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Dive into the research topics where Giulia Sinatti is active.

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Featured researches published by Giulia Sinatti.


Ethnicities | 2015

Migrants as agents of development: Diaspora engagement discourse and practice in Europe

Giulia Sinatti; Cindy Horst

This article analyses how European governments and civil society actors engage diasporas in Europe as agents for the development of their countries of origin. Through a critical examination of diaspora engagement discourse and practice in various European countries, we identify three implicit understandings. First, development is conceived of as the planned activities of Western professional development actors; second, diasporas are seen as actual communities rooted in a national ‘home’ and sharing a group identity; and third, migration is regarded as binary mobility. We argue that these interpretations are informed by notions of ethnic or national rootedness in given places and that they lead to further assumptions about why, and in pursuit of what goals, diasporas engage. We conclude that such essentialized understandings limit the potential of diaspora engagement as a means of innovating the development industry by broadening understandings of what development entails and how it can be done.


Migration, Gender and Social Justice: Perspectives on Human Security | 2014

“Masculinities and intersectionality in migration: Transnational Wolof migrants negotiating manhood and gendered family roles.”

Giulia Sinatti

Men are seldom a topic of concern in migration research as gendered subjects who experience the implications of social justice, for instance in aspects relating to lives in their families such as fairness of representation, consequences of material redistribution, and management of emotions. Economic migrants in particular, who are seen as matching the role of breadwinners and confirming the status of dominant patriarchal men, are a particularly underrated case. Using the experiences of Wolof men who emigrate from Senegal to become the main providers for their families, this chapter questions this assumption by drawing insights from a theorization on ‘transnational families’, ‘intersectionality’ and ‘masculinity’ as developed within migration and gender studies. The chapter discusses how male gender roles become interlocked with other categories, as asymmetries (be they real or perceived) intervene between the migrant and the stay-behind, and as geographic distance forces them to revisit the propriety of arrangements that enable them to enact their gendered responsibility within families. Caught between pressures deriving from their economic and moral obligations towards family and kin on the one hand, and personal aspirations of fitting the part of successful men on the other, the ethnographic research presented in this chapter shows that migrants engage in an emotional journey that may challenge, rather than confirm, their expectations of ‘hegemonic’ masculinity.


Ethnic and Racial Studies | 2015

Return migration as a win-win-win scenario? Visions of return among Senegalese migrants, the state of origin and receiving countries

Giulia Sinatti

This article explores the topic of return migration as it is understood and practised by different actors who engage with this theme, albeit from different perspectives. Return migration is paraded in policy debates as a triple-win scenario, bringing advantages to receiving states, countries of origin and migrants. Yet this article reveals how return migration is understood differently by policymakers in Senegal and Europe and by the migrants targeted by their policies. Interpretations are based on conflicting underlying assumptions of what return is, its benefits and its relation to transnational movement. Inspired by the discursive paradigm in political studies, this article utilizes interpretive tools to examine the structures that support and give meaning to understandings of return among institutional actors and migrants. It concludes that new theorization is needed to grasp the full complexity of return migration as a phenomenon that is marked by different temporalities and aspirations.


Population Space and Place | 2011

‘Mobile transmigrants’ or ‘unsettled returnees’? myth of return and permanent resettlement among Senegalese migrants

Giulia Sinatti


Transnational Ties: Cities, Migrations, and Identities | 2008

The Making of Urban Translocalities: Senegalese Migrants in Dakar and Zingonia

Giulia Sinatti


Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism | 2008

Diasporic Cosmopolitanism and Conservative Translocalism: Narratives of Nation Among Senegalese Migrants in Italy

Giulia Sinatti


Open House International | 2009

Home is where the heart abides. Migration, return and housing in Dakar, Senegal

Giulia Sinatti


EUR-ISS-GGSJ | 2010

Participation of Diasporas in Peacebuilding and Development : A Handbook for Practitioners and Policymakers

Giulia Sinatti; Cindy Horst


Archive | 2010

Participation of Diasporas in Peacebuilding and Development

Giulia Sinatti


Ethnicities | 2014

Migrants as agents of development

Giulia Sinatti; Cindy Horst

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Cindy Horst

Peace Research Institute Oslo

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Des Gasper

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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