Human Rights in Migration Societies. Exploring the Intersection of Human Rights and Migration in Law, Politics, and Everyday Life
Conference held on 18–20 September 2024 at Justus Liebig University Giessen | Deadline for Proposals: 31 January 2024
References to human rights have become increasingly prominent in migration-related discourse and practices. Actors in migration societies frequently use the language of human rights to articulate their interests and goals. Concurrently, other actors challenge such rights-based claims to migrants’ inclusion. In the legal system, for example, doctrinal arguments based in human rights law and strategic litigation at the European Court of Human Rights play important roles in shaping European immigration and refugee law. In various contexts of political action, migrant and non-migrant activists, diaspora members and policymakers refer to human rights when making political claims, pursuing transitional justice, or legitimizing inclusionary and exclusionary migration and border policies. The advance of human rights discourse is also occurring in professional and other everyday contexts, where the attitudes of actors within migration societies are actually expressed and formed, such as in school contexts, in social work, and in social and traditional media. At the same time, however, European migration laws and policies are becoming increasingly restrictive, leading to human rights violations on a daily basis, discourses of exclusion, and a widespread perception of a “human rights backlash”. How do these observations match?
The research group “Human Rights Discourse in Migration Societies” (MeDiMi) analyzes this humanrightization across ten projects by combining legal analysis, social-science research, and cultural studies. We aim to illuminate the interwoven processes of legalization, politicization, and everyday practice of human rights in migration societies. The research group also investigates the interplay of human rights discourse and counter-discourses in conflicts relating to migration. For a more detailed description of MeDiMi’s research agenda, see here (English) or here (German).
This multidisciplinary conference aims to explore the nexus of human rights and migration by starting a dialogue with other researchers working in related fields and facilitating exchange across established communities and disciplinary boundaries. More specifically, we are eager to learn from other scholars and activists about their approaches to human rights and/or migration research, including forced migration studies and refugee law.
We invite researchers at all career stages and of all backgrounds – from doctoral researchers to senior academics and independent activist-researchers – to join us in exploring how human rights norms, semantics, images, and narratives function in the context of migration and how this affects contemporary societies. Contributions can come from people working in legal studies, the social sciences or the humanities, including but not limited to legal doctrine, comparative law, legal history, sociology, political science, international relations, anthropology, cultural studies, media and communication studies, global health, and educational research.
Contributions should explicitly address the intersection of human rights and migration. We are particularly interested in empirical and doctrinal case studies that analyze how human rights are made relevant in different contexts (from grassroot activism to the UN level), but also welcome theoretical reflections on the contested role of human rights in migration societies. Regarding the regional focus, we are particularly interested in contributions that analyze processes in Europe as well as in comparative studies that concern the MENA region or North and South America. Presentations can build on previously published research.