1st Edition

Boundaries of European Social Citizenship EU Citizens’ Transnational Social Security in Regulations, Discourses and Experiences

232 Pages
by Routledge

230 Pages
by Routledge

230 Pages
by Routledge

This edited collection contributes to studies of intra-EU migration and mobility, welfare, and European social citizenship by focusing on transnational labour movements from new to the old EU member states (Hungary–Austria, Bulgaria–Germany, Poland–UK and Estonia–Sweden). The volume provides a comparative analysis of formal organization and mobile individuals’ use of European social security... Read more

1. European Welfare Between Complex Regulatory Frameworks and Mobile Europeans’ Experiences of Social (In)Security

Anna Amelina (University of Technology Cottbus-Senftenberg)

2. Theorizing European Social Citizenship: Governance, Discourses, and Experiences of Transnational Social Security

Anna Amelina (University of Technology Cottbus-Senftenberg)

3. Beyond the Rights-Bearing EU Mobile Citizen: Governing Inequality and Privilege in European Union Social Security

Emma Carmel (University of Bath), Bozena Sojka (University of Wolverhampton), Kinga Papiez (University of Oxford)

4. Discourses of Belonging in the Context of EU Enlargements: A Comparative Analysis of Policy Discourses Specifying EU Welfare Access

Ann Runfors and Florence Fröhlig (Södertörn University)

5. Navigating the Labyrinths of Transnational Social Security: Experiences and Meaning-Making Processes of EU Migrants When Accessing and Porting Social Rights

Elisabeth Scheibelhofer (University of Vienna), Nora Regös (German University of Administrative Sciences Speyer) and Clara Holzinger (University of Vienna)

6. When Vicinity Divides: Transnational Social Security in the Cross-Border region of Hungary and Austria

Nóra Regös (German University of Administrative Sciences Speyer), Clara Holzinger (University of Vienna) and Elisabeth Scheibelhofer (University of Vienna)

7. From Subordination to Empowerment? Mobile Europeans’ Access to and Portability of Social Security Rights Between Bulgaria and Germany

Jana Fingarova and Anna Amelina (University of Technology Cottbus-Senftenberg)

8. Inequalities, Insecurities, and Informalities: Making Sense of Migrants’ Experiences of Social Security Between Poland and the UK

Bozena Sojka (University of Wolverhampton), Kinga Papiez (University of Oxford) and Emma Carmel (University of Bath)

9. Business Contract Meets Social Contract: Estonians in Sweden and Their Transnational Welfare Opportunities

Florence Fröhlig (Södertörn University), Maarja Saar (University of Bristol) and Ann Runfors (Södertörn University)

10. Labyrinths of European Social Citizenship: Variations in and Levels of Comparison

Anna Amelina (University of Technology Cottbus-Senftenberg) Emma Carmel (University of Bath), Ann Runfors (Södertörn University), and Elisabeth Scheibelhofer (University of Vienna)

Biography

Anna Amelina is a Professor for Intercultural Studies at Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus-Senftenberg and UNESCO Chair for Heritage Studies. Her research areas are transnational migration studies, cultural sociology, gender and intersectionality, cross-border social inequalities, and European studies. Her recent publication is Gender and Migration: Transnational and Intersectional Prospects (with Helma Lutz, Routledge 2019).





Emma Carmel investigates how social and political order is imagined, produced, and contested in a range of empirical contexts. Her recent empirical work has been on EU and UK migration governance, and her latest book is Governance Analysis. Critical Enquiry at the Intersection of Politics, Policy and Society (Edward Elgar 2019).



Ann Runfors is an ethnologist and holds the position of Associate Professor at the School of Historical and Contemporary Studies at Södertörn University, Stockholm, Sweden. Her fields of research are migration, education, welfare, transnationalism, youth, and ethnographic approaches. Her recent publication is Welfare Negotiations among Estonians Working in Sweden. Experiences, Barriers and Narrated Coping Strategies (with Maarja Saar and Florence Fröhlig, working paper, University of Södertörn 2018).



Elisabeth Scheibelhofer is an Associate Professor in Sociology at University of Vienna, working on migration and qualitative methods. Her recent publication is Shifting Aspirations in Migratory Projects. Biographic Reconstructions in the Context of a Multi-scaled Second Modernity (Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 2018).