Sumários
Groupwork presentations (3 groups). Essay clinic on the group work composed by 2 students.
17 Abril 2024, 15:00 • Alina Isabel Pereira Esteves
Os estudantes do IGOT encontram-se em trabalho de campo.
The groups presenting their research were: student migration
(Bárbara Galinha, João Mauritti, Ricerdo Parreira and Tiago Pina); undocumented
migration (Tomás Pereira, Rodrigo Costa, Rodrigo Pacheco, Tomás Lima, Marta
Coelho, Beatriz Belchior); labour migration (Lara Lopes).
Essay clinic
on the group work composed by 2 students. Definition of an essay. Purposes, and
types of essays: Narrative essay, Expository essay, Analytical essay and
Argumentative essay. Essay structure. Supporting evidence and analysis.
Bibliografia
Daniel
Malet Calvo (2018). Understanding international students beyond
studentification: A new class of transnational urban consumers. The example of
Erasmus students in Lisbon (Portugal), Urban Studies, Vol. 55(10), pp.
2142–2158 (DOI: 10.1177/0042098017708089)
Stephen
Castles and Godula Kosack (2010). The function of labour immigration in Western
European capitalism, in Marco Martiniello and Jan Rath (eds.), Selected Studies
in International Migration and Immigrant Incorporation, IMISCOE Textbooks, pp.
21-44. Amsterdam University Press.
Sébastien Chauvin; Blanca Garcés-Mascareñas (2014). Becoming Less Illegal: Deservingness
Frames and Undocumented Migrant Incorporation, Sociology Compass 8/4, pp.
422–432, 10.1111/soc4.12145
Russell
King and Parvati Raghuram (2013). International Student Migration: Mapping the
Field and New Research Agendas, Popul. Space Place 19, pp. 127–137 (DOI:
10.1002/psp.1746).
Khalid
Koser (2010). Dimensions and Dynamics of Irregular Migration, Popul. Space
Place 16, 181–193 (DOI: 10.1002/psp.587)
Link to the
moodle platform: https://elearning.ulisboa.pt/course/view.php?id=8948
Presentations and essay clinic (1)
15 Abril 2024, 15:00 • Amandine Françoise Danielle Desille
Presentation of group "digital nomads"
Groupwork presentations (4 groups).
10 Abril 2024, 15:00 • Alina Isabel Pereira Esteves
The groups presenting their research were: asylum and refugees
(Simão Correia, José Miguel, Madalena Costa, Maria Jesus, Alexandre Ramos);
labour migration (Tomás Graciano, Guilherma Faria, Diogo Mesquita, Ana Cubas); student
migration (Filipe Palma, Maria de Lurdes Ribeiro, Laura Duarte, Inês M. Mendes,
Marta Teixeira); asylum and refugees (Guilherme Matos, Filipa Santana, Bianca
Veloso, Joana Leal, Daniela Mendes).
Bibliografia
Daniel
Malet Calvo (2018). Understanding international students beyond
studentification: A new class of transnational urban consumers. The example of
Erasmus students in Lisbon (Portugal), Urban Studies, Vol. 55(10), pp.
2142–2158 (DOI: 10.1177/0042098017708089).
Stephen
Castles and Godula Kosack (2010). The function of labour immigration in Western
European capitalism, in Marco Martiniello and Jan Rath (eds.), Selected Studies
in International Migration and Immigrant Incorporation, IMISCOE Textbooks, pp.
21-44. Amsterdam University Press.
Patricia
Ehrkamp (2017). Geographies of migration I: Refugees, Progress in Human
Geography, Vol. 41(6) 813–822 (DOI: 10.1177/0309132516663061).
Russell
King and Parvati Raghuram (2013). International Student Migration: Mapping the
Field and New Research Agendas, Popul. Space Place 19, pp. 127–137 (DOI:
10.1002/psp.1746).
René
Kreichauf (2018). From forced migration to forced arrival: the campization of
refugee accommodation in European cities, Comparative Migration Studies, 6:7
(DOI 10.1186/s40878-017-0069-8).
Mark van
Ostaijen1, Ursula Reeger and Karin Zelano (2017). The commodification of mobile
workers in Europe - a comparative perspective on capital and labour in Austria,
the Netherlands and Sweden, Comparative Migration Studies, 5:6 (DOI
10.1186/s40878-017-0048-0).
Link to the
moodle platform: https://elearning.ulisboa.pt/course/view.php?id=8948
Groupwork presentations (4 groups).
3 Abril 2024, 15:00 • Alina Isabel Pereira Esteves
The groups presenting their research were: family migration
(Leonor Guimarães, Nádia Martins, Sofia Damião, Marta Domingos, Henrique Sá);
labour migration (João Figueiredo, Vagner Soares, Mohamed Diop, António
Monteiro, António Delgado); digital nomads (Marta Valente, Diogo Fernandes,
Madalena Gonçalves, Carolina Rodrigues, Meropi Dimakopoulou); family migration
(Camila Veiga, Beatriz Teixeira, Francisco Roque, Miguel Fontes).
Bibliografia
Paola
Bonizzoni (2018). Policing the Intimate Borders of the Nation: A Review of
Recent Trends in Family-Related Forms of Immigration Control, J. Mulholland et
al. (eds.), Gendering Nationalism (https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-76699-7_12).
Stephen
Castles and Godula Kosack (2010). The function of labour immigration in Western
European capitalism, in Marco Martiniello and Jan Rath (eds.), Selected Studies
in International Migration and Immigrant Incorporation, IMISCOE Textbooks, pp.
21-44. Amsterdam University Press.
Olga
Hannonen (2021). In search of a digital nomad: defining the phenomenon,
Information Technology & Tourism (https://doi.org/10.1007/s40558-020-00177-z).
Fabiola
Mancinelli (2020). Digital nomads: freedom, responsibility and the neoliberal
order, Information Technology & Tourism, 22:417–437
(https://doi.org/10.1007/s40558-020-00174-2).
Eleonore Kofman, Franz Buhr and Maria Lucinda Fonseca
(2022). Family Migration,
P.Scholten(ed.), Introduction to Migration Studies, IMISCOE Research Series
(https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-92377-8_8).
Mark van
Ostaijen1, Ursula Reeger and Karin Zelano (2017). The commodification of mobile
workers in Europe - a comparative perspective on capital and labour in Austria,
the Netherlands and Sweden, Comparative Migration Studies, 5:6 (DOI
10.1186/s40878-017-0048-0).
Link to the
moodle platform: https://elearning.ulisboa.pt/course/view.php?id=8948