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      Do no harm? The impact of policy on migration scholarship

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      Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space
      SAGE Publications

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          Abstract

          The mass migrations of 2015 were not merely a watershed moment for ‘EUrope’ but also for the scholarly study of migration to EUrope. With academic expertise and insights becoming much sought-after in the media and political discourse, migration scholarship has gained in unknown popularity over recent years. This current ‘migration knowledge hype’ has particularly benefited scholarship that claims to be of relevance for EUropean policymakers in finding responses to ‘migratory pressures’. This article critically interrogates the increasing intimacy between the worlds of migration scholarship and migration policy and seeks to unpack how the quest for policy-relevance has shaped the process of research itself. The impact of policy on migration research can be discerned when policy categories, assumptions, and needs constitute the bases and (conceptual) frames of research that seeks to be legible to policymakers. However, with EUropean migration policies causing devastation and undeniably harmful effects on migrant lives, what is the responsibility of researchers for the knowledge they produce and disseminate? Should the ‘do no harm’ principle prevalent in the migration discipline be expanded to also include the potentially harmful consequences resulting from research made relevant to migration policymakers? This article makes the case for an engaged scholarship that does not shy away from intervening in the contested field of migration with the intention not to fix but to amplify the epistemic and other crises of the EUropean border regime.

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          Most cited references40

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          Methodological nationalism and beyond: nation-state building, migration and the social sciences

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            More Labels, Fewer Refugees: Remaking the Refugee Label in an Era of Globalization

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              Refugees, migrants, neither, both: categorical fetishism and the politics of bounding in Europe’s ‘migration crisis’

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space
                Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space
                SAGE Publications
                2399-6544
                2399-6552
                October 23 2020
                : 239965442096556
                Affiliations
                [1 ]University of Warwick, UK
                Article
                10.1177/2399654420965567
                a96acbfc-1d25-405e-9bc5-62a3e8031bde
                © 2020

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

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