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Dr. Shahar Shoham (BIM, HU Berlin): Social Reproduction of Sending Migration Communities: The Thailand-Israel Migration Regime in the Orbit of Isaan

06.05.2026 | 16:00 c.t. - 18:00

This talk is part of the Berlin Anthropology Seminars, which are co-organized by Claudia Liebelt (Institute for Social and Cultural Anthropology), Kai Kresse (Leibniz Zentrum Moderner Orient)and Paola Ivanov (Ethnologisches Museum Berlin). It intends to shape and cultivate an inclusive platform and open regular meeting point for exchange and discussion on current research by Berlin-based anthropologists. Please spread the word among colleagues, junior or senior, who may be interested. 
For further questions contact Carolin Gantz Vargas, c.gantz.vargas@fu-berlin.de

The events will take place in a hybrid format.

WebEx-meeting link: https://fu-berlin.webex.com/fu-berlin/j.php?MTID=m17f1ed284085e3ad247db1626ac2ca67

This lecture examines songs written by Thai migrants about their experiences working on Israeli farms, analysed in the context of the Thailand-Israel labour migration regime. The recruitment of Thais in the last four decades has been part of Israel's aim to replace, weaken and control the Palestinian workforce from the Occupied Palestinian Territories in the West Bank and Gaza and based on long-term bilateral relations between Thailand and Israel. Aiming to maintain the Jewish majority, the Israeli migration regime developed policies controlling migrant workers' lives, contributing to exploitative employment structures, continuous rights violations and social and physical isolation of migrant workers.

In capitalist, racialised, and discriminatory migration regimes, migrants' homes, as the songs articulate, are more than a physical place of origin. They encompass a multiplicity of relations, affective worlds, political gravity and power dynamics. They are spaces where responsibilities, a sense of belonging, and hopes materialize and are negotiated. Writing, performing, and listening to such songs is theorised in this lecture as a form of unwaged social reproduction labour of Thailand's rural sending migration communities in the northeast region (Isaan).

With this analysis, I expand the scope of social reproduction theory (SRT) by arguing that unwaged creative labour is a further type of social reproduction labour of sending migration communities. This labour is embedded within capitalist labour relations and is part of the latter's reproduction. Nevertheless, the creative labour and the gravity of sending migration communities into the lives of migrants offer imaginaries of future-oriented visions, potential paths of political struggles and of knowledge production. The lecture is based on more than a decade of research with sending migration communities in Isaan.

Zeit & Ort

06.05.2026 | 16:00 c.t. - 18:00

Lecture hall A
Ihnestraße 1
14195 Berlin

SFB 1171 Affective Societies
BGSMCS
Berlin Southern Theory Lecture