EVERYDAY EUROPE
Social transnationalism
in an unsettled continent
Ettore Recchi, Adrian Favell, Fulya Apaydin, Roxana Barbulescu, Michael Braun, Irina Ciornei, Niall Cunningham, Juan Dez Medrano, Deniz N. Duru, Laurie Hanquinet, Steffen Ptzschke, David Reimer, Justyna Salamoska, Mike Savage, Janne Solgaard Jensen, Albert Varela
First published in Great Britain in 2019 by
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Policy Press 2019
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Contents
Adrian Favell and Ettore Recchi |
Mike Savage, Niall Cunningham, David Reimer and Adrian Favell |
Justyna Salamoska and Ettore Recchi |
Laurie Hanquinet and Mike Savage |
Steffen Ptzschke and Michael Braun |
Juan Dez Medrano, Irina Ciornei and Fulya Apaydin |
Adrian Favell, Janne Solgaard Jensen and David Reimer |
Understanding Romanians cross-border mobility in Europe: movers, stayers and returnees |
Roxana Barbulescu, Irina Ciornei and Albert Varela |
Deniz Neriman Duru, Adrian Favell and Albert Varela |
Ettore Recchi |
Steffen Ptzschke, Michael Braun, Irina Ciornei and Fulya Apaydin |
List of tables and figures
Tables
Figures
Notes on contributors
Ettore Recchi is Professor of Sociology at Sciences Po Paris, where he is a member of the Observatoire Sociologique du Changement (OSC) and directs the Master and PhD programmes in Sociology. He is also a part-time professor at the Migration Policy Centre (MPC) of the European University Institute in Florence, where he coordinates the Global Mobilities Project. His main research foci are mobility (in its different forms), social stratification and European integration. A methodologically versatile sociologist especially committed to comparative research, Ettores last monograph was Mobile Europe (Palgrave, 2015). www.ettorerecchi.eu.
Adrian Favell is Chair in Sociology and Social Theory at the University of Leeds. He is the author of various works on migration, multiculturalism, cosmopolitanism and cities, including Philosophies of Integration (1998), The Human Face of Global Mobility (with Michael Peter Smith, 2006) and Eurostars and Eurocities (2008). A collection of his essays, Immigration, Integration and Mobility: New Agendas in Migration Studies, including more recent work on EastWest migration and anti-EU politics in Britain, was published by ECPR Press (2015). www.adrianfavell.com.
Fulya Apaydin is Assistant Professor at Institut Barcelona dEstudis Internacionals (IBEI). Previously, Fulya was AXA Research Fund Postdoctoral Fellow at IBEI and a visiting postdoctoral research associate in Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies (PIIRS) at Princeton University. Her current work explores the rise of Islamic finance in non-Western settings and the use of mixed-methods in social sciences.
Roxana Barbulescu is Academic University Fellow in New Migrations in UK and Europe in the School of Sociology and Social Policy, University of Leeds. Roxana is a comparative political sociologist with an interest in the tensions that emerge between mobility on the one hand and rights and citizenship on the other. She is the author of the research monograph Migrant Integration in a Changing Europe: Immigrants, EU Citizens and Co-ethnics in Italy and Spain (University of Notre Dame Press, 2018). Her work has also been published in Migration Studies, Mediterranean Politics, Politique europenne and Perspectives on European Society and Politics.
Michael Braun is Senior Project Consultant at the Department of Survey Design and Methodology (SDM) at GESIS Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences and Adjunct Professor at the University of Mannheim. He has specialised in cross-cultural survey methodology and analysis. He is an expert in both the design and the analysis of large-scale comparative surveys using state-of-the-art statistical methods. He has worked substantively on international comparisons in the fields of migration and the family.
Irina Ciornei is Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Bern. Her main research interests are related to cross-border mobility and the transnationalisation of political practices and institutions. Irinas most recent work focuses on transnational solidarity, emigrant politics and morality policy issues and has been published in Journal of Common Market Studies, Party Politics and West European Politics.
Niall Cunningham is Lecturer in Human Geography at Durham University. His work lies at the intersections of history, geography and sociology and he has interests in issues of social class, inequality and conflict, particularly in urban settings. He is co-author of Troubled Geographies: A Spatial History of Religion and Society in Ireland (Indiana UP, 2013) and Social Class in the 21st Century (Penguin, 2015).
Juan Dez Medrano is Professor of Sociology at the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. He is also a senior research fellow at the Institut Barcelona dEstudis Internacionals. His main research foci are European integration, collective identities and political sociology. He is the author of Divided Nations (Cornell University Press, 1995) and