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Fronteras y Justicia

Oxford Migration Studies Society, Migration and Mobility Network, Border Criminologies y Routed Magazine organizan el Congreso de Migraciones de Oxford 2021.

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Como el año pasado, el Congreso de 2021 adopta un formato digital, con una serie de publicaciones que estarán disponibles en esta web a partir del 8 de mayo y una semana de paneles virtuales que tendrán lugar entre el 10 y el 15 de mayo.

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Invitamos a los expertos universitarios, investigadores, activistas, artistas, profesionales y otros actores a participar en esta conversación sobre los fundamentos morales de las fronteras, las nociones de exclusión e inclusión, las formas de control fronterizo y de resistencia, en un intento colectivo y colaborativo de desafiar al régimen fronterizo actual e imaginar realidades futuras.

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Inscríbete en los paneles de Zoom en https://oxfordmigrationconference2021.eventbrite.co.uk.

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[Descarga aquí el poster del Congreso de 2021]

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1. Contested and protected rights

Judith Kohlenberger -- (c) Doro Blancke.jpg

The displacement paradox: Legitimising rightlessness in the refugee regime

George Gumisiriza_TitlePic_My Loss, shared grief pic A.jpg

How private is (my) grief?

Raluca Bejan 1 - Taken by autthor - RoutedM1.jpeg

‘NGOs are sort of a dirty word here’: Refugee service provision in Greece

patrícia martuscelli.jpg

How do diplomats separate refugee families in Brazil?

2. Climate change and (im)mobility

Himani Upadhyay 1S.jpg

Why do people stay despite climate risks?

Artist-Poulami Banerjee.jpg

Climate change and (im)mobility of persons with disabilities

Richard's but better.jpg

Impossible politics: The power of climate migration models

Mrittika Bhattacharya pic.jpg

Environmental injustice & (dis)empowerment of out-migrating Bangladeshi women to India

Marina Korzenevica Figure 1.png

From fast to slow risks: Shifting vulnerabilities of flood-related migration in Lodwar, Kenya

3. Gender, sexuality and (dis)empowerment

Minjae 1 -thumbnail.jpg

The politics of representation: Cross-border marriage brokerage agencies and migrant representations in South Korea

Jennifer Maaskant – taken by author.jpg

LGBTQI+ accessibility and visibility in a Dutch asylum seeker centre

Ismail Khan.jpg

Men, migration, and emerging masculinities in the transnational sphere

Marina Garcez, actually.jpg

Searching for reproductive justice for migrants held in the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention centres

4. Advancing power of technology

Abdullah Yassen & Mirjam Twigt.jpg

Technology and refugee legal aid in Iraqi Kurdistan

Felix Akinboyewa pic.jpg

Exploring power and migration: The United States’ spatialised digital border system

Chuthaporn pic.jpg

Digital technology and migrant health communication experiences: A perspective from the Thai border

5. Navigating humanitarianism and development

Simon & Otto 1.jpg

From humanitarian aid to mutual aid: A lexicon of border struggle

Claire Lefort-Rieu.jpg

Increasing or diverting control? Refugee self-reliance, political stakes, and international aid to forcibly displaced people in Cameroon

6. Colonial legacies and decolonial futures

Dalton Price Pic 1.jpeg

Who are the privileged? Refugees, the Indigenous, and white people in La Guajira, Colombia

Caetano Santos pic.jpg

Pandemics, populist necropower, and regimes of mobility in the Global South: Haitians’ silent exodus from Brazil during the COVID-19 pandemic

English_imperialism_octopus.jpg

Migration governance as white saviourism: A colonial legacy or a post-colonial power trip?

KDimitrova FINAL experiment 2.jpg

Comics, rhythms and rhymes: Colonial borderlands and decolonial lines

Daniel Whyte, photo credit_ 'By Robert Sharp - CC BY-SA 4.0.png

Afropolitanism: Rewriting African mobility in the 21st century?

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