• English
  • Francais
  • Deutsch
  • Italiano
National Center of Competence in Research – The Migration-Mobility Nexus
  • Blog
  • Categories
    • What do we mean by …
    • Politics
    • Experiences
    • Good practices
    • Media
  • Blog series
  • About the blog
  • Authors
  • Home
  • Migration-Mobility Indicators

Picture 1

30.01.2024 , ((No Comments))
Inka Sayed

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Write a comment >
Click here to cancel reply.
  • Subscribe to our Blog >
  • Subscribe to our E-News >
  • Follow us on LinkedIn >
Tags
Switzerland, asylum + refugees, integration, discrimination, borders, European Union, exclusion, policy + research, law + case law, admission
labor market, human rights, civil society, irregular migration, minorities, gender, mobility, citizenship, direct democracy, COVID-19, family, Politics, education, ethics, skills, demography, Migration, Immigration, removal + detention, initiative, inequality, Border policies, federalism, statistics, solidarity, children + youth, immobility, economics, social work, social security, transnationalism, policy and research, discourse, democracy, policy+research, votes, Swiss Federal Constitution, free movement, inclusion, crisis, labour market, Immigrants, climate change, Ukraine, Knowledge production, (im)mobility, pandemic, foreign judges, Populist Radical Right, housing, international law, migration studies, reflexive migration studies, Knowledge transfer, Schweiz, racism, populism, transnational aging, ECHR, informality, 1bru1vote, migration control, labor migration, care, racialization, voting rights, mobile society, Identity, asylum, naturalization, discriminiation, Italy, refugees, Israel, regimes, history, entrepreneurship, Academic skills, future, research, governance, attitudes, UNRWA, health, Droit de vote des résidents étrangers, démocratie, cultural diversity, welfare, Constitution fédérale, asylum seekers, law, Federal Council, prejudice, Abstimmungen, national identity, urban citizenship, policy, Demokratie, Zivilgesellschaft, naturalisation, europe, ageing population, social impact, asylum+refugees, creativity, resilience, feminism, Experiments, internal migration, India, climate refugee, Member States, Youth, asylum and refugees, social justice, EU, public opinion, intersectionality, Nationalism, Portugal, Palestine, practice, SVP, legal framework, state practices, deportation + detention, democrathy, Germany, European Commission, Greece, Tourism, Diskriminierung, international mobility patterns, Coloniality, Common European Asylum System, asylum policy, Suisse, hiring discrimination, trade, selective solidarity, migration policy, expatriates, media, citoyenneté, internal displacement, journalism, EU refugee policy, systemic racism, highly skilled migrants, Italianità, stereotypes, Ausschluss, racialisation, race or racism, intersectionnalité, géographies féministes, performance, integration challenges, espace, crise, corps, Precarity, embodied methodology, power relations, art in the city, violence, emotions, pedagogy, inégalités, waiting and uncertainty, status s permit, international migration, documentaries, Urban Essential Workers, Ceuta and Melilla, Bilateralism, migration and mobility studies, impact, science communication, EU migration, Europe’s border, colonial legacy, humanitarianism, la, welfare policy, EU migration governance, ukrainian refugees, lutte sociale, Rites, Visibility, Enquête MMS, Representation, turnout, local elections, Parliament, political participation, Menschenrechte, United Nations, Politische Partizipation, Partizipation, PhD, Direkte Demokratie, Politik, Council of States, Dataset, mobilité, Hackathon, justice sociale, grassroots, Japan, Diversity, far-right, National Council, anti-feminism, xenophobia, ideology, Mentorship, nomad, Data, Gaza, Networks, Asyl + Flüchtling, Romania, Ständerat, Nationalrat, Syria, Everyday life, pushbacks, Aerial legacy, Airspace, Bilateral Migration Agreements, EU Commission, subsidiarity principle, Spain, Mediterranean Sea, Mobility Regime, Children and Youths, the Netherlands, Föderalismus, démographie, Students, securitization, Pacific islands, Palästina, Cyprus, Parlament, Vereinte Nationen, Conseil des États, geopolitics, blockade, necropolitics, Conseil National, Nations Unies, Soziale Sicherheit, Parlement, aid, Reflexivity, Politik + Forschung, Environment, EU migration policy, crises, normative political philosophy, Swiss municipalities, local politicians, Elections, Exclusions, descendants of immigrants, Mobility (to be newly created), name, admiss, children and youth, deuxième génération, mifration, European Court, Secondas, Removal and Detention, Children, Brussels, foreigners, constitutional law, Federal Tribunal, federal law, Self-Determination, Law and Case Law, perspective féministe, worry, empires, colonialisms, diaspora, decolonization, border, social policy, values, transnational, childcare, international exchanges, food aid, poverty, bureaucracy, Frauensession, Most-read blog posts, Euro, grand parenting, culture, queer theory, Bildungspolitik, Heterogenität in der Schule, Wage Gaps, Meta-Analysis, CV Whitening, résumé, housing market, well-being, LGBTQ, queer refugees, aging migrants, academia, admission; asylum + refugees; human rights; irregular migration, Misperceptions, Fact-checking, Misinformation, online classes, Displaced Refugees, Homelessness, law + case, religion, Twitter, Social Media + Crisis communication, the European Union, dublin, schengen, Informal Strategies, agriculture, urban planning, nation-state, human right, deportation, street-level bureaucracy, anthropology, representations, fiction, biodiversity loss, social cohesion
+ All tags– Only popular tags

The views and opinions expressed on the blog are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of the nccr – on the move. Our aim us that our blog bridges academic insights with societal concerns, and contributes to ongoing debate, informed by research and analysis.

Editor in Chief: Inka Sayed

  • Back to nccr-onthemove.ch >
  • Contact the blog moderator >
  • Disclaimer
  • Imprint
  • Contact
  • Newsletter
The National Centres of Competence in Research (NCCRs)
are a funding scheme of the Swiss National Science Foundation