27th April 2026 

15:30–16:30 

NOTE: The lecture is held at MVS S-237 & online in Zoom (link below)

https://eu01web.zoom.us/j/65906637989

 

About: 

In this lecture, Noa K. Ha (German Centre for Integration and Migration Research, DeZIM) examines how Germany has transformed into a migration society and how questions of belonging, citizenship, and diversity are negotiated today. Tracing migration history, demographic change, and key policy reforms—such as the 2000 citizenship law—the talk explores how statistical categories shape the way populations are counted and governed. Drawing on findings from the National Discrimination and Racism Monitor (NaDiRa), it also highlights how experiences of racism often remain invisible in traditional demographic data. The lecture offers critical insights into the relationship between migration, data, citizenship, and the politics of exclusion in contemporary Germany.

Link to find out more about the institute, German Centre for Integration and Migration Research (DeZIM): https://www.dezim-institut.de/en/

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Rannsóknarstofan
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Íslenska

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English

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