Transnational Families, Farms and Firms: Migrant Entrepreneurs in Kosovo and Serbia Since the 1960s
Project managers: Ulf Brunnbauer (IOS), Carolin Leutloff-Grandits (Viadrina University), Judith Möllers (IAMO)
Project researchers: Janine Pinkow-Läpple (IAMO, PhD student), Sara Žerić (IOS, PhD student), Tom Dufhues (IAMO)
Cooperation partners: IOS, Leibniz Institute of Agricultural Development in Transition Economies (IAMO), Halle/Saale, European University Viadrina, Frankfurt/Oder
Project duration: 07/2022–06/2025
Funding: Leibniz Association (Collaborative Excellence Program)
Few places in Europe are shaped so consistently by migration like the former Yugoslavia. Zooming in on Serbia and Kosovo, our project explores socio-economic effects of emigration and return migration on local communities within their broader socio-political context. Focusing on entrepreneurial activities, we suggest an intersectional approach, relating migrant agency to social status, state policies, family and kinship, gender, and value orientations. Our approach is multidisciplinary, non-normative, context-sensitive, and actor-centered: which economic strategies do (did) migrants, and their families, develop by exploiting the multi-faceted resources gained by migration? How do they respond to government initiatives to influence their (investment) behavior, how do they relate to expert discourses? By that, we explain persistent homeland oriented migrant engagement in Serbia and Kosovo and its impact on their societies. To explore this questions we take a comparative and longue durée perspective, which allows us to analyze the impact of political ruptures on migrant behavior.
Our project makes four essential contributions to the migration-development literature:
- It de-constructs visions of “development” underpinning state efforts to channel migrant investment by exploring their ideological framings.
- It provides a comparison in time, tracing transformations in migrant behavior since the 1960s, highlighting the effects of war on migrant entrepreneurialism.
- It cuts across the rural-urban divide comparing areas with different family models and distinctive migration patterns
- It traces bottom-up the effects of entrepreneurial activities of (return) migrants.
Our joint research is based on three interrelated core components:
- The IAMO team will investigate how migrants’ remittances and return shapes livelihood strategies in rural communities, and IAMO will conduct a survey in Kosovo and Serbia.
- The IOS team explores so-called gastarbeiter factories in the socialist period and their fate afterwards, and deconstructs expert discourses on the migration-development nexus.
- The team at the European University Viadrina focusses on entrepreneurial activities of trans- and return migrants in urban environments, comparing cases from Serbia and Kosovo.
We will utilize a broad range of sources, including our own ethnographical and household survey data, census data, archival documents, newspapers, as well as policy and legal documents. The variety of data used for research reflects our multi-disciplinary approach, which brings together social history, agrarian economics, political science, and social anthropology. Such a project design allows to achieve multi-layered and multi-perspective analyses.
The project cooperates with specialist organizations in its field: the Center for Economic History in Belgrade, the Riinvest think tank in Prishtina, the German Association for International Cooperation (GIZ) and the FAO regional office in Budapest. The partners will also help to achieve the outreach and policy analysis goals of the project. A final workshop, planned in Prishtina in 2025, will summarize and publicize our research findings and put them into comparative contexts.
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