2019
DOI: 10.1080/01419870.2019.1599133
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Who are the transnationals? Institutional categories beyond “migrants”

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Cited by 8 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Some argue that simply using the word "migrant" at all others mobile people and reinforces methodological nationalism, or the idea that the current system of states and citizenship is a natural and objective reality (Iosifides 2017). As a corrective, many critical scholars are interested in empowering local (or bottom-up) knowledge, "decolonizing" knowledge production (Mignolo 2011;Bejarano et al 2019), and "de-migrantizing" the literature (Iosifides 2017;Tudor 2018;Talleraas 2020).…”
Section: Critical Approaches: Structural Discursive Otheringmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some argue that simply using the word "migrant" at all others mobile people and reinforces methodological nationalism, or the idea that the current system of states and citizenship is a natural and objective reality (Iosifides 2017). As a corrective, many critical scholars are interested in empowering local (or bottom-up) knowledge, "decolonizing" knowledge production (Mignolo 2011;Bejarano et al 2019), and "de-migrantizing" the literature (Iosifides 2017;Tudor 2018;Talleraas 2020).…”
Section: Critical Approaches: Structural Discursive Otheringmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research from this perspective, have focused on how the street-level bureaucrats construct categories of clients and institutional identities through their practices (Caswell et al, 2010;Cedersund, 2013;Juhila, 2007;Mäkitalo, 2003;Talleraas, 2019;Villadsen, 2003;Vitus, 2003), and hence attempt to unfold 'essential categories that take identities as fixed' (Häikiö & Hvinden, 2012, p. 77). This perspective forms an important rationale for the current study: To explore how caseworkers' categorisation of immigrant clients and how this influences the distribution of services.…”
Section: Diverging Descriptions Of the Distinctiveness Of Immigrantsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Jenkins (1994) describes how the definition of some groups into specific categories contributes to define 'members of the category in question as socially deficient or lacking in some fashion and serve to label them further as "undeserving" or "troublesome"' (Jenkins, 1994, p. 214). This is often the result of simplifications, differentiations and processing of information (Diedrich et al, 2011), that may be based on and reinforce prejudices, stereotypes and street-level bias (Talleraas, 2019). The definition of categories may be influenced by several discursive oppositions, such as culture, race, ethnicity, and citizenship (Vassenden, 2010).…”
Section: Theoretical Perspectives On Street-level Categorisationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Different types of categories thus occur in the same discursive and affective fields, albeit occupied by a varied range of actors, documents, modes of engagement and purposes. The definition of illegality or irregularity may be defined by administrators using policy definitions, but they bend to and get shaped by what public opinion thinks about irregularity, becoming tighter or looser, depending on their acceptability (also see, Talleraas 2020). Thus, these definitions influence and shape each other.…”
Section: The Limitations Of Categoriesmentioning
confidence: 99%