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Summer School - Mobile Work-Life Arrangements: Exploring Conceptual and Methodological Challenges, University of Freiburg, Germany, 9-18 October 2015

Publish Date: Aug 10, 2015

Deadline: Aug 10, 2015

Event Dates: from Oct 09, 2015 12:00 to Oct 18, 2015 12:00

MOBILE WORK-LIFE ARRANGEMENTS: EXPLORING CONCEPTUAL AND METHODOLOGICAL CHALLENGES.

An Interdisciplinary Late-Summer School

Convened by COME (Research Group Cultures of Mobility in Europe) and ANTHROMOB - https://www.easaonline.org/networks/anthromob/ (EASA Anthropology and Mobility Network)

Anna Lipphardt (Freiburg); Jamie Coates (Waseda/Sheffield) and Roger Norum (Leeds/UCL)

Funded by Volkswagen Foundation - https://www.volkswagenstiftung.de/  

Overview

The interdisciplinary field of mobility studies has produced a broad spectrum of theoretical works and structural analyses, driven by research focusing on recent innovation in transport and communication. Within that field, economic and work-related aspects of mobility, are often treated as distinct from other life practices. This late-summer school aims to contribute to the field of mobility studies with respect to two key issues: First, it will turn attention to the interplay between work and non-work (e.g. leisure, family life, well-being) spheres of life linked to mobility. Second, it focuses on the complexities of mobile work-life arrangements as they play out in the everyday lives of an ever-growing number of people worldwide, across the economic spectrum, and across diverse professional and socio-cultural fields.

The late-summer school explicitly aims to bring together people studying a range of empirical cases including (but not limited to) research across the following subjects:
- peripatetic and pastoralist groups
- transport-sector professionals
- artists, creatives, and traveling entertainers
- seasonal and project-based laborers
- academics
- lifestyle migrants.

Objectives and key questions

The late-summer school has two core objectives:
1. Providing a forum for discussing qualitative methodological approaches to mobility, including multi-sited, mobile, or trajectory ethnography; life-course and life-world analyses; and newly-emerging ICT-based methods;
2. Exploring the differing forms of knowledge production concomitant with mobile work-life arrangements, will encourage a critical reflection of the theoretical frameworks, empirical operationalizations, and political discourses that implicitly or explicitly inform much research on mobile groups. Our intention is to bring together different epistemic communities, thus fostering a comparative perspective.

Key questions which the late-summer school will address are:
- How do we develop a critical analytical position in light of the complex entanglements between the political and economic discourses on certain mobile groups, the conceptual approaches of our respective research disciplines, and the emic perspectives of the people we study?  
- What are the advantages, challenges, and limitations of different analytical models such as multi-sited ethnography, qualitative case study, life-course analysis, or phenomenology in exploring mobile work-life arrangements?
- How can we compare or generalize insights gained from qualitative studies on specific mobile fields? And how can we employ empirical research to advance theoretical stances on mobility, both within a given research area and across disciplinary divides?

The common ground for all participants will be their interest in the labor/economic aspects of the mobile empirical fields they study, their footing in qualitative social research, and a shared interest in the epistemology of Mobility Studies.

Program and working formats

The program includes keynote lectures and advanced seminars by Noel Salazar (University of Leuven), Michaela Benson (Goldsmiths University), and Huub van Baar (University of Amsterdam/Giessen University). It also comprises presentations by doctoral students, workshops on mobile methods and representational strategies, informal discussions on practical issues of mobile/multi-sited fieldwork, career and professional development sessions, a film screening, and recreational activities. The working language is English.

Who we are looking for

The program is aimed at doctoral students working on projects situated in qualitative social research focusing on issues related to mobile work-life arrangements. The common ground for all participants will be their interest in the labor/economic aspects of the mobile empirical fields they study, their footing in qualitative social research, and a shared interest in the epistemology of Mobility Studies. We welcome applications from doctoral students based in disciplines such as cultural and social anthropology, sociology, political science, social work, education, geography, and relevant interdisciplinary research fields including mobility, communication, environmental, transport, and labor studies. Doctoral students at any stage of their research – including beginners – are invited to present work in progress and to discuss central research issues with which they are currently concerned. To ensure an open and collaborative learning environment, the number of participants will be limited to a maximum of 25.

Application

Interested applicants are asked to submit the following materials to the convenors by email up until August 10, 2015:

1. Curriculum Vitae (1 page);
2. Short description of your dissertation project (1-2 pages);
3. Personal statement (1-2 pages) that answers the following:
 - Why do you wish to attend the Mobile Work-Life Arrangements Late-Summer School?
 - What specific aspects of your dissertation and fieldwork are you most interested in discussing?

Successful applicants will be notified by email by the 3rd week of August.

Travel, accommodation, venue, and funding information

There are three airports close by EuroAirport Basel-Mulhouse-Freiburg, Zurich (Switzerland) and Frankfurt are Main. And since Freiburg lies within the network of the European railway system and along the highly frequented ICE (Intercity-Express) line between Frankfurt am Main, Basel, and Zurich (Switzerland), it is readily accessible by rail from all directions – 40 minutes from Basel; 2.5 hours from Frankfurt am Main, 2 hours from Zurich.
For train connections, please check www.bahn.de. Please make sure you book your ticket to "Freiburg im Breisgau - Germany" since there is another (very small) Freiburg in the north of Germany and one in Switzerland.
The summer school will cover up to 150,- Euro travel expenses per PhD-Student from Germany, up to 300.- Euro for international PhD-students and up to 800,- Euro for those who come from overseas.
Ph.D. students from emerging countries and from countries affected by the economic crisis may apply for full funding.

Accommodation

Board and lodging will be covered by the Summer School. Doctoral students will be staying in double rooms at the Hotel Schiller, a beautiful landmarked building just 2 minutes from the old town and the city center. The workshop venue is a nice 10-minutes walk from there.
Presenters and senior scholars will lodge in single rooms at the Hotel Kaiser, Günterstalstraße 38, around the corner from the Liefmannhaus.
The university catering service will take care of lunch and dinner, coffee and fruit will be at hand for our coffee breaks.
Please let us know in advance of any specific dietary requirements.

Venue

The workshop venue Liefmannhaus - https://www.io.uni-freiburg.de/downloads/gaestehaeuser/liefmann.pdf is conveniently located at Goethestraße 33 within the popular neighborhood Wiehre and within walking distance from downtown Freiburg.

Contact

Marion Villalobos
Research Group Cultures of Mobility in Europe (COME)
Institute for Cultural Anthropology/Folkloristics
University of Freiburg
Maximilianstrasse 15
D-79100 Freiburg
Germany
Phone: +49 (0) 761-203-9 76 98
Email: info@mobworklife.net

This opportunity has expired. It was originally published here:

http://www.come.uni-freiburg.de/summer-school

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Eligible Countries

International

Host Countries

Germany