Futures of Difference

How Migration Reshapes Diversity — Dan Hiebert

1 h 6 min · 26 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio How Migration Reshapes Diversity — Dan Hiebert

Descripción

How is migration reshaping ethnic diversity worldwide — and what do demographic shifts mean for social categories? Dan Hiebert explains. In this episode, Steven Vertovec and Georg Diez discuss migration and identity with geographer Dan Hiebert (University of British Columbia). They explore how aging populations, labor market needs, and media narratives shape migration dynamics — and how demographic diversity is transforming social categories across Western societies and the Global South. Dan Hiebert is one of Canada's leading scholars on migration, multiculturalism, and urban diversity. His research examines how migration reshapes cities, labor markets, and social structures. Futures of Difference is a research-based video podcast by the Max Planck Institute for Political and Social Science (formerly the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity) that explores how social categories are being challenged, contested, and transformed. --- Listen & watch: youtube.com/@FuturesOfDifference Essays & more: futuresofdifference.substack.com Produced by the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity mmg.mpg.de

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6 episodios

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What is essentialism — and how does intersectionality challenge it? Ann Phoenix (UCL) explores social complexity and the future of difference. In this final episode, Steven Vertovec and Georg Diez discuss essentialism, intersectionality, and the psychosocial approach to identity with Ann Phoenix (University College London). They examine how simplified thinking about social categories — groupism, culturalism, racialization — does harm, and how intersectional, multiple identities point toward a more complex and tolerant future. Ann Phoenix is a renowned scholar in social psychology and sociology. Her psychosocial approach examines how people internalize social categories, construct identities, and navigate power relations in everyday life. Futures of Difference is a research-based video podcast by the Max Planck Institute for Political and Social Science (formerly the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity) that explores how social categories are being challenged, contested, and transformed. --- Listen & watch: youtube.com/@FuturesOfDifference Essays & more: futuresofdifference.substack.com Produced by the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity mmg.mpg.de

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episode Mixity and How Social Categories Change — Miri Song artwork

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How are mixed identities changing social categories — and what does the fastest-growing demographic mean for human diversity? Miri Song explains. In this episode, Steven Vertovec and Georg Diez explore the concept of mixity with sociologist Miri Song (University of Kent / LSE). They discuss how the dynamics of assertion and assignment shape identity, why the fiction of monoracial thinking persists, and how mixed identities open up new possibilities for understanding social categories. Key themes include the 2020 US Census finding that "mixed" is the fastest-growing social category, how people navigate multiple ethnic and racial identities, and what examples of social categories look like in a world of increasing mixity. Futures of Difference is a research-based video podcast by the Max Planck Institute for Political and Social Science (formerly the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity) that explores how social categories are being challenged, contested, and transformed. --- Listen & watch: youtube.com/@FuturesOfDifference Essays & more: futuresofdifference.substack.com Produced by the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity mmg.mpg.de

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How do colonial legacies still shape social categories today — and what does Singapore's model mean for the future? Junjia Ye explains. In this episode, Steven Vertovec and Georg Diez examine how colonial pasts continue to structure present-day social categories, with a focus on Singapore. Junjia Ye (Nanyang Technological University) discusses the CMIO model of racial management, the enforcement of temporary migration, cosmopolitanism, and how skill regimes are creating new forms of social difference. Key themes include cultural diversity examples from Singapore, diversity representation beyond the West, creating belonging in multiracial societies, and the implications of enforced transience for migrant workers' rights. Futures of Difference is a research-based video podcast by the Max Planck Institute for Political and Social Science (formerly the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity) that explores how social categories are being challenged, contested, and transformed. --- Listen & watch: youtube.com/@FuturesOfDifference Essays & more: futuresofdifference.substack.com Produced by the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity mmg.mpg.de

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episode How Migration Reshapes Diversity — Dan Hiebert artwork

How Migration Reshapes Diversity — Dan Hiebert

How is migration reshaping ethnic diversity worldwide — and what do demographic shifts mean for social categories? Dan Hiebert explains. In this episode, Steven Vertovec and Georg Diez discuss migration and identity with geographer Dan Hiebert (University of British Columbia). They explore how aging populations, labor market needs, and media narratives shape migration dynamics — and how demographic diversity is transforming social categories across Western societies and the Global South. Dan Hiebert is one of Canada's leading scholars on migration, multiculturalism, and urban diversity. His research examines how migration reshapes cities, labor markets, and social structures. Futures of Difference is a research-based video podcast by the Max Planck Institute for Political and Social Science (formerly the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity) that explores how social categories are being challenged, contested, and transformed. --- Listen & watch: youtube.com/@FuturesOfDifference Essays & more: futuresofdifference.substack.com Produced by the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity mmg.mpg.de

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Social Categorization and Populism — Michèle Lamont | Ep. 1

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