GENDER, FAMILY AND MIGRATION

Academic year
2019/2020 Syllabus of previous years
Official course title
DONNE E FAMIGLIE MIGRANTI
Course code
FM0357 (AF:302533 AR:167130)
Modality
On campus classes
ECTS credits
6
Degree level
Master's Degree Programme (DM270)
Educational sector code
SPS/07
Period
4th Term
Course year
1
Moodle
Go to Moodle page
The course has two main goals:
1) to place gendered international migration processes in a historical and comparative perspective;
2) to analyze how care, employment and migration regimes as well as micro practices give shape to and have consequences for women’s migration;

Given this premise, the course contributes to an advanced understanding and to the development of analytical abilities of complex social phenomena such as the intertwining of migration, social policy and gender.
The social scientific, namely sociological, thoretical and analytical tools provided in the course are useful to disentangle the problems at the core of the course, and that can be further applied to the analysis of other compex social phenomena.
At the end of the course, students are:
- able to work with concepts and paradigms of migration necessary to understand the complexity of past and contemporary international migration process;
- familiar with different configurations of women’s migration across Europe and the world
- are aware of the role of (social, employment, migration) policies in structuring (female) migration and the specific position of (women) migrants in society, also in relation to the international division of work;
- able to deconstruct social representations and stereotypes about migrant women's status
- can tale a critical standpoint with respect to theories and political discourses explaining women inequalities as ethnic, cultures and/or religious .
- are able to orally present and discuss problems related to gender and migration based on knowledge and critical appraisal of the recent literature on the topic;
- are able to analyze, in writing, a specific problem related to gendered migration based on the most important theoretical approaches in the field and on research evidence.
No specific pre-conditions for attending the course
The course reviews, compares and critically discusses theories and concepts that analyse the processes underlying women’s migration and the impact these have on migrant men and women and their economic, social, political and civil status in home and destination countries, as well as on societies at large.

The course starts with a brief historical reconstruction of female migration that put current debate in perspective. The theory of care chains is then critically discussed and the core of the course focusses on the link between social institutions, namely employment, care and migration regimes, and the forms taken by women’s. Finally, the course addresses the impacts of different forms and contexts of migration on gender, class and generational relations.
Books (privisional list):
Kofman Eleonore, Phizacklea Annie, Raghuram Parvati, and Sales Rosemary (2000) Gender and international migration in Europe: employment, welfare and politics. London, Routledge.
Parreñas Rhacel Salazar (2005) Children of global migration. Transnational families and gendered woes, Stanford (Calif.), Stanford University Press.


Articles and chapters (provisional list):
Bonizzoni P. (2014) Immigrant Working Mothers Reconciling Work and Childcare: the Experience of Latin American and Eastern EuropeanWomen in Milan, Social Politics, 21(2): 194–217.
Da Roit B., Weicht B. (2013) Migrant care work and care, migration and employment regimes: A fuzzy-set analysis, Journal of European Social Policy, 23(5): 469-486.
Hondagneu-Sotelo P. (1992) Overcoming Patriarchal Constraints: The Reconstruction of Gender Relations among Mexican Immigrant Women and Men, Gender and Society, 6 (3): 393-415
Kofman E. (1999) Female 'Birds of Passage' a Decade Later: Gender and Immigration in the European Union, The International Migration Review, Vol.(33):2: 269-299.
Pedraza S. (1991) Women and Migration: The Social Consequences of Gender, Annual Review of Sociology, 17: 303-325.
Schrover M. (2014) Gender and Migration in a Historical Perspective, EUI, Florence.
Schrover M. (2015) Feminization and problematization of migration: Europe in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, In DOI: 10.1163/9789004251380_006
Torosyan K., Gerber T., Gonalons-Pons P. (2015) Migration, Household Tasks, and Gender: Evidence from the Republic of Georgia, International Migration Review, 50 (2): 445–474.
Yeates N. (2012) Global care chains: a state-of-the-art review and future directions in care transnationalization research, Global Networks 12(2): 135–154.


The complete list of books, articles and book chapters will be made availabe before the beginning of the course on the Moodle platform. Students are kindly invited to resquest a Moodle password by sending an email to the teacher.
1) For attending students (attendace is highly recommended. Please see below under "other information" which conditions need to be fulfilled for attendance)
The examination consists of two parts:
- an individual paper (written in English or in Italian) to be submitted at the end of the course (80% of the final grade)
- an oral presentation (in couples or small groups depending on the number of participants (20% of the final grade)

2) For non-attending students (students unable to attend are kidly asked to contact the teacher in due time; see also below under "other information")
The examination consists of three parts:
- an individual paper (written in English or in Italian) to be submitted one week before examination day (50% of the final grade)
- an oral presentation of two papers chome among the course literature (in couples or small groups depending on the number of participants (10% of the final grade)
- oral examination on the course literature (40% of the final grade)
The course consist of ten sessions organized as follows:
- eight meetings with lectures and student presentations. The students are expected to actively participate, prepare for class by reading the literature and preparing their presentations and contribute to in-class discussion.
- two sessions devoted to preparing, giving and receiving feedback on the individual papers.
Depending on the number of students, the organization of the sessions could slightly be changed.

Attendance is highly recommended. Attending students should be present and actively participating in at least at 80% of the classes.
Students unable to attend should contact the teacher at the beginning of the course.
Italian
Attending the course is highly recommended.

Attendance consists of:
- being presenta at 80% of classes.
- actively participating in classe (reading the assigned literature and preparing at home, participating in discussions and exercises in class)
- performing the assigned presentations.

Non-attending students are kindly asked to contact the teacher in order to be informed on how to prepare the final examination.

The main language of the course is English. However, students are allowed to give their presentations and submit their papers in Italian.

All course information and communication will happen through the Moodle platform. Students are kindly asked to contact the teacher and ask for a Moodle password before the start of the course.


written and oral

This subject deals with topics related to the macro-area "Human capital, health, education" and contributes to the achievement of one or more goals of U. N. Agenda for Sustainable Development

Definitive programme.
Last update of the programme: 10/04/2019