Central and Eastern European Migration Review
@CEEMigrationRev
Publishing #openaccess and #peerreviewed research on migration within, into and out of the Central and Eastern Europe region.
Check out our new issue with 9 articles on such topics as transnationalism, Ukrainian refugees, and acculturation. As always #openaccess: ceemr.uw.edu.pl/sites/default/…

New paper: Yulia Kiselyova & Viktoriia Ivashchenko, from the V.N. Karazin Kharkiv National University, provide strong support for recognizing the process of self-identification among Ukrainian academics as a distinct and significant form of agency. Link: bit.ly/4j1zX7Y

New: Zdeněk Uherek & Veronika Beranská show the growing importance of institutional ties in the destinations for Czech diaspora: although diasporas are dispersed and their members do not communicate with each other, they are capable of joint action: bit.ly/4jhoj8P

New: Papp, Kovács, & Kováts from @css_budapest, drawing on Hungarian Diaspora Policy, describe three distinctive categories of Hungarian emigrants regarding how they undergo processes of diasporization. Link: bit.ly/4j2CE9v

New: Aigerim Yerken & Lan Anh Nguyen Luu from ELTE Eötvös Loránd University described the ‘cultural encapsulation’ phenomenon among Kazakhstani students in Hungary who started to value their own cultural identity abroad more than they did in Kazakhstan: bit.ly/41bvxn5

Three years after the full-scale Russian invasion, we stand with #Ukraine and attempt to provide both knowledge about the displacement induced by the war and give voice to Ukrainian scholars. Check out our special section devoted to this topic: ceemr.uw.edu.pl/issues/vol-12-…

Anne White from @UCLSSEES analysed how migration impacts social change in sending countries and how stayers can become persuaded to accept maternal behaviour which is contrary to traditional views on gender roles and the position of the extended family: bit.ly/3WXTvRv

In 2016, Mike Haynes & Aleksandra Galasińska from @wlv_uni, drawing on the qualitative analysis of selected comments from the gazeta.pl website, argued that workplace was key in the transmission of social remittances by Poles in the #UK: bit.ly/3WUEDUh

Only until tomorrow we are awaiting your proposals on racialisation and the intersections of migration processes with colonial/imperial histories and their afterlives. More: bit.ly/3NG8Ime

Continuing the remittances topic, we recall the 2016 paper of Karolak who argued about 4 strategies of Polish migrants in the UK, drawing on the social remittances based on their work at emigration: re-emigration, activism, adaptation and entrepreneurship: bit.ly/40O8orW
