Etnografía en la red

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GERMAN MIGRANTS IN BULGARIA AND THEIR SOCIAL NETWORKS

Authors Tanya Matanova
Year 2020
Journal Name FOLKLORE-ELECTRONIC JOURNAL OF FOLKLORE
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1 Journal Article

Emotions and migration in social media discourse: A new Greek migrant case study

Authors Mariza Georgalou
Year 2021
Journal Name EMOTION SPACE AND SOCIETY
Citations (WoS) 11
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2 Journal Article

Contrapuntal Connectedness: Analysing Relations Between Social Media Data and Ethnography in Digital Migration Studies

Authors Marie Sandberg, Nina Grønlykke Mollerup, Luca Rossi
Year 2022
Book Title Research Methodologies and Ethical Challenges in Digital Migration Studies
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3 Book Chapter

Shall WeChat? Switching between online and offline ethnography

Authors Beatrice Zani
Year 2021
Journal Name Bulletin of Sociological Methodology/Bulletin de Méthodologie Sociologique
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4 Journal Article

SOCIAL NETWORK SITES AND SOCIAL SCIENCE

Description
The last few years have witnessed an explosive increase in the use of social networking sites. Today there are over 500 million on Facebook, and 100 million on QQ - the Chinese equivalent, as well as Orkut and Twitter. The primary purpose of this research project is to determine the nature of these sites and assess the challenge they represent to assumptions at the core of social science with regard to the decline in social relations, including the degree to which these sites have been appropriated to alleviate the negative impact of this decline. It will also focus on trends including the shift to older and less affluent users, and key consequences such as the impact on migrants and on separated families which rely on such communications. It will assess recent academic debates regarding the consequence of social networks for political action and activism, the nature of privacy and the public domain. But the research method is holistic and the seven proposed books will include a general re-thinking of core social science theory in the light of this phenomenon as well as monographs on more specific trends in usage and an overall assessment of social and welfare implications. Research has mainly been on the earlier users, mainly college students and focused on the US. But recent trends suggest future growth in older populations and in middle income regions such as Brazil and Turkey. The research consists of 15 months intensive ethnographic participation and observation, appropriate given the intimate nature of these communications. There will be seven ethnographies all based in small town sites. Some aimed at demographic breadth in China, India, Brazil and Turkey others at depth in Romania, Trinidad and the UK. The study will also include long term online participation in the social networking sites themselves with 150 informants from each country. The intensity of ethnographic depth will be matched by a commitment to comparative analysis and generalisation.
Year 2012
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8 Project

Rwandan diaspora online: Social connections and identity narratives

Authors Michelle Martin
Year 2019
Journal Name Crossings: Journal of Migration & Culture
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9 Journal Article

Participant Observation in Migration Studies: An Overview and Some Emerging Issues

Authors Mieke Schrooten, Paolo Boccagni
Book Title Qualitative Research in European Migration Studies
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10 Book Chapter

Media Literacy for Unaccompanied Refugee Youth - A Path to Integration

Description
According to Eurostat, 2015 saw 90,000 unaccompanied minor asylum seekers register in the EU. Refugee children pose considerable policy challenges: their integration in Europe is of utmost importance. Studies show that while refugee children have IT competences, they lack the ability to make critical media choices, and make informed decisions regarding their well-being. This project builds on the IT knowledge of young refugees in order to further their integration by developing media literacy pedagogic tools. Media literacy education is essential for empowering citizenship, for gaining skills to become drivers of economic growth, and not least to prevent radicalization. Media literacy, a necessary aspect of lifelong learning, enables young people to participate civically, to overcome disadvantage and to represent marginalized and missing voices. For developing these pedagogic tools, the Fellow will first research how unaccompanied minor refugees use digital technology and social media through fieldwork carried out in 3 EU countries. In the second research phase, the Fellow will conduct participatory action research (PAR) in collaboration with an NGO which specializes in PAR with refugee youth. These results will be used to design teaching materials for youth workers and teachers. The project is unique because it brings together the disciplines of education, media literacy and migration studies for offering solutions to a matter of pressing urgency: the integration of unaccompanied minor refugees. This project will serve to widen the professional horizon of the Fellow. She will acquire specific research skills (digital ethnography, participant action research, educational tools design) and transferable skills (PhD supervision, leadership, editorial skills, managing large-scale events). The project will lay the foundations for the Fellow's long-term career goals, and she will be propelled to the forefront of media literacy research.
Year 2017
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12 Project

Advantages of implementing mediamorphosis in supporting Using-ethnic programs at Radio Sritanjung FM Banyuwangi

Authors Zainal Abidin Achmad, Juwito Juwito, Yuli Candrasari, ...
Year 2021
Journal Name MASYARAKAT KEBUDAYAAN DAN POLITIK
Citations (WoS) 1
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13 Journal Article

Knowledge migration flows in education hubs: Mobile students enrolled at Indian and British branch campuses in the United Arab Emirates

Description
The provision of higher education is a key priority for countries around the world, given that knowledge production, innovation and skills are crucial for thriving societies and economies. Even though the number of university enrollments is forecast to rise by 21 million between 2011 and 2020, many countries are struggling to meet demand. Thus different types of knowledge migration are emerging, more students are studying abroad and institutions are establishing offshore branch campuses. Research has been conducted on international student migration and transnational education, but nothing is known about the intersection of these two literatures, i.e. instances when both students and institutions cross international borders. EduHubMig addresses the paucity on this topic through the study of international students enrolled at British and Indian branch campuses in the United Arab Emirates (UAE). Statistical analyses of secondary data and an online survey will identify the characteristics and size of this under-studied young migrant group. In addition, a range of qualitative research methods, such as in-depth interviews with students and other stakeholders (n=130), an institutional ethnography of offshore universities and a netnography of the website materials and social media, will uncover the various ways in which different actors shape knowledge flows within education hubs. EduHubMig will enable the Experienced Researcher to develop important new research skills and enhance her career development. The project will provide intensive training and facilitate knowledge exchange between the Experienced Researcher and the colleagues at Utrecht University with whom she shares research interests. The training plan will be closely monitored by her supervisor and supported by dedicated academic and administrative colleagues. The research and excellent training integrated in EduHubMig will help the Experienced Researcher accomplish her career objective of a tenure-track position.
Year 2017
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14 Project

EduHubMig: Knowledge migration flows in education hubs: Mobile students enrolled at Indian and British branch campuses in the United Arab Emirates

Description
The provision of higher education is a key priority for countries around the world, given that knowledge production, innovation and skills are crucial for thriving societies and economies. Even though the number of university enrollments is forecast to rise by 21 million between 2011 and 2020, many countries are struggling to meet demand. Thus different types of knowledge migration are emerging, more students are studying abroad and institutions are establishing offshore branch campuses. Research has been conducted on international student migration and transnational education, but nothing is known about the intersection of these two literatures, i.e. instances when both students and institutions cross international borders. EduHubMig addresses the paucity on this topic through the study of international students enrolled at British and Indian branch campuses in the United Arab Emirates (UAE). Statistical analyses of secondary data and an online survey will identify the characteristics and size of this under-studied young migrant group. In addition, a range of qualitative research methods, such as in-depth interviews with students and other stakeholders (n=130), an institutional ethnography of offshore universities and a netnography of the website materials and social media, will uncover the various ways in which different actors shape knowledge flows within education hubs. EduHubMig will enable the Experienced Researcher to develop important new research skills and enhance her career development. The project will provide intensive training and facilitate knowledge exchange between the Experienced Researcher and the colleagues at Utrecht University with whom she shares research interests. The training plan will be closely monitored by her supervisor and supported by dedicated academic and administrative colleagues. The research and excellent training integrated in EduHubMig will help the Experienced Researcher accomplish her career objective of a tenure-track position.
Year 2017
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15 Project

Youth Activism for Climate on and Beyond Social media: Insights from FridaysForFuture-Rome

Authors Francesca Belotti, Stellamarina Donato, Arianna Bussoletti, ...
Year 2022
Journal Name The International Journal of Press/Politics
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20 Journal Article

A Raciosemiotics of Appropriation: Transnational Performance of Raciogender among Mexican K-Pop Fans

Authors Joyhanna Yoo
Year 2023
Journal Name SIGNS AND SOCIETY
Citations (WoS) 2
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21 Journal Article

Becoming part of a temporary protest organization through embodied walking ethnography

Authors Amanda J. Lubit, Devon Gidley
Year 2020
Journal Name Journal of Organizational Ethnography
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22 Journal Article

Diaspora No More? The Role of Facebook in the Development of a Global Rotuman Community

Authors Alan Howard
Year 2019
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
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24 Journal Article

Navigating Digital Ethics for Rural Research: Guidelines and recommendations for researchers and administrators of social media groups

Authors Alison Mayne, Christina Noble, Paula Duffy, ...
Description
Social media creates new spaces for connecting people digitally and provides a forum for the exchange of information and discussion. Online spaces such as Facebook groups (FGs) have become part of the fabric of social interaction in many rural areas, with both residents and others living away from the community maintaining a connection in the virtual space. Community FGs are routinely used to share place-based information about resources, events or issues, and to discuss topics of shared interest. In research, these groups allow researchers to connect directly with people who have an interest in what happens within specific communities and offer rich opportunities for participants to likewise engage with research. We can reflect on how FGs in rural communities have the potential to enhance and/or complement existing approaches by making research with dispersed communities more accessible and affordable, while considering challenges around confidentiality and digital inclusion given the characteristics and size of the population. Social media has developed at pace during the last decade, and digital ethics is a shifting methods sub-field that poses challenges to social sciences and humanities researchers. Apart from platforms’ changing terms and conditions, research with and on social media groups has specific ethical challenges (e.g. around anonymity, confidentiality, and data access) that require tailored consideration. In particular, when approaching netnography and similar methods with social media groups, dialogic approaches which aim to engage, respect and protect participants are critical. There is consensus on the need to agree the access conditions with the group administrator as a first step, but there is no guidance on good practice on developing these conditions. To create these guidelines, we have worked collaboratively across disciplines and with administrators of Facebook groups to explore what such process could look like: aspects to address, pros and cons of potential approaches, and potential challenges and solutions.
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28 Report

The dual institutional work of Lyra's Walk: partisan violence and peace protest in Northern Ireland

Authors Devon Gidley, Amanda J. Lubit
Year 2023
Journal Name Journal of Organizational Ethnography
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30 Journal Article

Syrian Imaginations of Europe

Description
Refugees’ attempts to flee to a certain country are usually preceded by imaginations about possible destination countries. These imaginations not only contribute to refugees’ decisions where to seek asylum but also have an effect on how refugees experience realities when they eventually arrive in the destination country. The research project ‘SYRMAGINE – Syrian Imaginations of Europe’ focusses on how Europe is imagined by Syrian refugees settling in Syria’s neighbouring countries and examines how refugees’ imaginations affect their attitudes to seek asylum in European countries. SYRMAGINE understands “geographical imaginations” of Europe as subjective human conceptions of a geographical location and stresses the differences between “imagined regions” and reality. The project adopts an interdisciplinary mixed-method approach combining a large sample of individual surveys, semi-directive interviews and an online ethnography in two recipient and transit countries of Syrian refugees in the Middle East, Lebanon and Turkey. SYRMAGINE contributes to the academic literature on the active role of imaginations in refugees’ decision-making. From a policy perspective, it responds to one of the key priorities of the Horizon 2020 work programme 2016-2017, which is to investigate the governance of migration and asylum. The research is highly time relevant due to the surge of Syrian asylum application in Europe in the last years: Between April 2011 and June 2016, more than one million Syrians have applied for asylum in Europe (UNHCR 2016). The research project has the following three objectives: 1) to investigate the relation between refugees’ imaginations and decision-making and to study how the present country of residence compares to Europe as a destination choice, 2) to examine how refugees inform themselves about social and political realities in European countries and 3) to use these findings to contribute to the development of evidence-based asylum and integration policies.
Year 2017
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32 Project

Facebook Ethnography: The Poststructural Ontology of Transnational (Im) migration Research

Authors David Joseph Piacenti, Luis Balmore Rivas, Josef Garrett
Year 2014
Journal Name International Journal of Qualitative Methods
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34 Journal Article

Migrants and New Media

Authors Monika Palmberger
Year 2022
Book Title The Oxford Handbook of Superdiversity
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38 Book Chapter

Don't Give Up! A Cyber-ethnography and Discourse Analysis of an Online Infertility Patient Forum

Authors Mihan Lee
Year 2017
Journal Name Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry
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39 Journal Article

Nudging Social Media toward Accuracy

Authors Gordon Pennycook, David G. Rand
Year 2022
Citations (WoS) 24
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41 Journal Article

Alan Kurdî, deaths in the desert and failed migrants’ processing of dystopic images on social media

Authors Ayobami Ojebode
Year 2017
Journal Name Crossings: Journal of Migration & Culture
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43 Journal Article

WeChat, we sell, we feel: Chinese women’s emotional petit capitalism

Authors Beatrice Zani
Year 2020
Journal Name International Journal of Cultural Studies
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45 Journal Article

Extreme mobilities: Challenging the concept of 'travel'

Authors Paivi Kannisto
Year 2016
Journal Name Annals of Tourism Research
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46 Journal Article

Social media use for travel purposes: a cross cultural comparison between Portugal and the UK

Authors Suzanne Amaro, Paulo Duarte
Year 2017
Journal Name Information Technology & Tourism
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50 Journal Article
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