Click the star to add/remove an item to/from your individual schedule.
You need to be logged in to avail of this functionality.
Log in
Accepted Paper:
Paper short abstract:
The paper discusses preliminary ethnographic, epistemological and methodological reflections on a research project aimed at co-producing a digital archive of the migrations of Somali refugees and asylum seekers in Italy. The project addresses the nexus between mobility, heritage and memory
Paper long abstract:
The paper presents preliminary considerations on a research project aimed at co-producing a digital archive of the migrations of Somali refugees and asylum seekers residing in Italy. We structure the paper in four points which represent on-going lines of reflection rather than conclusive thoughts.
First, we introduce the historically situated ideas and practices of memory making about migration of young Somali refugees and asylum seekers who during the last fifteen years have travelled from the Horn of Africa to Europe via the Libyan-Mediterranean route.
Then, we discuss the possibilities of how a process of co-archiving migration experiences, involving forms of solidarity, violence and social-economic vulnerabilities, can publicly document and represent the memory making dynamics.
In the third point we debate the theoretical and pragmatic aspects of co-archiving as a reflexive pathway that leads to subjectivation processes ranging from resilience to emancipation. In the case of Somali young migrants this relates to the individual and collective construction of social membership within the setting of inter-generational relations and the transnational cultural ecumene assembled during the decades of the Somalis’ diasporic dislocation in different continents. Pathways of subjectivation are also framed within and challenged by the everyday conditions of uncertainty generated by the European migration regimes.
In the final point, we highlight the ethical and epistemological implications of collecting, cataloguing, archiving and disseminating public representations of this co-produced body of knowledge.
Africa in Europe: the digital archives, their downsides, and the imagination of the future
Session 1 Friday 2 June, 2023, -