• Newsletter | 
  • Directory | 
  • RSS
Advanced search
  • Lien vers la page Statut de l'étranger
  • Enlace a la pàgina Estatuto del extranjero
:: Votre Intranet
Fondation maison des sciences de l'homme, page d'accueil
  • Page:Foundation
  • Page:Research
  • Page:Distribution
  • Page:News
  • Page:You and the FMSH
  • Collège d'études mondiales
  • Geographical Areas
  • Mobility
  • Thematics
    • Chaire ITEN
    • Archives de l'Est
    • ALIBI Workshops
    • BESS
    • Chair in Indian Economic Studies
    • Cherche-Midi
    • Cinema
    • The civilisation of bread
    • History Committee
    • Weimar Culture
    • Développement durable des villes
    • E-pathie
    • Entre-Sciences programme
    • EsCA
    • F2DS
    • GERFLINT
    • History and Epistemology of Finance
    • Innovative financing
    • IRSES
    • OIRES
    • History and Epistemology of Finance
    • Security – technology – society
    • Semiotics
    • Status of Foreigners
    • Tématice
    • Tianjin Program
    • ICT and Migrations
    • Autumn University Session
    • Vox Internet
  • Projets collaboratifs
  • Advanced Studies

You are here: Home > Research > Thematics > Status of Foreigners

  • Cliquez ici pour utiliser une taille de police normale
  • Cliquez ici pour agrandir les caractères (grande police)
  • Cliquez ici pour agrandir les caractères (très grande police)
  • Envoyer cette page par email
  • Version imprimable, nouvelle fenêtre
Research

:: Status of Foreigners

European Network for Interdisciplinary Research on the Status of Foreigners


The status of foreigners varies considerably from one society to the next.  Anthropology – which by nature has the right to analyze multiple highly contrasting models – has until now stayed outside this debate despite the fact that it feeds abundantly upon other disciplines in the social sciences (history, sociology, didactics, political science, etc.).  The present project has been in place for several years and aims at stimulating pluridisciplinary discussion by using models built by anthropology and other disciplines in the social sciences to examine the question of foreign status. 

In various societies – including Western societies – where different areas like political relations, religion, economics, etc. are distinguished, the overarching ideology is geared towards eliminating the “foreign part” of the foreigner or at least boxing it up into restricted domains.  This fact is underlying in both integration and assimilation policies and currently overlooks new ideologies that promote conserving difference and that have never been put into action.    

In other societies, which we can tentatively call those where the various domains are not distinguished and which therefore concentrate on the totality of social facts, we see the opposite.  The objective here is to preserve the foreign part of some people or certain elements even though this part tends to disappear progressively through social interactions.  Therefore, everything plays out as if this part of foreignness was needed by these societies in order to build relations that can be reproduced through time.

The Four Components of the Program


This project thus requires significant pluridisciplinary work.  It is for this reason that we collaborate with several specialists of other disciplines in the social sciences with the goal of elaborating the program presented below where each of the four components addresses the topic according to their own approaches:
1. Comparative study of the notion of foreigner:  societies that demand foreigners or foreignness.  Coordinated by André Iteanu, Stephen Headley, Cécile Barraud, Jos Platenkamp and Jarich Oosten
2. The notion of foreigner seen through the perspective of the schooling of children from minority cultures and the relations between educational institutions and these minorities by analyzing ordinary language, how it is acquired, and its actual uses.  Coordinated byAlain Pierrot
3. The status of foreigners in societies from Western and Eastern Europe belonging to or having belonged to diverse types of political units (imperial Russian, Ottoman, French, and now post-colonial powers, or small transborder or insular regions between different countries).  Coordinated by Wanda Dressler
4. Explore the polysemy and polyphony of tangible and intangible heritage and its relation with cultural and religious diversity.  Coordinated by Saphinaz-Amal Naguib

In addition, since February 2007 the network has been participating in the European Commission’s Eurosphere Program, which brings together 17 European universities and research institutes, and mobilizes the disciplines of political science, ethnology, sociology, psychology, and history in order to build a European public sphere open to diversity.  

Network Coordinators


- Cécile Barraud (CNRS)
- Wanda Dressler (CNRS, LADYSS, University of Paris 10)
- Jean-Claude Galey (EHESS)
- Stephen Headley (CNRS)
- André Iteanu (CNRS)
- Denis Monnerie (Marc Bloch University, Strasbourg)
- Saphinaz-Amal Naguib (University of Oslo)
- Jarich Oosten (University of Leyden)
- Alain Pierrot (Department of education sciences, University of Paris 5)
- Jos Platenkamp (University of Münster)

Puce

[ Animateurs ]


- Cécile Barraud (CNRS)
- Wanda Dressler (CNRS, LADYSS, université Paris 10)
- Jean-Claude Galey (EHESS)
- Stephen Headley (CNRS)
- André Iteanu (CNRS)
- Denis Monnerie (université Marc Bloch Strasbourg)
- Saphinaz-Amal Naguib (université d'Oslo)
- Jarich Oosten (université de Leyden)
- Alain Pierrot (université Paris 5)
- Jos Platenkamp (université de Münster)

 

 

  • Copyright
  • General Info
  • Accessibility
  • Site Map
  • Hosted Websites