CFP Revista Interdisciplinar da Mobilidade Humana: 3 Special Issues on Migration/Diaspora Topics

“Publication

Call for 3 special issues of Revista Interdisciplinar da Mobilidade Humana on topics related to migration and/or diaspora. Deadlines: 30 June 2025.

1. Entrepreneurship and self-employment initiatives of migrants

The vast majority of migrant people, regardless of the reason for migration or the visa they (do not) hold, face the challenge of entering the labor market. Nowadays, the number of those migrating for economic reasons, to improve their wages or ensure a dignified life for their families through remittances, remains significant. Furthermore, even among those who migrate for other reasons – such as refuge or family reunification, for example – there is always a significant segment that will need to enter the labor market. This special issue is particularly interested in focusing on the entrepreneurship and self-sufficiency initiatives of migrant workers.

2. New Brazilian diasporas (Igor José de Renó Machado and Alexandre Branco-Pereira, guest editors)

Brazil is a country shaped by multiple migratory regimes, and emigration has been one of them since the 1980s. However, something shifted in the mid-2010s. While data on Brazilian emigration remains somewhat fragmented, it points to a striking figure: the Ministry of Foreign Affairs estimates that, by 2022, approximately 4.5 million Brazilians had left the country…If Brazilian emigration can now be regarded as the most significant migratory regime in contemporary Brazil—surpassing even the arrival of immigrants and refugees—scientific knowledge has yet to match its importance. There is relatively little academic output addressing what could be termed the “new Brazilian diasporas.” This special issue seeks to bring together studies focusing on the recent experiences of Brazilian emigration, in both traditional and emerging destinations. Its goal is to stimulate critical reflection on this phase of Brazil’s emigration history and to encourage new research on the contemporary Brazilian diaspora.

3. Migration Research: Logics, Practices, and Methodologies between Tradition and Transformation (Maria Catarina Chitolina Zanini, Yolanda López García, Asmara González Rojas, guest editors).

This issue aims to reflect on migration studies’ contemporary dynamics and histories in their academic and activist practices in knowledge production in these universes. It seeks to aggregate studies that contribute to our thinking on issues relevant to research practices, their modalities, publication, feedback, collaborative processes, and activism…To what extent can we or can we not, in a dialogue between different areas of knowledge, propose broad criteria of scientific objectivity or questions about scientificity or activism? Or even question the various forms of writing and formatting of studies. The aim is also to include studies that reflect on the ethical issues involved in producing knowledge about migrations and that present proposals for “ethical care” that encompass the different Human Sciences. Editors also wish to disseminate research that presents negotiated forms of feedback to the groups studied and studies produced and published collectively.

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