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Call for Papers for Panel: “Youth with Migration Backgrounds and Political Engagement: Intergenerational Transmissions, Political (Re)socialization, and Inequalities”, 2026 ECPR General Conference, 8-11 September 2026, Jagiellonian University, Kraków
Panel to be included in Section S16 “Contemporary Approaches to Migration Governance and Inclusion: Policies, Actors, and Everyday Practices”
Panel Chairs: Dr. Zeynep Mentesoglu Tardivo (University of Milan) and Prof. Simona Guglielmi (University of Milan)
Discussant: Giorgio Dolci (University of Milan)
Submission deadline: 19 December 2025
Panel abstract:
Classical theories of political socialization emphasize intergenerational value continuity, yet research on immigrant families highlights possible disruptions in the standard model of political learning (Borkowska and Luthra, 2024). While foreign-born parents often face structural barriers in host societies, their children—socialized through schools, peers, and civic norms—often develop different political perspectives that diverge from those of their parents. This raises important questions about intergenerational (mis)alignment, hybrid identities, and the ways in which migrant youth negotiate belonging and citizenship. At the same time, despite the growing number of young people living outside their country of birth, their political engagement remains under-examined. Understanding how they engage with politics, activism, and everyday performative forms of citizenship is therefore crucial for debates on democratic inclusion and political equality.
Existing research identifies several micro-level mechanisms to explain variation in migrants’ political participation. In particular, three “resocialization” theories—exposure, transferability, and resilience—have been particularly influential in explaining how migrants adjust to new political environments (White et al., 2008; Voicu & Comşa, 2014). Exposure theory links adaptation to the duration and intensity of contact with the host-country political environment, whereas resilience theory stresses the enduring impact of political orientations formed prior to migration. Transferability theory adds a dynamic dimension, arguing that migrants can redeploy previously acquired political skills and knowledge in new institutional settings. To disentangle cultural from institutional effects, scholars increasingly rely on the epidemiological approach, which treats culture as portable and compares immigrants from different origins within the same host context to isolate the influence of cultural legacies on political attitudes and behavior (Polavieja, 2015).
Against this background, this panel aims to investigate migrant youth political participation across local and national levels, and through single-case and comparative designs. We invite contributions that address, but are not limited to, the following questions:
We particularly encourage submissions that draw on cross-national or longitudinal survey data, original survey experiments, and mixed-method approaches.
Submission Details
Please submit your paper proposal (title, abstract of 200–300 words and author details) through the form https://forms.gle/Tzytc6sgewujwJCA6 by Friday, 19 December 2025.
For questions or further information, please do not hesitate to contact: zeynep.mentesoglu@unimi.it