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Domenico Napolitano 2025 Taiwan Lecture Series: Organizational Studies and Disability: Identity Work, Accommodations, Accessibility
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Flora & Fauna: Domestic Nature and Private Collecting in Reform Era Beijing
moreMigration, Unequal Citizens, and Critical Legal Studies
Convener:Joyce C.H. Liu, Yu-Fan Chiu, Mei-Lin Pan
According to the United Nations Statistics Division (UNSD), the total number of international migrants had amounted to 272 million in mid-2019, up from 173 million in 2000. Compared to 70 million international migrants in 1960, the figure has increased by 200 million. Among the total number of international migrants, about 100 million international migrants were from Asia, and 83 million were migrating within Asia. Most countries in Asia still practice exclusionary politics of citizenship. The migrant workers and stateless persons suffer severe discrimination and even inhuman treatment because of their non-citizen status.
The first five-year ICCS project has discussed the theme of “Conflict, Justice, and Decolonization” to understand the crux of the problem from the scene of social conflict from the perspective of transnational migration and labor mobility. Our shared concerns include the different forms of social conflict and inequality in third-world countries within the global context. We paid particular attention to the issues of refugees, mobile laborers, stateless persons, and human trafficking under mass migration. We discussed the formation of severely excluded discrimination, oppression, and violence as expressed in laws and institutions in different societies. However, the international labor migration under globalization constantly faces exploitation, forced labor, and human trafficking, particularly in Asia-Pacific.
The second five-year project will focus on analyzing the forced labor risks in the global supply chain and addressing effective practices for eliminating forced labor, including law enforcement strategy. Our project will continue to deepen the transnational cooperation with research institutions, research scholars, and non-governmental organizations to develop more significant contributions to labor rights and access to justice for migrant workers, stateless populations, and undocumented workers. We orient our project toward a critical legal study in terms of empirical cases and emancipatory articulation of particular fundamental concepts, including citizenship.
Research agenda:
For more information on event outcomes, please see: Migration, Unequal Citizens, and Critical Legal Studies.
2024 Achievement Report and 2025 Plan Overview: link
Research Topics
計畫總覽 All Research Topics
Analysis of Contemporary Issues
Future Society of Co-Existence and Equality