Skip to main content

SCHOOL OF ARCHAEOLOGY & ANTHROPOLOGY

  • Home
  • People
    • Head of School
    • Academics
    • Professional staff
    • Visitors
      • Past visitors
    • Current HDR students
    • Graduated HDR students
    • Alumni
  • Events
    • Anthropology Seminar Series
    • ANU Migration Seminar Series
    • Biological Anthropology Research Seminars
    • Centre for Archaeological Research Seminar Series
    • Conferences
      • Past conferences
  • News
  • Students
    • Study with us
      • Field schools
      • Undergraduate programs
      • Graduate programs
      • Higher Degree by Research
  • Study options
    • Anthropology
    • Archaeology
    • Biological Anthropology
    • Development Studies
  • Research
    • Anthropology
    • Archaeology
    • Biological Anthropology
    • Kin and Connection
    • People and Plants Lab
    • Publications
    • Collections
  • Contact us

Centres

  • Centre for Native Title Anthropology

Related Sites

  • ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences
  • Research School of Humanities and the Arts
  • Centre for Heritage & Museum Studies
  • Australian National Internships Program

Centre for Native Title Anthropology

ARCHANTH

Related sites

Administrator

Breadcrumb

HomeUpcoming EventsFrontiers of Belonging: Understanding Everyday Acts of Anti-migrant Boundary Drawing
Frontiers of belonging: Understanding everyday acts of anti-migrant boundary drawing
Frontiers of belonging: Understanding everyday acts of anti-migrant boundary drawing

By adzicnatasa on Adobe Stock

Frontiers of belonging: Understanding everyday acts of anti-migrant boundary drawing

In my presentation I will engage with the question of what role migration researchers might play in creating a more nuanced understanding of the backlash against refugees and migrants following the summer of displacements 2015 in Europe. I will suggest that due to its closeness to people’s everyday processes of meaning-making, ethnographic research can play a crucial role in understanding the xenophobic, anti-cosmopolitan and illiberal sentiments that are currently sweeping through European societies. This, however, means that migration scholars need to overcome their traditional reluctance of studying groups they cannot sympathise with. By reflecting on my previous and on-going research I will show why, after a decade of studying refugees’ struggles for emplacement in Western host societies, I decided to “change sides” and study the experiences of people who believe that the influx of refugees is a threat to their values and ways of life. I will argue that if we are to understand the current backlash against liberal and cosmopolitan ideas we need to pay attention to genealogies of exclusionary practices, or “cultures of unwelcome”.

This event is presented in person and online. Zoom details below

Speaker
Dr Annika Lems 
Annika Lems is a senior lecturer in anthropology at the School of Archaeology & Anthropology at the Australian National University. Her work broadly concerns the ways people experience, negotiate and actively create place attachments in an age of rapid global transformations. This has included research on Somali refugees’ placemaking practices in Melbourne, unaccompanied refugee minors navigating the Swiss asylum landscape and exclusionary ideas of belonging to place in the Austrian Alps. She has published extensively, including two monographs: Being-Here: Placemaking in a World of Movement (Berghahn, 2018) and Frontiers of Belonging: The Education of Unaccompanied Refugee Youth (Indiana University Press, 2022).

This series is an ANU-wide collaboration spearheaded by the Migration Hub @ ANU, in collaboration with the School of Archaeology and Anthropology

For online attendance, see Zoom details below
https://anu.zoom.us/j/86557701787?pwd=cnIreVB5eG8vNmlibWtHMjRKaEtIZz09
(Meeting ID: 865 5770 1787. Password: 836061)

Date & time

  • Thu 10 Aug 2023, 3:00 pm - 4:00 pm

Location

Jean Martin Room, Beryl Rawson Bldg (#13) & Streaming Online

Speakers

  • Dr. Annika Lems, ANU School of Archaeology & Anthropology

Event Series

ANU Migration Seminar Series

Contact

  •  Sverre Molland
     Send email

File attachments

AttachmentSize
10-8-23_Migration_Series_2023_-_Annika_Lems.pdf(1.53 MB)1.53 MB