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Conference Announcement

Theme: Refugee Voices
Type: RSC International Conference
Institution: Refugee Studies Centre (RSC), University of Oxford
Location: Oxford (United Kingdom)
Date: 24.–25.3.2014

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The Refugee Studies Centre’s international conference, 24-25 March
2014, will explore the voices and aesthetic expressions of those
dispossessed, displaced and marginalised by the pre-eminence of the
nation state. The Conference will bring together scholars from across
the social sciences as well as researchers in cultural studies,
literature and the humanities, to look beyond the nation state and
international relations in order to give new attention to the voices
and aspirations of refugees, stateless persons and other forced
migrants themselves.

Among the themes to be explored are historical and cultural sources
and meanings of flight, exile and forced migration, as well as the
significance of encampment, enclosures and forced settlement.
Conference papers are sought which recognise and investigate unheard
voices of forced migrants who exhibit adaptability, resilience and
resistance in the ‘grey zones’ and borderlands between states and
state bureaucracies.

Most academic disciplines, including refugee studies, and
humanitarian practices adopt the nation-state’s perspective in their
approach to forced migrants. People must be tied to territory, and
thus humanitarian practices are frequently about re-settlement either
in the state of origin, the state of current emplacement or a third
nation-state. However, the current realities of displacement
situations do not support either current forced migration theory or
most humanitarian aid practices, and an epistemological change in
thinking about forced migrants, exiles and refugees is urgently
required.

Some of the questions which might be addressed at the Conference
include: Under what circumstances do refugees, exiles and forced
migrants leave a nation state that is collapsing? How do they cope
with existence outside the nation state? How are resilience and
resistance to the ‘bare life’ of the refugee and exile expressed
across different refugee experiences? What mechanisms and mediums are
used to express loss, perseverance and hope? How do they perceive
their futures and manipulate existing systems outside the nation
state to achieve their goals of dignity, justice and freedom (i.e.
wellbeing)? The conference intends to discuss, among others, the
following modes of expression:

Cultural expression: e.g. aesthetic expression through art, music,
literature, story-telling; contextualising our understanding of
refugee experiences.

Socio-Legal and Political expression: e.g. refugees' preferences not
to be put in camps (Syria), or their preferences for durable
solutions (e.g. when should repatriation happen for refugees from
Burma).

Methodological/Ethical expression: e.g. the crucial role that
refugees play in facilitating academic work (as translators, research
assistants – but rarely as authors/academics); explorations of
methodological concerns and research ethics such as that raised by
‘second-hand’ ethnography.

Meanings of voice: e.g. the need not only for articulation but also
for dialogue/conversation; the difference between having voice and
being heard – soliciting refugees' voices is one dimension but
genuinely listening to what those voices say is a much deeper
phenomenological process.


Contact:

Heidi El-Megrisi
Refugee Studies Centre
Department of International Development
University of Oxford
3 Mansfield Road
Oxford, OX1 3TB
United Kingdom
Tel: +44 (0)1865 281728/9
Fax: +44 (0)1865 281730
Email: rsc-confere...@qeh.ox.ac.uk
Web: http://www.rsc.ox.ac.uk/events/rsc-international-conference-2014




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