Publications

Updates on the IMISCOE Book Series

23 June 2026

IMISCOE, the world's largest network focusing on migration and diversity, is proud to have an official book series in collaboration with Springer. This collection showcases empirical and theoretical research on diverse facets of international migration. Authored by experts in the field, these publications serve as a comprehensive resource for both researchers and individuals interested in migration studies. The series, consisting of over eighty titles, is meticulously curated under the watchful eye of our IMISCOE Editorial Committee, which comprises a diverse group of renowned scholars. The internationally peer-reviewed nature of the series ensures the preservation of exceptional academic standards and high scholarly quality. Most of these invaluable resources are freely accessible to the public. Here you will find a review and recap of the latest publications.

Migration and the Politics of Integration | IMISCOE Short Reader

Authors: Karin Borevi, Ayhan Kaya

March 2026, 8105 Accesses

This open-access short reader provides an introductory yet critically analytical exploration of migration and the politics of integration. Drawing inspiration from Nira Yuval-Davis' concept of the 'politics of belonging,' we define the 'politics of integration' as various political projects aimed at constructing integration, belonging, and cohesion within different collectivities. The book explores theoretical debates, such as the cultural, civic, and local turns, governmentality, subsidiarity, nationalism, nativism, securitization of migration, ultra-politics, sub-politics, populism, nativism, multiculturalism, and interculturalism. Based on the authors' empirical research findings, the book analyzes the directions the politics of integration have taken in Europe during the neoliberal era. This era is characterized by a bipolar, Manichean view of the world, which exacerbates the divide between "us" and "them". Written in an assessable way, the book offers valuable insights for social science students at both undergraduate and postgraduate levels as well as for policymakers and practitioners grappling with the challenges posed by migration and its political dimensions.

Download the book here!

Transformative Engaged Scholarship in Migration: Toward a Co-creative, Caring, and Reflexive Migration Studies

Editors: Halleh Ghorashi, Tara Fiorito, Phoebe Kisubi Mbasalaki, Elena Ponzoni

May 2026,
9223 Accesses

This open access book centers the everyday experiences of forced and undocumented migrants in the Global North and Global South – specifically, the Netherlands, USA, and South Africa – through the prisms of engaged scholarship and co-creation as well as through transformative research processes within the field of migration studies. It goes beyond general definitions of engaged scholarship to describe how academics/researchers realized co-creation through meaningful collaboration with forced migrants in the three countries, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic. The book teases out contextual differences between the countries while connecting to broader debates on forced migration, ethics of care, complexities of engaged scholarship, and community networks and well-being as well as the politics of knowledge production on forced migration and reflexive migration studies. With its range of empirical work, this book is a great resource for students at all levels, academics in migration and refugee studies, policymakers in the three countries, and members of forced migrant communities.

Download the book here!

Translocal Lives in Times of Conflict: Understanding People’s (Im)Mobilities and (Dis)Connections under Conditions of Violence and War

Editors: Benjamin Etzold, Marie Godin

May 2026, 9223 Accesses

This open access book builds a bridge between migration and refugee studies and peace and conflict studies by examining the trans-local lives of people affected by violent conflict. Combining conceptual debates with rich insights from empirical research from across the world, 18 chapters address the question of how war and conflict shape, disrupt and transform (im)mobility trajectories and patterns of translocal living—within and across borders. The volume is complemented by an introduction that presents conceptual advances in this emerging interdisciplinary research field, two chapters summarising methodological innovations and challenges in conducting empirical studies, and a conclusion reflecting on the findings and policy implications of applying a translocal research perspective. This book will be an excellent resource for students and scholars seeking to move beyond a conventional, linear understanding of displacement, embracing instead a translocal perspective that captures the multi-sited patterns and repercussions of violence and war.

Download the book here!

Migration Governance in Central and Eastern European Cities Post-2015

Editors: Karolina Łukasiewicz, Marta Pachocka, Michał Nowosielski

Due August 2026 - Pre-order available!

This open-access book provides a thorough overview of migration trends and governance in Central and Eastern European (CEE) cities since 2015. For decades, CEE cities were primarily shaped by emigration. However, more than a decade of unprecedented change—from the 2015 European refugee reception crisis to the 2022 full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine, which triggered the largest forced displacement in Europe since World War II—has transformed the region into one of Europe’s most dynamic new immigrant destinations. This volume offers the first comprehensive account of how nine diverse CEE cities across Poland, Czechia, Hungary, and Romania are navigating this new reality. Moving beyond traditional Western-centric models, the book explores the ‘local turn’ in migration studies through the experiences of capital cities such as Warsaw, Prague, and Budapest. It also examines rapidly diversifying second-tier cities like Kraków and Brno, as well as border and shrinking cities including Lublin, Oradea, Płock, and Łomża. Readers are introduced to the innovative CEE Local Migrant Governance Index (CEELMiG), a novel tool designed to measure and compare local policies across CEE cities—capturing integration strategies, coordination mechanisms, migrant participation, research on diversity, and the funding schemes of inclusive measures. From ‘mainstreaming by accident’ to the rise of grassroots solidarity, the book highlights how local administrators, activists, and residents are bridging service gaps and redefining urban citizenship in contexts marked by crisis and illiberal pressures. Migration Governance in CEE Cities Post-2015 is essential reading for scholars and students across disciplines, as well as for policymakers, urban planners, migration practitioners, and anyone interested in how cities respond to—and shape—evolving migration dynamics in Europe.

Pre-order here!

Privilege in Migration: Mobilities, Inequalities, and the Urban Context

Editors: Hila Zaban, Franz Buhr

Due August 2026 - Pre-order available!

This open access book explores the transnational mobility of privileged migrants. The notion of ‘privilege’ has the merit of bringing to light various less-studied forms of migration, such as retirement, lifestyle, investment, amenity, elite, highly skilled and international residential mobilities. This book investigates the concept of privilege and examines its analytical reach in capturing and describing migration processes of middle- and high-income people. It advances the notion that privilege entails a critical assessment of power differentials, and that privileged migration is inherently relational, thus requiring to be contrasted to less privileged experiences of migration marked by precarity, vulnerability and a lesser choice. Throughout its 12 chapters, the volume broadens the geography of lifestyle and privileged migration, from being overly focused on North-South migration to including privileged forms of mobility emerging among the middle and elite classes from new areas of accumulation in the Global South.

Pre-order here!

Do Employers Matter? Their Impact on Labour Migration

Editors: Marek Okólski

Due August 2026 - Pre-order available!

This open access book explores employers’ interests in international labour migration, arguing that employers’ interests have consistently been a major force shaping and directing international labour migration in market economies. Employers’ interests have been underestimated in part due to the lack of an appropriate theory. This book offers a comprehensive theoretical framework for studying employers’ interests in labour migration. It does this by building on neo-institutionalist concepts, and proposing a framework for classifying institutions relevant to employers’ pursuit of their interests in this domain. Contributors utilise qualitative document analysis, political discourse analysis, and in-depth interviews with representatives of employers’ organisations and other actors knowledgeable about employers’ interests. By looking at historical events on several continents, and subsequently focusing on four European countries: the UK, Germany, Italy and Poland, this book demonstrates that employers’ interests have consistently been the reason behind international labour migration, even if they manifest themselves differently depending on the institutional environment of the particular country. This counters the dominant public narratives of today, which treat migration primarily as a security issue. By putting the spotlight on employers and offering a theoretical framework for analysing their interests and activities, this book hopes to rectify the imbalance in both academic and public discussions concerning labour migration and the forces that shape it.

Pre-order here!

In this Bulletin

#15 - IMISCOE Annual Conference in Girona and online

Welcome to the 15th edition of the IMISCOE Bulletin!

We are pleased to share the 15th edition of the IMISCOE Bulletin, released just ahead of the 23rd IMISCOE...

Editorial
Latin America: Understanding the Anti-Immigrant Turn in the Region

Over the past two decades, Latin America has undergone a profound transformation in its migratory dynamics....

A chat with
The local organizing committee of the 2026 IMISCOE Annual Conference in Girona

The 23rd IMISCOE Annual Conference is hosted by the Migratory Movements Group (Grup de Recerca sobre...

Announcement of the 2025 IMISCOE Annual Report
Reflections of IMISCOE Coordinators Daniela Vintila and Jean-Michel Lafleur on the 2025 IMISCOE Annual Report

We are delighted to inform that the 2025 IMISCOE Annual Report is now available. You can read it in full...

In the Spotlight
The Slovenian Migration Institute (SMI) at ZRC SAZU

The Slovenian Migration Institute (SMI) is part of the Research Centre of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences...

PhD Academy
Beyond the Ivory Tower: A New Horizon for PhDs’ Non-Academic Career Development

A non-academic path is a perfectly valid option after completing a PhD. Yet, throughout the doctoral...

IMISCOE Research Activities
News from IMISCOE Standing Committees

SC Arts, Culture and Migration (DIVCULT) The SC DIVCULT has recently been involved in different activities...

Voices outside Academia
Using fiction within a documentary framework in Shatila refugee camp

In 2009, when I first visited Shatila, a Palestinian refugee camp on the outskirts of Beirut, I was nineteen years...

PhD Network
Updates from IMISCOE PhD Network

The months since our last update in February have been full of activity. When the PhD Network last wrote for the...

In the Spotlight
CRASH Center for Research on Social Change and Human Mobility, Kozminski University, Warsaw

At CRASH, we study migration not only as movement but as a process of transforming skills, resources, and...

Publications
Updates on the IMISCOE Book Series

IMISCOE, the world's largest network focusing on migration and diversity, is proud to have an official book...

IMISCOE Migration Podcast
Season 6 of the IMISCOE Migration Podcast has started

The IMISCOE Migration Podcast has launched its sixth season with three new episodes that explore migration...