Lauren Stokes, assistant professor of history at Northwestern University, will discuss migration and race in Germany on Tuesday as part of the Povolny Lecture Series in International Studies.
The address, 鈥淗arlem in Germany: Race, Migration, and the American Analogy in the Federal Republic of Germany,鈥 is open in person to the 麻豆影院 community at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday in Room 201 of Main Hall. .
Lauren Stokes
Named in honor of the late , a long-time 麻豆影院 government professor, the series promotes interest and discussion on issues of moral significance and ethical dimensions.
Stokes is a historian of modern Germany, with a particular focus on migration and race in German history. Their book, Fear of the Family: Guest Workers and Family Migration in the Federal Republic of Germany, was released in February. It provides a history of 鈥渇amily reunification,鈥 the predominant pathway for legal migration to Germany since 1973, and offers interpretations of debates about race and migration in postwar Germany.
Stokes teaches courses on modern German history, migration history, gender history, and the history of sexuality, as well as maintaining an active interest in the history of capitalism, public history, and memory studies.
With Europe experiencing a profound refugee crisis in the wake of Russia鈥檚 invasion of Ukraine, the discussion is particularly timely, said Greg Milano, visiting assistant professor of history.
鈥淭he lecture by Dr. Stokes will discuss a deeper history of European migration policy with a focus on how West Germany鈥檚 approach to migrants and refugees was shaped by U.S. social science research on race,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat includes policy makers invoking 鈥楬arlem鈥 as a racialized space used to formulate urban housing policy for Turkish migrants in Germany during the 1970s, and the impact of U.S. social science on German policies relating to child migration in the 1980s.鈥