Metropolitan Washington Workshop on Immigration & Race
Metropolitan Washington Workshop on Immigration & Race
The Metropolitan Washington Workshop on Immigration & Race (MWWI&R) is a network of scholars dedicated to conducting research and advancing understanding of immigrant networks, social and economic integration, immigrant entrepreneurship, and challenges of exclusion and resentment among native-born populations in one of the top five destinations for newcomers in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area.
- History
MWWI&R was first conceived by Dr. Katharine Donato and Dr. Marie Price and began in Spring 2019 at the Institute for the Study of International Migration at Georgetown University with the intent to rotate across universities in the metropolitan DC area from year to year.
During the 2019 - 2020 academic year, thanks to funding provided by The George Washington University Seminars Funding Program, MWWI&R brought together scholars from universities and think tanks to conduct seminars at the George Washington University with the goal to foster collaboration that leads to sponsored research, increased data sharing and the framing of questions around how metropolitan areas respond, benefit and adapt to racial, ethnic and demographic shifts in population brought on by large scale immigration.
Save the Date
- Friday, September 27
- Friday, October 11
- Friday, November 15
Upcoming Seminars
- Past Seminars
MWWI&R: African 'Immigrants' in Early America?: Early African Migration to the United States
Speaker: Nemata Blyden, PhD. Associate Professor of History and International Affairs ,The George Washington University
Friday, 10/18/2019, 12:00pm - 7:59pm
Nemata Blyden spoke about her book African Americans and Africa: A New History (Yale University Press).
MWWI&R: Race, Class, and Politics in the Capuccino City
Derek Hyra, Ph.D., Associate Professor Public Administration and Policy American University
Friday, 9/20/2019, 12:00pm - 7:59pm
Derek Hyra spoke about his new book Race, Class, and Politics in the Cappuccino City. At the core of the book is the phrase “cappuccino city.”