1 project and it is a long term plan, few years after this project will have finished). • An official project website to publish project publications, activities, field work, field histories, photos, workshops, policy recommendations, targeting academic and policy related audience. http://www.rrpp-westernbalkans.net/en/research/Current-Projects/Migration/Industrial-Citizenship-and-Migration.htm

http://icm-westernbalkans.com/icm-conference/
31/08/2015

http://icm-westernbalkans.com/icm-conference/

ICM Conference ————————————————————————————————————————————— Call for papers-International Conference on Labor Migration and Industrial Citizenship Program of the Conference- coming soon Logistic information- coming soon Guidelines for papers and presentations- coming soon Proceedings- coming s…

ICM Western BalkanIndustrial Citizenship and Migration from the Western Balkans: Migration from Albania and Kosovo towar...
27/03/2015

ICM Western Balkan
Industrial Citizenship and Migration from the Western Balkans: Migration from Albania and Kosovo towards Greece, Germany and Switzerland

Industrial Citizenship and Migration from the Western Balkans: Migration from Albania and Kosovo towards Greece, Germany and Switzerland

Project Coordinator: Erka Caro
Contact: [email protected]

Involved Institutions:
1. University of New York Tirana
2. University of Pristina

Duration: September 2014 - August 2016

Short Description of the Project :

The project investigates the experience of Industrial Citizenship (IC) of labour migrants coming from the Western Balkans (WB) to the European Union (EU). IC implies both labour rights and participation of workers in the economic decision-making system via democratic institutions. It is thus embedded in the (power) relationship between workers and employers, based on the creation of structural political power through class-driven collectivism, and using this power to advance workers’ interests. The project relies primarily on accounts by the migrants themselves, trying to grasp their motives, strategies and the ways in which they benefit from migration. The majority of Albanian migrants reside in Greece, Germany and Switzerland, while the Albanians from Kosovo live mainly in Germany and Switzerland, rendering such case selection feasible. The project looks also at the returned migrants, especially in the case of return migration from Greece as a relevant trend in the last years. The underlying questions of the research are as follows: How do migrant workers define and understand the IC? How can labour lead to the achievement of the IC?

Main Objectives:

Bearing in mind the Western Balkans` aspiration to become part of the EU, the project aims to investigate the process of IC rights actualization from bottom-up i.e. rights actualization through a process of interpretation by migrants from the WB to the EU. The project will explore the relationship between citizenship, territoriality and states, by looking both at the protection of rights, as well as identity construction, and perceptions of opportunities for participation and belonging. The particular focus will be to determine to what extent transnational work and mobility (forth and back) is a vehicle for European integration from the bottom-up perspective, and to what extent it results in segmentation, alienation, and differentiation of access to rights and participation.

Expected Outputs:

• An article on how to conduct a biography-based ethnography of migration for a methodological journal such as Qualitative Research or Ethnography. • An article on migrants’ perspectives on IC, showing its effect on countries of origin, within such journals as Work, Employment and Society or Industrial and Labour Relations Review. • An article comparing the outgoing migration and return migration, negotiation of IC practices by the returnees within Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies or International Migration Review. • An article on the role of gender in migration process, return and IC in a journal such as Gender & Society or Gender, Place & Culture. • A book aimed at a major academic press house such as Cornell, exploring the relationship between migration, citizenship, and territory, focusing on the problem of achieving IC in a post-national environment (this will be incorporated with the data and the team member of IC-1 project and it is a long term plan, few years after this project will have finished). • An official project website to publish project publications, activities, field work, field histories, photos, workshops, policy recommendations, targeting academic and policy related audience.

27/03/2015
Industrial Citizenship and Migration from the Western Balkans: Migration from Albania and Kosovo towards Greece, Germany...
27/03/2015

Industrial Citizenship and Migration from the Western Balkans: Migration from Albania and Kosovo towards Greece, Germany and Switzerland

Project Coordinator: Erka Caro
Contact: [email protected]

Involved Institutions:
1. University of New York Tirana
2. University of Pristina

Duration: September 2014 - August 2016

Short Description of the Project :

The project investigates the experience of Industrial Citizenship (IC) of labour migrants coming from the Western Balkans (WB) to the European Union (EU). IC implies both labour rights and participation of workers in the economic decision-making system via democratic institutions. It is thus embedded in the (power) relationship between workers and employers, based on the creation of structural political power through class-driven collectivism, and using this power to advance workers’ interests. The project relies primarily on accounts by the migrants themselves, trying to grasp their motives, strategies and the ways in which they benefit from migration. The majority of Albanian migrants reside in Greece, Germany and Switzerland, while the Albanians from Kosovo live mainly in Germany and Switzerland, rendering such case selection feasible. The project looks also at the returned migrants, especially in the case of return migration from Greece as a relevant trend in the last years. The underlying questions of the research are as follows: How do migrant workers define and understand the IC? How can labour lead to the achievement of the IC?

Main Objectives:

Bearing in mind the Western Balkans` aspiration to become part of the EU, the project aims to investigate the process of IC rights actualization from bottom-up i.e. rights actualization through a process of interpretation by migrants from the WB to the EU. The project will explore the relationship between citizenship, territoriality and states, by looking both at the protection of rights, as well as identity construction, and perceptions of opportunities for participation and belonging. The particular focus will be to determine to what extent transnational work and mobility (forth and back) is a vehicle for European integration from the bottom-up perspective, and to what extent it results in segmentation, alienation, and differentiation of access to rights and participation.

Expected Outputs:

• An article on how to conduct a biography-based ethnography of migration for a methodological journal such as Qualitative Research or Ethnography. • An article on migrants’ perspectives on IC, showing its effect on countries of origin, within such journals as Work, Employment and Society or Industrial and Labour Relations Review. • An article comparing the outgoing migration and return migration, negotiation of IC practices by the returnees within Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies or International Migration Review. • An article on the role of gender in migration process, return and IC in a journal such as Gender & Society or Gender, Place & Culture. • A book aimed at a major academic press house such as Cornell, exploring the relationship between migration, citizenship, and territory, focusing on the problem of achieving IC in a post-national environment (this will be incorporated with the data and the team member of IC-1 project and it is a long term plan, few years after this project will have finished). • An official project website to publish project publications, activities, field work, field histories, photos, workshops, policy recommendations, targeting academic and policy related audience.

Mentoring Institution Finland – University of Jyväskylä The University of Jyväskylä (JYU) is a state-funded research uni...
27/03/2015

Mentoring Institution

Finland – University of Jyväskylä

The University of Jyväskylä (JYU) is a state-funded research university with about 15,000 students, focusing on human and natural sciences. It was founded in 1863 as a teaching seminary, but has expanded to a full range of research and teaching programs. JYU is organized into faculties, and this project will be within the Faculty of Social Sciences. The Faculty is divided into departments, and within the Faculty this project will be located in the Department of Social Sciences and Philosophy. The JYU Department of Social Sciences and Philosophy is known for its cooperative nature and aim to cross the boundaries between disciplines. With more than 40 academic staff, organized into the disciplines of Philosophy, Political Science, Sociology, Social Policy, Social Work and Gender Studies, the Department staff includes experts in migration policy, industrial relations, education policy, family studies, and work-life balance, among many other areas.The JyU department of Social Sciences and Philosophy is host to the European Research Consortium funded project “Transnational Work and the Evolution of Sovereignty” (TWES #263782), focusing on the regulation of European Union. This project provides an excellent infrastructure and scholarly community interested in migration and labour market issues. The TWES project team has conducted field work on migration and labour issues in Germany, Finland, the Netherlands, the UK, and Estonia, and is now expanding with an Academy of Finland research grant to conduct field work on Albania-Italy migration. We therefore have excellent infrastructure and experience with conducting this kind of research, and a strong interest in developing enduring contacts with NYU-Tirana and the University of Pristina. We will seek not only to develop research contacts during the period of this grant, but also student and teaching exchanges; we have already begun negotiations for recruitment and supervision of a jointly supervised PhD student connected with this project.Within the TWES project, we have an international team of researchers who consult with and support Erka Caro and Mimoza Dushi in their work. Ines Wagner is a senior grad student at JyU guest researcher at the Hans Boeckler Foundation in Germany, and can provide advice and contacts with that part of the work. Markku Sippola, Kairit Kall and Laura Mankki have been conducting biographical interviews along the same model with Estonians in Finland and will assist and advise Caro and Dushi in the implementation of the method. Sonila Danaj is a graduate student who has been conducting industrial relations research in the UK, and will assist and advise on industrial relations aspects of the project, and in analyzing Albanian industrial relations institutions.

The TWES team has had over a dozen research publications on labour migration issues accepted into international journals and edited volumes in 2013-2014, including articles in the British Journal of Industrial Relations, European Journal of Social Theory, Journal of Common Market Studies, and Economic and Industrial Democracy. There are a large number of articles and book chapters in process. The senior team members also have established publication records in the industrial relations and migration area.


Research Team
1- Nathan Lillie (Project Coordinator)
2- Markku Sippola (Senior Researcher)
3- Sonila Danaj (Junior Researcher)
4- Laura Mankki (Junior Researcher)
5- Ines Wagner (Junior Researcher)

Industrial Citizenship and Migration from the Western Balkans: Migration from Albania and Kosovo towards Greece, Germany...
27/03/2015

Industrial Citizenship and Migration from the Western Balkans: Migration from Albania and Kosovo towards Greece, Germany and Switzerland

Industrial Citizenship and Migration from the Western Balkans: Migration from Albania and Kosovo towards Greece, Germany and Switzerland Project Coordinator: Erka Caro Contact: [email protected] Involved Institutions: 1. University of New York Tirana 2. University of Pristina Duration: Septembe…

Mentoring Institution
27/03/2015

Mentoring Institution

Mentoring Institution Finland – University of Jyväskylä The University of Jyväskylä (JYU) is a state-funded research university with about 15,000 students, focusing on human and natural sciences. It was founded in 1863 as a teaching seminary, but has expanded to a full range of research and teac…

27/03/2015
ICM Working Papers & ICM Policy Briefs
27/03/2015

ICM Working Papers & ICM Policy Briefs

ICM Working Papers & ICM Policy Briefs Abstract 1- TO RETURN OR NOT TO RETURN REINTEGRATION DILEMMAS OF CIRCULAR AND RETURN ALBANIAN LABOR MIGRANTS FROM GREECE. Abstract 2 – A GENERAL OVERVIEW OF TRADE UNIONS IN ALBANIA STRUGGLING FOR LEGITIMACY AND WORKERS RIGHTS

Address

University Of New York Tirana, Kodra E Diellit
Tirana
1000

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