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E-raamat: Research Methodologies and Ethical Challenges in Digital Migration Studies: Caring For (Big) Data?

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This Open Access book investigates the methodological and ethical dilemmas involved when working with digital technologies and large-scale datasets in relation to ethnographic studies of digital migration practices and trajectories. Digital technologies reshape not only every phase of the migration process itself (by providing new ways to access, to share and preserve relevant information) but also the activities of other actors, from solidarity networks to border control agencies. In doing so, digital technologies create a whole new set of ethical and methodological challenges for migration studies: from data access to data interpretation, privacy protection, and research ethics more generally. 

Of specific concern are the aspects of digital migration researchers accessing digital platforms used by migrants, who are subject to precarious and insecure life circumstances, lack recognised papers and are in danger of being rejected and deported. Thus, the authors call for new modes of caring for (big) data when researching migrants’ digital practices in the configuration of migration and borders. Besides taking proper care of research participants’ privacy, autonomy, and security, this also spans carefully establishing analytically sustainable environments for the respective data sets. In doing so, the book argues that it is essential to carefully reflect on researchers’ own positioning as being part of the challenge they seek to address.

1 Caring for (Big) Data: An Introduction to Research Methodologies and Ethical Challenges in Digital Migration Studies
1(24)
Marie Sandberg
Luca Rossi
Part I Digital and Qualitative Data Dynamics
2 Migrant Digital Space: Building an Incomplete Map to Navigate Public Online Migration
25(28)
Vasiliki Makrygianni
Ahmad Kamal
Luca Rossi
Vasilis Galis
3 Contrapuntal Connectedness: Analysing Relations Between Social Media Data and Ethnography in Digital Migration Studies
53(34)
Marie Sandberg
Nina Granlykke Mollerup
Luca Rossi
4 Migration Trail: Exploring the Interplay Between Data visualisation, Cartography and Fiction
87(26)
Giacomo Toffano
Kevin Smets
5 Migration Multiple? Big Data, Knowledge Practices and the Governability of Migration
113(28)
Laura Stielike
Part II Ethical Challenges in Digital Migration Research and Beyond
6 Impossible Research? Ethical Challenges in the (Digital) Study of Deportable Populations Within the European Border Regime
141(26)
Leandros Fischer
Martin Bak Jorgensen
7 The Redundant Researcher: Fieldwork, Solidarity, and Migration
167(28)
Vasilis Galis
8 Emotional Introspection: The Politics and Challenges of Contemporary Migration Research
195(26)
Ninna Nyberg Sorensen
Part III Comments
9 On Data and Care in Migration Contexts
221(14)
Koen Leurs
10 Caring as Critical Proximity: A Call for Toolmaking in Digital Migration Studies
235(12)
Anders Munk
11 What Should We Do as Intellectual Activists? A Comment on the Ethico-political in Knowledge Production
247(12)
Anna Lundberg
Index 259
Marie Sandberg is Associate Professor in Ethnology and Director of the Centre for Advanced Migration Studies (AMIS), The SAXO Institute, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.  Luca Rossi is Associate Professor, at the IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark. Vasilis Galis is Associate Professor in the Technologies in Practice (TIP) group at the IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark.  Martin Bak Jørgensen is Associate Professor at DEMOS at the Department for Culture and Learning, Aalborg University, Denmark.