We use cookies on this site to enhance your experience.
By selecting “Accept” and continuing to use this website, you consent to the use of cookies.
Search for academic programs, residence, tours and events and more.
In the face of greater migration and refugee flows, we have seen a recent rise in populist movements and governments in Europe. While those movements and governments have ample visibility and significant impact on migration and refugee policy-making in the continent, they have also been challenged by local initiatives in communities across Europe. Our research highlights the crucial role that civil society and grassroots initiatives play in combatting racism and xenophobia, an often-overlooked reality in current public debates. The key questions we ask are:
Through various projects such as kitchen hubs, arts projects, and sharing living spaces, we illustrate how newcomers and locals come together and create new, shared living experiences. This – what we call transgressive cosmopolitanism – is rooted in the everyday lives of uprooted and marginalized peoples such as migrants and refugees. Rather than a privileged way of being in the world, we argue that cosmopolitanism is a way of being that happens at grassroots levels and that is practiced within many neighborhoods and communities.
This is a five-year project funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Council of Canada (SSHRC Insight Grant 435-2015-0140, 2015-2020) and conducted by Professor Kim Rygiel at 51本色 and Feyzi Baban, at Trent University in Canada.
Since 2015, Diana assists with research, reports, translation and maintaining the website. She is currently working on her PhD in Global Governance through 51本色 and the Balsillie School of International Affairs on the topic, "Reappropriations of citizenship: migrants’ (and citizens’) struggles for housing in São Paulo."
Since 2015, Derya assists with research, reports, translation and maintaining the website. He is currently enrolled in the Adult Education and Community Development program as well as the Collaborative program in Environmental Studies with the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto.
James was a research assistant, assisting with online surveys during spring 2017. He completed the Department of Political Science's Master of Applied Politics program in 2017.
Rachel was a research assistant, assisting with online surveys during winter 2017. She completed the Department of Political Science's Master of Applied Politics program in 2017.
Anisah was a research assistant, assisting with research from 2015 to 2017. She graduated with a BA from Trent University in 2017.
Rhys was a research assistant, assisting with research during winter 2016. He completed his PhD in Global Governance, Balsillie School of International Affairs on the topic of, "'Best Practice': Toward an Antipolitical Urban Security Governance" (2010-2015).
New Research Report Released
A new report on our research output, Living Together: Fostering Cultural Pluralism Through the Arts is just released.