Building on research within the fields of exile studies and critical migration studies and drawing links between historical and contemporary refugee scholarship, this volume challenges the bias of methodological nationalism and Eurocentrism in discussing the multifaceted forms of knowledge emerging in the context of migration and mobility. With critical attention to the meaning, production and scope of refugee scholarship generated at the institutions of higher education, it also focuses on refugee knowledge produced outside academia, and scrutinizes the conditions according to which it is validated or silenced. Presenting studies of historical refuge and exile, together with the experiences of contemporary refugee scholars, this book will appeal to scholars across the social sciences with interests in forced migration, refugee studies, the sociology of knowledge and the phenomenon of insider knowledge, and research methods and methodology.
The Open Access version of this book, available at www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license.
Building on research within the fields of exile studies and critical migration studies and drawing links between historical and contemporary refugee scholarship, this book challenges the bias of methodological nationalism and Eurocentrism in discussing the multifaceted forms of knowledge emerging in the context of migration and mobility.
Introduction Part I: Beyond Methodological and Eurocentric Nationalism
in Research on Scholarship
1. Methodological Nationalism and Migration
Studies: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives
2. Refugee and Migrant
Knowledge as Historical Narratives
3. Narratives on Refugee Knowledge in
the Institutions of Europe
4. The World as an Exiling Political Structure:
Yassin Al-Haj Salehs Conceptualisation of Exile Part II: Refugee Scholarship
and Scholarly Identity
5. Exile and Emigration from the Third Reich: Stages
and Results of Research in Germany
6. Personal and Academic Narratives of
Exiled and Displaced Scholars
7. Refugee Scholars Then and Now
8. Beyond
Authoritarianism: Migration, Uncertainty and a Sense of Belonging Among
Public Intellectuals Part III: Silencing and Gatekeeping Knowledges
9. The
Silenced Majority: Academic Refugees and the Vicissitudes of Readaptation
10.
Reframing the Subject: Affective Knowledge in the Urgency of Refuge
11.
Nursing Trauma, Harvesting Data: Refugee Knowledge and Refugee Labour in the
International Humanitarian Regime
Magdalena Kmak is a Professor of International Law with specialization in Migration and Minority Research at Åbo Akademi University, Finland and a researcher at the University of Helsinki, Finland.
Heta Björklund has a PhD in Classics from the University of Helsinki, Finland. She has previously worked as an editor at the Classical journal Arctos and is the co-editor of Roman Law and the Idea of Europe.