This one day conference, to be held at Regent's College, London, seeks to investigate the construction of power relations within the urban context through both theory and practice. We invite papers and posters exploring themes that fall within the following three streams: Identity and the City; Inequalities in Urban Areas; and Experiencing the City. The conference is open to everyone, and specifically aims to encourage participation by early career academics, as well as postgraduate students.
Friday, 20 August 2010
Registration
For the event code, please type in 'HASS conference', for course level please select 'Events Forum', RC School 'Webster Graduate School', and Payment option 'Other'.
Hope this makes on-line registration easier for you!
Looking forward to seeing many of you on September 24.
The organizers.
Wednesday, 7 July 2010
Migrants, Identity and the City - One Day Conference
Regent’s American College London,
Inner Circle, Regent’s Park, London NW1 4NS
Friday, 24 September 2010
This conference, to be held at Regent's College, London, seeks to investigate the construction of power relations within the urban context through both theory and practice. We invite papers and posters exploring themes that fall within the following three streams: Identity and the City; Inequalities in Urban Areas; and Experiencing the City. The conference is open to everyone, and specifically aims to encourage participation by early career academics, as well as postgraduate students.
This interdisciplinary conference seeks to combine academic and policy work in the area of ‘migrants, identity and the city’. The morning will be dedicated to academic presentations, followed by lunch, where there is the opportunity for poster presentations. The afternoon is dedicated to speakers from local community organisations, the voluntary sector, and the policy-making arena, to encourage a debate between academic knowledge and policy and practice.
Invited Speakers include:
• Dr. Michael Seeraj Charlton Athletic Race and Equality Partnership (CARE)
• Dr. Sarah Crowther Refugees in Effective and Active Partnership (REAP)
• Simon Assaf, Journalist, Anti-Fascist League
• Representatives from local government, reflecting a range of political ideologies
• Representatives of local and transnational community organizations
Keynote Speaker: TBC
Conference Registration
To register for this conference, please e-mail HebingM@regents.ac.uk and RoitmanK@regents.ac.uk with your name, affiliation, and areas of interest.
Fees
Early registration 10 GBP
Registration on the day of conference 15 GBP
Please make cheques payable to Regent’s College, and clearly write on the back that you are paying for the HASS Migrants, Identity and the City Conference. Post cheques to:
Dr Karem Roitman - HASS
Regent’s American College London,
Inner Circle, Regent’s Park, London NW1 4NS
Alternatively you can pay by debit or credit card at: https://www.ecommercegateway.co.uk/regents
CALL FOR PAPERS
Deadline extended to: July 15, 2010
Abstracts should be app. 400 words, and should be e-mailed to HebingM@regents.ac.uk and RoitmanK@regents.ac.uk by July 15, 2010. Abstracts should include the institutional affiliation of proponents, highlight which stream(s) their work falls into, and indicate whether the participant is proposing a presentation (app. 30 mins.) or a poster (during lunch and tea/coffee breaks). Please indicate also if you would be willing to chair a session. Accepted papers will be notified on August 17, 2010.
More information on the conference can be found at:
www.migrantsidentityandthecityconference.blogspot.com
Wednesday, 16 June 2010
Where the conference will be held
Tuesday, 15 June 2010
Call for Papers
Migrants, Identity and the City
One Day Conference
Regent’s American College London,
Inner Circle, Regent’s Park, London NW1 4NS
Friday, 24 September 2010
CALL FOR PAPERS
This conference, to be held at Regent's College, London, seeks to investigate the construction of power relations within the urban context through both theory and practice. We invite papers and posters exploring themes that fall within the following three streams: Identity and the City; Inequalities in Urban Areas; and Experiencing the City. The conference is open to everyone, and specifically aims to encourage participation by early career academics, as well as postgraduate students.
Abstracts should be approximately 400 words, and should be e-mailed to HebingM@regents.ac.uk and RoitmanK@regents.ac.uk by July 6th, 2010. Abstracts should include the institutional affiliation of proponents, highlight which stream(s) their work falls into, and indicate whether the participant is proposing a presentation (app. 30 mins.) or a poster (during lunch and tea/coffee breaks). Please indicate also if you would be willing to chair a session.
The Conference
This interdisciplinary conference seeks to combine academic and policy work in the area of ‘migrants, identity and the city’. The morning will be dedicated to academic presentations, followed by lunch, where there is the opportunity for poster presentations. The afternoon will invite speakers from local community organisations, the voluntary sector, and the policy making arena, to encourage a debate between academic knowledge and policy and practice. The topics we would like to address are organised into three streams as follows:
1. Identity and the city – power of ideas
This stream will investigate the social construction of the notion of the city; it will explore for whose benefit cities are built, especially how the construction of the city creates opportunities for some communities, whilst it makes others invisible. Furthermore, this stream will also explore how migrants’ identities are shaped and re-shaped by the city as a context. This stream includes:
- Intellectuals and the construction of the city
- Who builds the identity of the city
- Media representations of the city/migrants
2. Engaging with inequalities in urban areas
The focus of this stream is on how inequalities are embedded in and reproduced through institutional structures in the city. How are particular inequalities created and maintained? How does social and economic policy address inequality, and how successful is it in doing so? This stream includes:
- Minorities and discrimination
- Employment
- Education
- Environment
- Legal structure
3. Different experiences of the city
This stream seeks to engage with how migrants experience the city, in contrast to other populations in the same urban space. By dissecting these different experiences, we hope to learn about the diverse networks of power built and experienced by different actors, and explore how these affect migrants’ experiences.
- Experiences and view of dominant sectors
- Experiences and views of the working classes
- Experiences and views of refugees/immigrants