The so-called ‘refugee crisis’ provoked a wave of solidarity movements across Europe. These movements contrasted with attitudes of rejection against refugees from almost all EU member states and a lack of coordinated and satisfactory response from the EU as an institution. The growth of the solidarity movement entails backlash of nationalized identities, while the resistance of the member states to accept refugees represents the failure of the cosmopolitan view attached to the EU. In the article, we argue that the European solidarity movement shapes a new kind of cosmopolitanism: cosmopolitanism from below, which fosters an inclusionary universalism, which is both critical and conflictual. The urban scale thus becomes the place to locally a...
In the summer of 2015, a wave of solidarity washed across the European continent as 1.3 million refu...
In this inaugural issue, CPCL reflects upon the first adjective that qualifies its title. What is th...
In this inaugural issue, CPCL reflects upon the first adjective that qualifies its title. What is th...
The so-called "refugee crisis" provoked a wave of solidarity movements across Europe. These movement...
This article sheds light on the lack of cohesion in asylum approaches between EU member states and q...
This article sheds light on the lack of cohesion in asylum approaches between EU member states and q...
In the context of the so-called refugee crisis, political disputes about solidarity become a central...
In the context of the so-called refugee crisis, political disputes about solidarity become a central...
This article sheds light on the lack of cohesion in asylum approaches between EU member states and q...
This article scrutinizes how local responses to irregular migrants vary across European cities. Exis...
In the wake of increasing migrant deaths in the Mediterranean, non-governmental organizations took t...
In the wake of increasing migrant deaths in the Mediterranean, non-governmental organizations took ...
In the summer of 2015, a wave of solidarity washed across the European continent as 1.3 million refu...
In the summer of 2015, a wave of solidarity washed across the European continent as 1.3 million refu...
In the summer of 2015, a wave of solidarity washed across the European continent as 1.3 million refu...
In the summer of 2015, a wave of solidarity washed across the European continent as 1.3 million refu...
In this inaugural issue, CPCL reflects upon the first adjective that qualifies its title. What is th...
In this inaugural issue, CPCL reflects upon the first adjective that qualifies its title. What is th...
The so-called "refugee crisis" provoked a wave of solidarity movements across Europe. These movement...
This article sheds light on the lack of cohesion in asylum approaches between EU member states and q...
This article sheds light on the lack of cohesion in asylum approaches between EU member states and q...
In the context of the so-called refugee crisis, political disputes about solidarity become a central...
In the context of the so-called refugee crisis, political disputes about solidarity become a central...
This article sheds light on the lack of cohesion in asylum approaches between EU member states and q...
This article scrutinizes how local responses to irregular migrants vary across European cities. Exis...
In the wake of increasing migrant deaths in the Mediterranean, non-governmental organizations took t...
In the wake of increasing migrant deaths in the Mediterranean, non-governmental organizations took ...
In the summer of 2015, a wave of solidarity washed across the European continent as 1.3 million refu...
In the summer of 2015, a wave of solidarity washed across the European continent as 1.3 million refu...
In the summer of 2015, a wave of solidarity washed across the European continent as 1.3 million refu...
In the summer of 2015, a wave of solidarity washed across the European continent as 1.3 million refu...
In this inaugural issue, CPCL reflects upon the first adjective that qualifies its title. What is th...
In this inaugural issue, CPCL reflects upon the first adjective that qualifies its title. What is th...