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Strukturbaum
Keine Einordnung ins Vorlesungsverzeichnis vorhanden. Veranstaltung ist aus dem Semester SoSe 2023 , Aktuelles Semester: SoSe 2024
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Super-Diversity and Institutional Whiteness in (Post-)Migration Society    Sprache: Englisch    Belegpflicht
(Keine Nummer) Seminar     SoSe 2023     2 SWS     keine Übernahme    
   Fakultät: Fakultät für Gesellschaftswissenschaften    
 
   Zugeordnete Lehrpersonen:   Datler begleitend ,   Shinozaki
 
 
Zur Zeit keine Belegung möglich
   Termin: Montag   10:00  -  16:00    EinzelT    Maximal 20 Teilnehmer/-in
Beginn : 26.06.2023    Ende : 26.06.2023
      Raum :   LB 137   LB  
  Dienstag   10:00  -  16:00    EinzelT    Maximal 20 Teilnehmer/-in
Beginn : 27.06.2023    Ende : 27.06.2023
      Raum :   LB 137   LB  
  Mittwoch   10:00  -  16:00    EinzelT    Maximal 20 Teilnehmer/-in
Beginn : 28.06.2023    Ende : 28.06.2023
      Raum :   LB 121   LB  
  Donnerstag   10:00  -  16:00    EinzelT    Maximal 20 Teilnehmer/-in
Beginn : 29.06.2023    Ende : 29.06.2023
      Raum :   LB 121   LB  
  Freitag   10:00  -  16:00    EinzelT    Maximal 20 Teilnehmer/-in
Beginn : 30.06.2023    Ende : 30.06.2023
      Raum :   LB 117   LB  
 
 
   Kommentar:

Beginning in the summer 2020, people in many parts of the world have begun to be actively engaged in the Black Lives Matter movement (BLM) – more than ever in our recent history. BLM has long repercussions to date. For example, in this summer, Austria has witnessed citizens’ referendum “Black Voices”. In many Western European societies where a quarter of the population has a so-called migration background, mobility related diversity is just a banal everyday reality. In urban spaces some authors have argued that metropolitan cities have become even “super-diverse” (Vertovec 2007: 1024), rendering conventional normative notions, such as “integration” obsolete on the one hand.

 

But, on other hand: Why is it that migrant and racialized ‘Others’ are the ones to be named and talked about? While it continues to be important to scrutinize structural inequalities based on racialization along with gender, class and religion, scholarship just like political and social discourses often fail to problematize the dominant gaze through which racialized inequalities are looked into.

 

This seminar invites you to reflexively engage with issues related not only to racism but also to “institutional whiteness” in employment and higher education institutions, discussing both empirical and theoretical works in the European and Asian context. As a learning/teaching method, we will use a slightly adopted version of “ProblemBased Learning” to ensure lively discussions. We will also have an opportunity to listen to a guest lecture and watch a movie, in order to broaden and deepen our understanding of the seminar topic.