Reinventing the Politics of Knowledge Production in Migration Studies: Introduction to the Special Issue

  • Nina Amelung
  • , Stephan Scheel*
  • , Roger van Reekum
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal contributionsOther (editorial matter etc.)Research

47 Citations (Scopus)
78 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

This special issue (SI) calls for reinventing the politics of knowledge production in migration studies. Academic migration research should make knowledge production an essential part of its research agenda if it wants to remain relevant in the transnational field of migration research. A risk of marginalisation stems from three interrelated tendencies: First, non-academic actors producing authoritative knowledge about migration have proliferated in recent years. Secondly, academic knowledge production is challenged both by counter-knowledge produced by social movements as well as new digital methods and information structures owned by policy-oriented and private actors. Thirdly, academics no longer hold a hegemonic position in the transnational field of migration research. The contributions to this SI interrogate the politics of knowledge production on migration along three lines of inquiry: (1) the enactment of migration as an intelligible object of government through practices of quantification, categorisation and visualisation; (2) the production of control knowledge in border encounters about subjects targeted as migrants and (3) the modes of thought seeking to unknow and re-know migration beyond dominant nation-state centric understandings. This introduction elaborates how the nine articles of the SI intervene in the politics of knowledge production in migration studies along these lines of inquiry.

Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
Volume50
Issue number9
Pages (from-to)2163-2187
Number of pages25
ISSN1369-183X
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 21.02.2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.

Research areas and keywords

  • Sociology
  • Categorisation
  • constructivism
  • migration research
  • migration statistics
  • quantification
  • performativity

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)
  • Demography

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