HomeResearch The Europeanisation of Everyday Life: Cross-Border Practices and Transnational Identities among EU and Third-Country Citizens (EUCROSS)
The Europeanisation of Everyday Life: Cross-Border Practices and Transnational Identities among EU and Third-Country Citizens (EUCROSS)
The Europeanisation of Everyday Life: Cross-Border Practices and
Transnational Identities among EU and Third-Country Citizens (EUCROSS)
Head researcher:
Juan Díez Medrano
Researchers linked to the project:
Fulya Apaydin; Irina Ciornei
External Contributors:
Ettore Recchi (Università degli Studi 'G. D'Annunzio' di Chieti-Pescara),
Michael Braun (GESIS-Leibniz Institut für Sozialwissenschaften), Mike Savage
(University of York), Adrian Favell (University of Aarhus), Dumitru Sandu
(Universitatea din Bucuresti)
Duration:
2011-2014
Project Summary:
The EUCROSS project examines the relationship between the
manifold activities of EU residents (nationals, mobile EU citizens, and third-country
nationals) across the borders of nation states and their collective identities.
Specifically, the project will:
1) map out individuals’ cross-border practices as an
effect of European integration and globalisation;
2) assess the impact of these practices on collective
identifications (also controlling for the inverse causal process).
Which cross-border practices are more likely to foster
some form of identification with the EU – e.g., contacts with foreign friends
and/or unwanted foreigners, periods of labour mobility abroad, buying property
abroad, business and tourist travel, or consumer relations with international
companies? Under which contextual and individual conditions do these
experiences promote a higher sensitivity to ‘Europe’
– rather than the ‘local’ or the ‘global’ – as an identity catalyst? Which
social groups are more prone to adopt a European mindset in the wake of the
Europeanisation of everyday life? To disentangle empirically the factors and
mechanisms that link together the cross-border practices facilitated by
European integration, globalisation and/or other dimensions of collective
identity, we adopt a two-stage, mixed quantitative/qualitative approach. In the
first stage, we will carry out a quantitative survey among nationals, intra-EU
movers (Romanian citizens) and third-country nationals (Turkish citizens) who reside
in six European countries (Denmark,
Germany, Italy, Romania,
Spain and the United Kingdom).
In the second stage, we will interrogate, via in-depth interviews, the meaning
given by individuals to cross-border practices, their collective
identifications, and the role that the European Union, globalisation, and the
nation play in these personal narratives, among a select typology of respondents
to the quantitative survey.