The session aims to address the profound transformations in migration dynamics and governance in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, escalating geopolitical conflicts, and intensified migration controls worldwide. These uncertain times have disrupted traditional migration patterns while also deepening the complexities of migrant trajectories, reshaping governance frameworks, and amplifying public debates around migration. The session seeks to unpack these intertwined processes by examining how intersecting drivers—ranging from economic inequalities and climate change to political instability—are reshaping global mobility.
-
1:00 PM
The Incompleteness of Citizenship, New Carceral Regimes, and Gendered Refugees from Türkiye in Canada
Ebru Ustundag, Brock University -
1:15 PM
Access to and Usage of Services Among Francophone Immigrants Across Ontario: Examining the Role of Language Practices in Settlement
Shannon Leitch, University of Ottawa -
1:30 PM
A Transnational Approach to Iranian Diaspora Networks in Toronto: Negotiating Belonging and Identity
Negar, University of Ottawa -
1:45 PM
« Il faut qu'on les garde francophones » : Comment les organismes francophones en Ontario négocient l’agentivité des immigrants
Jasmine Bégin Marchand, University of Toronto (OISE)