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Author Biography

Dr. Colette Mazzucelli is Professor (Part-Time) at NYU New York, LIU Global, and Pioneer Academics. Her biography is listed in Marquis Who's Who in the World 2016.

Dr. Anna Visvizi is Assistant Professor at Deree-The American College of Greece, and Head of Research at the Institute of East-Central Europe (IESW), Poland.

Dr. Ronald Bee is a Lecturer in American foreign relations, international security and conflict resolution at San Diego State University (SDSU) and directs the Hansen Summer Institute on Leadership and International Cooperation at the University of San Diego School of Leadership and Education Sciences.

DOI

http://dx.doi.org/10.5038/1944-0472.9.3.1545

Subject Area Keywords

Europe and EU, Political violence, Terrorism / counterterrorism

Abstract

This article discusses the disintegration paradox as set against the backdrop of the Brexit referendum and the migration crisis in Europe. In face of an apparent inability effectively to address the challenge of migration, and tested by disintegrative dynamics of which Brexit is just one example, religion has been brought back to narratives employed by societies perceived as secular. The instrumental use of religion and, as a consequence, the emergence of a migration-terrorism nexus, obscure our ability to understand and address the migration crisis as well as the subsequent disintegrative dynamics in the European Union. In this context, this article makes a case that, while the concepts of migration and the migrant have to be revisited, it is fundamental that the agency (individual and plural) of the migrant be brought into the analysis. In this way, migration can be viewed as a complex phenomenon that is a function of the postmodern and post-Westphalian reality, whereby the EU becomes a nomadic hub defined by “fluid frontiers” rather than binary divides. The migrant’s agency serves as the key to decode a complex matrix of strategies that could be employed to address the disintegrative dynamics that the current migration crisis exacerbates.

Acknowledgements

The authors express their appreciation to the Faculty Resource Network (FRN) for the opportunity given to Professor Anna Visvizi to conduct this research at NYU New York as well as to Belen Presas Mata, Bongha Lee, Ossama Ayesh, Melissa Salyk-Virk, and Negin Njn for their editorial comments and research assistance.

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