»We Are All Activists«
Exploring Solidarities in Activism By, With and For Refugees and Migrants in Hamburg
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Chronological data
Date of first publication2022-09-27
Date of publication in PubData 2024-06-27
Language of the resource
English
Abstract
Who is taken into consideration when we talk about the citizens, about the people or the activists? Often it is a rather unquestioned privileged positionality, which is taken to be the standard that most of the time it is actually not. In this quote, the activist Madjiguène Cissé, from the transnational Sans-Papiers movement, raises that just because someone or something is not visible—to the broader public or a particular public—it does not mean that they have not been there for a long time. Migrant rights activism is not a new phenomenon but has intensified and become more networked and visible over the past years (Eggert & Giugni, 2015). This study explores group contexts of activism by, with and for refugees and migrants in Hamburg, the claims, interactions, challenges and processes that activists experience, discuss and deal with. I have approached activists experiencing political organizing in this context from a constructivist grounded theory perspective. This allowed me to develop conceptual perspectives grounded in activist groups’ realities and was advanced through existing literature on this social movement but also theories from other research fields. Solidarities emerged throughout the research process as a more concrete focus. This research sets out to answer the questions: What does solidarity mean in social movements, and how do migrant rights activist practices result in negotiating, enacting and challenging it?
This publication is a revised version of my dissertation thesis.
Keywords
Migrant; Rights; Immigration; Einwanderung; Migrant; Rechte; Immigration
Faculty / department
Notes
Zugl.: Leuphana, Universität Lüneburg, Dissertation, 2021
More information
DDC
323 :: Grundrechte und politische Rechte
Creation Context
Research