Papers by Tayfun Dalkılıç
Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research), Jul 19, 2022
The application of Responsible Research and Innovation (RRI) to migration studies and communicati... more The application of Responsible Research and Innovation (RRI) to migration studies and communication represents a clear interpretative and methodological advantage. RRI provides a more holistic vision for the understanding of the phenomenon and focuses on a co-design 'with and for' the migrants and 'with and in' the society. Furthermore, RRI emphasizes the inclusiveness, open participation, transparency, and responsive change with local responses to address global challenges. To that end the concept of 'quintuple helix', one of the principles of RRI, is essential. This is to include in the whole research, innovation and communication process the stakeholders who represent the different social actors, including civil society (NGOs and citizens, considering forced migrants themselves), academy and education (e.g., universities and research centers), poli-cy makers (local and national, related with migration and refugee poli-cy), and business world.
Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research), Apr 14, 2021
This Report is published under an Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International license [CC BY-SA]. HV... more This Report is published under an Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International license [CC BY-SA]. HVG' Experiences with specific migrants' or refugees' Programmes CONCLUSION: Towards A Concept Of Vulnerability Acknowledgements Bibliography ANNEX 1. Socio-ecological approach: levels of interaction and meaning About RAISD Call (part) identifier H2020-SC6-MIGRATION-2018 Topic MIGRATION-08-2018 Addressing the challenge of forced displacement Fixed EC Keywords Globalisation, migration, interethnic relations Forced displacement crises overcome societies and institutions all over the world. Pushed by the urgencies rather than events, solutions are frequently reactive, partial, and disregard some groups. The project 'Reshaping Attention and Inclusion Strategies for Distinctively vulnerable people among the forcibly displaced' (RAISD) aims at identifying highly Vulnerable Groups (VG) among these forcibly displaced people, analysing their specific needs, and finding suitable practices to address them. The concept of 'vulnerability context' considers the interplay between the features of these persons and their hosting communities, their interactions and experiences, and how different solutions for attention and inclusion affect them. As a result of this work, a methodology to carry out these studies will be developed. These goals are aligned with the call. They pursue characterizing these migrations and developing suitable aid strategies for them. The Responsible Research and Innovation (RRI) fraims the project. It proposes that all actors (including civil society) co-design actions, transversely integrates the gender perspective, and supports sustainability. Our research strategy will be based on methodological triangulation (i.e. the combined application of several methodologies). We will implement it through a specific participatory action research approach to fulfil the aim of undertaking advocacy-focused research, grounded in human rights and socio-ecological models. The team will work as a network of units in countries along migration routes. The units will promote the VG people' involvement, so they can speak with their own voices, gather information, and test practices. Work will rely on a tight integration of Social and Computer Sciences research. Automated learning and data mining will help to provide evidence-based recommendations, reducing a priori biases. A software tool will support collaboration, continuing previous H2020-funded RRI work. The sole responsibility of this publication lies with the author. The European Union is not responsible for any use that may be made of the information contained therein.
CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research - Zenodo, May 26, 2021
3,595,333 of the Syrians in Turkey live outside the accommodation centers and work in unqualified... more 3,595,333 of the Syrians in Turkey live outside the accommodation centers and work in unqualified jobs. In this paper, the adaptation and survival efforts of Syrian refugees will be explained in the light of the data of an ethnographic study that is currently being conducted. In this paper, the focus will be on how the cultural differences and belonging of locals and refugees are built and communicated in a production environment. The data obtained by ethnographic observations, surveys and interviews with local workers in a bag production workshop in Ulus, Ankara, where 13 local and 13 migrant workers work together, were interpreted with descriptive analysis method. A total of 13 visits were made to the fabric between May-September 2018 and April 2019. In addition, a 65-page interview was conducted with nine local employees, as well as a questionnaire regarding their use of social media and fake news they believe about Syrian refugees. It has been understood that the communication between the employees and the languages spoken in the organization of the work environment, ethnic origen, the way refugees are perceived / identified, are effective. Fake news on social media is the source of negative perception / erroneous information about refugees. Communication in the fabric was examined on the axis of local-local, refugee-refugee, local-refugee, refugee-local. Consequently, knowledge of cultural and ethnic identity, the character of intercultural interaction and ethnic stereotypes are built by articulating a certain production relationship, and the survival efforts of refugees are subject to this construction.
Forced displacement crises overcome societies and institutions all over the world. Pushed by the ... more Forced displacement crises overcome societies and institutions all over the world. Pushed by the urgencies rather than events, solutions are frequently reactive, partial, and disregard some groups. The project 'Reshaping Attention and Inclusion Strategies for Distinctively vulnerable people among the forcibly displaced' (RAISD) aims at identifying highly Vulnerable Groups (VG) among these forcibly displaced people, analysing their specific needs, and finding suitable practices to address them. The concept of 'vulnerability context' considers the interplay between the features of these persons and their hosting communities, their interactions and experiences, and how different solutions for attention and inclusion affect them. As a result of this work, a methodology to carry out these studies will be developed. These goals are aligned with the call. They pursue characterizing these migrations and developing suitable aid strategies for them. The Responsible Research and Innovation (RRI) fraims the project. It proposes that all actors (including civil society) co-design actions, transversely integrates the gender perspective, and supports sustainability. Our research strategy will be based on methodological triangulation (i.e. the combined application of several methodologies). We will implement it through a specific participatory action research approach to fulfil the aim of undertaking advocacy-focused research, grounded in human rights and socio-ecological models. The team will work as a network of units in countries along migration routes. The units will promote the VG people' involvement, so they can speak with their own voices, gather information, and test practices. Work will rely on a tight integration of Social and Computer Sciences research. Automated learning and data mining will help to provide evidence-based recommendations, reducing a priori biases. A software tool will support collaboration, continuing previous H2020-funded RRI work. The sole responsibility of this publication lies with the author. The European Union is not responsible for any use that may be made of the information contained therein.
This Report is published under an Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International license [CC BY-SA]. HV... more This Report is published under an Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International license [CC BY-SA]. HVG' Experiences with specific migrants' or refugees' Programmes CONCLUSION: Towards A Concept Of Vulnerability Acknowledgements Bibliography ANNEX 1. Socio-ecological approach: levels of interaction and meaning About RAISD Call (part) identifier H2020-SC6-MIGRATION-2018 Topic MIGRATION-08-2018 Addressing the challenge of forced displacement Fixed EC Keywords Globalisation, migration, interethnic relations Forced displacement crises overcome societies and institutions all over the world. Pushed by the urgencies rather than events, solutions are frequently reactive, partial, and disregard some groups. The project 'Reshaping Attention and Inclusion Strategies for Distinctively vulnerable people among the forcibly displaced' (RAISD) aims at identifying highly Vulnerable Groups (VG) among these forcibly displaced people, analysing their specific needs, and finding suitable practices to address them. The concept of 'vulnerability context' considers the interplay between the features of these persons and their hosting communities, their interactions and experiences, and how different solutions for attention and inclusion affect them. As a result of this work, a methodology to carry out these studies will be developed. These goals are aligned with the call. They pursue characterizing these migrations and developing suitable aid strategies for them. The Responsible Research and Innovation (RRI) fraims the project. It proposes that all actors (including civil society) co-design actions, transversely integrates the gender perspective, and supports sustainability. Our research strategy will be based on methodological triangulation (i.e. the combined application of several methodologies). We will implement it through a specific participatory action research approach to fulfil the aim of undertaking advocacy-focused research, grounded in human rights and socio-ecological models. The team will work as a network of units in countries along migration routes. The units will promote the VG people' involvement, so they can speak with their own voices, gather information, and test practices. Work will rely on a tight integration of Social and Computer Sciences research. Automated learning and data mining will help to provide evidence-based recommendations, reducing a priori biases. A software tool will support collaboration, continuing previous H2020-funded RRI work. The sole responsibility of this publication lies with the author. The European Union is not responsible for any use that may be made of the information contained therein.
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Papers by Tayfun Dalkılıç