Colloquium: Prof. David Kaufmann
Tuesday, 6th October 2020, at 17.15 - 18.30
Online (Zoom)
https://zoom.us/j/92021668012
Meeting ID: 920 2166 8012
Sanctuary Cities in Europe? Urban Policies in Support of Irregular Migrants in Europe
Irregular migrants tend to live in dense urban settings. As a consequence, cities worldwide develop a variety of urban policies in support of irregular migrants. By doing so, cities intervene in a policy-making realm that is commonly perceived as the prerogative of national states. Given the US phenomenon of sanctuary cities, the study of these policies has been rather US-centric so far.
In this talk, Prof. David Kaufmann gives a conceptual overview over different urban policies in support of irregular migrants and he presents empirical insights from a policy survey of the biggest 95 European cities (all European cities with over 350’000 inhabitants) and of two case studies (Geneva: Operation Papyrus and Zürich: Züri City Card). A high policy diversity in European cities was found. These urban policies are products of complex policy formulation processes in which institutional opportunities and constraints as well as the political agency of a diverse set of actors account for often rather idiosyncratic policies. More theoretically, this research shows that the city can be the space to challenge exclusion perpetrated at the level of the national state.
About Prof. David Kaufmann
David Kaufmann is Assistant Professor of Spatial Development and Urban Policy at ETH Zürich and the Deputy Director of the Institute for Spatial and Landscape Development. His research examines the intersections of public policy, urban politics, spatial planning and migration studies.
David Kaufmann studied political science at the University of Zürich and the University of Lund. He obtained his Ph.D. from the University of Bern in December 2016. He was a guest researcher at University of Toronto, Leiden University, Virginia Tech, and University of Ottawa.
David Kaufmann received the 2018 Carl-Goerdeler-Preis for the best Ph.D. thesis about local politics or local administration in business and social sciences in German-speaking countries, the 2020 Clarence Stone Scholar Award as well as the 2017 Susan Clarke Young Scholar Award awarded by the American Political Science Association section "Urban and Local Politics" and the Best Comparative Policy Paper Award (together with Prof. Dr. Fritz Sager) awarded by the journal JCPA and the "International Political Science Association Research Committee on Comparative Studies on Local Governments and Politics".
- You can read a summary of the colloquium talk on our Reports webpage.
- You can download the presentation of the talk protected page here (accessible only by ETH members).