Homing - The Home-Migration Nexus

Homing - The Home-Migration Nexus Page run by the Homing team (based at University of Trento) in the framework of the research project

Paolo Boccagni will participate in the workshop "Theorizing transience: Temporary migrations in the Middle-East and the ...
17/11/2025

Paolo Boccagni will participate in the workshop "Theorizing transience: Temporary migrations in the Middle-East and the Pacific" convened by Anju Paul, Laure Assaf and Brenda Yeoh at NYU Abu Dhabi (19-21 November). Paolo's presentation will be on "Theorizing home in transience: Commonalities and dilemmas in place attachment and appropriation across temporary mobilities".

Paolo Boccagni will participate in the workshop “Theorizing transience: Temporary migrations in the Middle-East and the Pacific” convened by Anju Paul, Laure Assaf and Brenda …

“UNDOING NOTHING” AND APPROACHING QUESTIONS OF “HOME” IN REFUGEE STUDIESOn 6 November, at 12pm local time, Paolo Boccagn...
05/11/2025

“UNDOING NOTHING” AND APPROACHING QUESTIONS OF “HOME” IN REFUGEE STUDIES

On 6 November, at 12pm local time, Paolo Boccagni will give a guest lecture at McGill University, in the ISID Series, convened by the McGill Refugee Research Group.

Paolo Boccagni (University of Trento) Undoing nothing: Waiting for asylum, struggling for relevance

This lecture unpacks the complex ways in which "home" matters for refugee studies, as well as for those who go through forced displacement. It draws on the recent book Undoing Nothing, in conversation with a burgeoning literature on refugee biographical and housing pathways, but also on the political, emotional and moral repertoires associated with home in representing them. Whether home is assumed as a concept, a place, or an object of memories, aspirations and struggles, it provides a powerful analytical prism into any form of dwelling, including those that fall below any standard of decent housing, or of mainstream domesticity. The asylum center in which fieldwork was undertaken for this project is a case in point - a non-home environment, in which the significance and ambivalence of home can be appreciated in descriptive, discursive, practical, reflexive and existential ways. This ultimately shows the promise of approaching home as a processual endeavour that conflates different agendas and interests, both as a category of analysis and of practice

On 6 November, at 12pm local time, Paolo Boccagni will give a guest lecture at McGill University, in the ISID Series, convened by the McGill Refugee Research Group. See the titl…

HOMING @ CARLETON UNIVERSITY: ‘WEARING SEDENTARINESS, DREAMING OF MOBILITY. SLIPPERS, SNEAKERS AND THE TENSION BETWEEN S...
03/11/2025

HOMING @ CARLETON UNIVERSITY: ‘WEARING SEDENTARINESS, DREAMING OF MOBILITY. SLIPPERS, SNEAKERS AND THE TENSION BETWEEN SURVIVAL AND SUCCESS IN A PLACE FOR ASYLUM SEEKERS’

On 3 November, at 12pm local time, Paolo Boccagni will give a lecture at the University of Ottawa, as a part of the Migration and Diaspora Studies group activities. The lecture revisits, and elaborates upon, some aspects of the recently published monograph Undoing Nothing. See more details below…

Wearing sedentariness, Dreaming of mobility. Slippers, sneakers, and the tension between survival and success in a place for asylum seekers Paolo Boccagni (University of Trento)

In the Italian asylum center in which I did fieldwork between 2018 and 2022 (Undoing Nothing, University of California Press, 2025), certain objects and belongings are more than background affordances. Once properly contextualized, they are silently telling about the concerns, dreams and nightmares of the young male residents, as they struggle with social, legal and existential suspension. This especially holds for two unremarkable pairs of objects that are literally embodied in their routines. On one hand, the slippers residents wear in the centre, as a part of an informal and almost careless dressing code, might evoke imaginaries of comfort and mastery over place. In fact, they articulate a sense of unwanted sedentariness – of “being home” with “nothing to do”, as people complain, instead of pursuing the new masculine life of advancement, based on an ethics of sacrifice and dedication, that migration should afford. Parallel to slippers, and far less in use, are the sneakers on their room shelves. Their number and visibility is as remarkable as the way in which they are cleaned and taken care of, much more than the surrounding room space. While raising occasional curiosity and weird doubts among the staff, to my eyes as habitual guest these sneakers evoke advancement, modernity, success – or rather, a failure to achieve much of this, and a persistent aspiration toward it. As of now, most sneakers lie there, still and unused – like their owners, in a way, as long as they keep waiting for a decision on their cases. Nonetheless, by virtue of their presence, and of the gendered and generational imaginaries they elicit, sneakers keep “telling” about the possibility to literally run into the future, as young and athletic men who take care of their outfits and bodies would aspire to do. To that extent, their effective use matters less than their symbolic power – and, for a researcher, their heuristic one. Based on the parallel lives of these ordinary objects in extraordinary circumstances, my lecture shows the potential of material culture as an opening into marginalized and silenced stories of migration and displacement. It also unpacks the tension between use and taste/desire, at a subjective level, as much as between ideals of existential mobility and realities of protracted stasis, at an inter-subjective one.

On 3 November, at 12pm local time, Paolo Boccagni will give a lecture at the University of Ottawa, as a part of the Migration and Diaspora Studies group activities. The lecture revisits, and elabor…

NEW ARTICLE: ‘SOMATIC AGENCY AND THE SENSORY CONSTRUCTION OF FAMILIARITY AMONG ECUADORIAN MIGRANTS IN THE NETHERLANDS’ (...
14/10/2025

NEW ARTICLE: ‘SOMATIC AGENCY AND THE SENSORY CONSTRUCTION OF FAMILIARITY AMONG ECUADORIAN MIGRANTS IN THE NETHERLANDS’ (BY A. MIRANDA-NIETO & E. GUBRIUM, ‘ETHNIC AND RACIAL STUDIES’, 2025)

Former Hominger Alejandro Miranda-Nieto, now at Oslo Met University, has just published (together with E. Gubrium) an OA article in Ethnic and Racial Studies. The paper draws on Alejandro’s HOMInG fieldwork in the Netherlands, and on his ongoing conceptualization of home, familiarity, social practices, and the senses. See the abstract below.

Miranda-Nieto, A., & Gubrium, E. (2025). Somatic agency and the sensory construction of familiarity among Ecuadorian migrants in the Netherlands. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 1–17. https://doi.org/10.1080/01419870.2025.2562656

This article examines how embodied, multisensory interactions influence migrants’ experiences of familiarity, proposing that familiarity is not just cognitive or emotional but a socio-embodied phenomenon integrating bodily sensations with social practices. Building on studies that show how social practices like food, music and rituals foster belonging among migrants, we argue that sensory engagement is fundamental to the formation of familiarity. Through ethnographic research focusing on an Ecuadorian migrant in the Netherlands, we introduce the concept of “somatic agency” – the proactive and intentional use of sensory engagement to reshape one’s environment and cultivate familiarity. By actively engaging in cultural practices, creating familiar sensory cues and building social bonds, migrants exercise agency over their surroundings. We emphasise the dynamic interplay between familiarisation, defamiliarization and somatic agency in migrant experiences, suggesting that sensory engagement is crucial for migrants as they navigate and adapt to new environments. In doing so, the article contributes to debates on migrant belonging by demonstrating that bodily practices and sensory engagement are resources for negotiating familiarity. It also emphasises the methodological relevance of attending to sensory dimensions, which reveal the entanglement of the intimate and the political in everyday life.

This article examines how embodied, multisensory interactions influence migrants’ experiences of familiarity, proposing that familiarity is not just cognitive or emotional but a socio-embodied phen...

Next 9 October at 12, in the MPC Seminar Series (EUI - Robert Schumann Centre), Paolo Boccagni will present his new book...
06/10/2025

Next 9 October at 12, in the MPC Seminar Series (EUI - Robert Schumann Centre), Paolo Boccagni will present his new book Undoing Nothing: Waiting for Asylum, Struggling for Relevance (University of California Press, OA, 2025). The seminar, in presence and online, is convened by Martin Ruhs and Andrew Geddes, and chaired by Lorenzo Piccoli. See the description below.

In this MPC Seminar, Professor Paolo Boccagni will discuss his book, 'Undoing Nothing', which explores the often overlooked struggles of Italian asylum seekers. What does everyday life look like for young men who flee to Europe, survive, and are then assigned temporary housing? Hypersurveillance or parallel normality, irrelevance, or even nothingness? Based on four years of ethnographic research, Undoing Nothing recounts the untold story of Italian asylum seekers' struggles to produce relevance—that is, to carve out meaning, control, and direction from their legal and existential liminality. Their ways of inhabiting space and time rest on a deeply ambivalent position: together and alone, inside and outside, absent and present. Their racialised bodies dwell in their assigned residence while their selves inhabit a suspended translocal space of moral economies, nightmares, and furtive dreams. Drawing from his book, Paolo Boccagni (Professor of Sociology at the University of Trento) will explore different angles of Italian asylum seekers' experiences: a critique of state responses to the so-called refugee crisis and nuanced psychological portraits of a demographic rarely afforded narrative depth. This book is open access and can be downloaded for free on the University of California Press' website.

Next 9 October at 12, in the MPC Seminar Series (EUI – Robert Schumann Centre), Paolo Boccagni will present his new book Undoing Nothing: Waiting for Asylum, Struggli…

Former Hominger Luis Eduardo Pérez Murcia has just published A long journey home, a major contribution to the study of h...
15/09/2025

Former Hominger Luis Eduardo Pérez Murcia has just published A long journey home, a major contribution to the study of home, and to the quest and the struggle for it, after forced displacement.

Former Hominger Luis Eduardo Pérez Murcia has just published A long journey home, a major contribution to the study of home, and to the quest and the struggle for it, after forced di…

Within the final workshop of the PRIN WELL-MIG project, Paolo Boccagni will give an invited lecture on “Beyond the here-...
08/09/2025

Within the final workshop of the PRIN WELL-MIG project, Paolo Boccagni will give an invited lecture on “Beyond the here-now: Interrogating the temporal, spatial and relational scales of well-being in migration“. The Istituto di ricerche sulla popolazione e le politiche sociali - CNR workshop, on “Migration and subjective well-being in Italy and Europe“, will take place on 16 September in Rome. The following day, again hosted by CNR-IRPPS, he will present and discuss “Vite Ferme” together with Angela Paparusso, Aurora Massa and Stefano Degli Uberti. Both events will be accessible online.

Within the final workshop of the PRIN WELL-MIG project, Paolo Boccagni will give an invited lecture on “Beyond the here-now: Interrogating the temporal, spatial and relational scales of well-…

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