What happens when borders cross families? How do families navigate these interruptions to their ability to live together? This episode considers what shifting perspective to families opens up to view in terms of thinking about the work of borders and their impact on people’s everyday lives. Helena Wray, Professor of Migration Law at the University of Exeter, explains the historical development of family migration laws and what these make visible about the racialization of the nation and its political community. Elena Zambelli explains what a ‘mixed-status family’ is, and the many ways in which states may affect its members’ everyday lives and future imaginings. And co-hosts Nando Sigona and Michaela Benson consider how the state’s regulation of family migrations is linked to the reproduction of the nation state, and draw on data collected within the MIGZEN project to show the effects of Brexit on British-European families.
You can access the full transcripts for the episode, further resources and active listening questions over on our website: Who do we think we are?
S3 E10 Migration and the making of Global Britain
S3 E9 (Not so) safe routes
S3 E8 Fortress Britain?
BtH2 E2 Beyond the headlines … Care Activism with Ethel Tungohan
BtH2 E1 Beyond the headlines … at Manchester Museum with Senna Yousef and Caitlin Nunn
S3 E6 Migrant Rights 2.0
S3 E5 Migration, diaspora, diplomacy
S3 E4 A New Plan for Migration?
S3 E3 Bye, Bye Britain
BONUS Interview with Elspeth Guild
S3 E2 Free Movement, limited
S3 E1 Of Kings, Songs and Migrants
[SWAP] Uncommon Sense: Security, with Daria Krivonos
S2 BONUS Behind the Scenes
S2 E10 In dialogue
S2 E9 East-West inequalities and the remaking of unequal Europeans
S2 E8 Who is a migrant?
BtH1 S8 Beyond the headlines … with İdil Akıncı-Pérez
S2 E7 European Identities from the Aliens Act 1905 to Brexit
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