Histories of Migration: Transatlantic and Global Perspectives

Histories of Migration: Transatlantic and Global Perspectives

Organizer
Pacific Office of the German Historical Institute Washington
Venue
Berkeley, California & Sitka, Alaska
Funded by
ZEIT-Stiftung Ebelin und Gerd Bucerius
ZIP
94720
Location
Berkeley
Country
United States
Takes place
In Attendance
From - Until
18.09.2023 - 24.09.2023
Deadline
01.04.2023
By
Heike Friedman, Pacific Office, German Historical Institute Washington DC

The 2023 Forum focuses on indigenous migration. The Pacific Office of the German Historical Institute Washington DC (GHI Pacific Office) invites proposals for papers to be presented at the Bucerius Young Scholars Forum, which will be held at UC Berkeley, September 18–19, 2023. The Forum will be connected to a field trip to Sitka, Alaska, from September 20–24, 2023.

Histories of Migration: Transatlantic and Global Perspectives

The Pacific Office of the German Historical Institute Washington DC (GHI Pacific Office) invites proposals for papers to be presented at the seventh Bucerius Young Scholars Forum, which will be held at UC Berkeley, September 18–19, 2023. We seek contributions from post-doctoral scholars, recent PhDs, as well as those in the final stages of their dissertations with a background in the humanities or social sciences. The Forum will be connected to a field trip to Sitka, Alaska, from September 20–24, 2023.

The Bucerius Young Scholars Forum, funded by the ZEIT-Stiftung Ebelin und Gerd Bucerius, is an annual program designed to bring together a transatlantic group of approximately ten scholars based in Germany, Europe, North America, and beyond to explore new research in the history of migration.

The 2023 Forum focuses on indigenous migration. During the past decades, growing numbers of indigenous people have left their ancestral lands. Persistent violation of their land rights and the disproportional impact of environmental and climate changes have forced them to move into unfamiliar urban or rural environments. The impacts of this mobility on communities and individuals have been manifold. Migrants have faced abuse and discrimination, grappled with the loss of material and spiritual connections to land, and struggled with the changing meanings of indigeneity in relation to other identities. Non-indigenous communities, in turn, have begun to debate their response to these newcomers and their responsibility in causing the social, environmental, and climatic changes coercing new migratory flows.

The Forum approaches its annual theme from a trans-epochal and transregional perspective. We seek to tie in these current developments to both the past and the present. We call for empirically rich contributions to the history of migration at the intersection of indigenous studies and the history of knowledge. For centuries colonizers have displaced and disrupted the lives of indigenous communities, taking their land, enslaving peoples, and introducing new diseases and harmful habits. How can we narrate the stories of these experiences from the perspective of the history of knowledge? What knowledge did indigenous migrants produce, contest, and deploy as they dealt with their own mobility? How did they engage with the colonizers’ epistemologies? How did they carry other types of knowledge (professional, academic, religious, cultural) into these negotiations? What knowledge was lost due to their movements, and how did this loss impact communities and environments? What epistemological and ontological strategies did indigenous migrants use to defy their marginalization and produce visions of alternative worlds?

We welcome contributions that deal with these and other related questions. With the Forum’s focus on the intersection of migration and knowledge, we encourage applications from junior scholars in history, the social sciences, political sciences, anthropology, geography, as well as area studies and other related fields. Contributions in other media forms such as films will be considered as well.

Papers will be pre-circulated to allow maximum time for peers and invited senior scholars to engage in discussions on the state of the field. The workshop language will be English. The Forum will be hosted by Sören Urbansky (GHI Pacific Office), and Nino Vallen (GHI Pacific Office ).

The field trip, as part of the Forum, to Sitka, Alaska, will allow participants to explore the insights of Alaska Native traditions and indigenous encounters with Russian and American colonizers. The organizers will cover basic expenses for travel and accommodation to Berkeley and Sitka.

Selected participants will have the opportunity to extend their stay in Berkeley (by up to two weeks) through the California Archive Research Award (CARA). CARA funds can be used to explore the internationally renowned research resources in the San Francisco Bay Area. These include, for example, the Bancroft Library at UC Berkeley, the Hoover Archives at Stanford University, and the National Archives in San Bruno. Please indicate in the online application form if you would like to be considered for CARA. We will award the additional funding for up to two applicants.

Please upload a brief CV and a proposal of no more than 750 words by March 15, 2023, to our online portal: https://app.smartsheet.com/b/form/d1f14dc503fc4959bb6b3b112db0e3fb.

Please contact Heike Friedman (friedman@ghi-dc.org) if you have problems with submitting your information online. Applicants will be informed of the outcome of their submissions in April.

Contact (announcement)

Heike Friedman
E-Mail: friedman@ghi-dc.org

https://ysf.hypotheses.org
Editors Information
Published on
27.01.2023
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