All by Benjamin Thomas White
We are pleased to announce the third round of seminars in our series, Doing Refugee History, supported by the Institute for Historical Research and RefugeeHistory.org. This set of seminars will explore the subject of Methods in Refugee History and will run from March to May 2022.
The purpose of this set is to explore the role of method in doing refugee history, by examining both the use of conventional research methods and the emergence of innovative new methodological approaches. We welcome contributions that discuss the relationship between methods, analysis and argument in the sub-field of refugee history.
We are pleased to announce the second round of seminars in our series, Doing Refugee History, supported by the Institute for Historical Research and RefugeeHistory.org. This series of seminars will explore the subject of Themes in Refugee History and will run from October to December 2021.
The purpose of the seminar is to explore new ways of addressing established themes in refugee history (e.g. refugee agency) and to suggest innovative thematic approaches. Scholars at all career stages are encouraged to submit paper abstracts.
Is the 1951 UN Refugee Convention eurocentric? There are plenty of reasons to think so. But we should pause before we condemn it as hopelessly outdated and eurocentric. We need a better historical understanding of how states and refugees in the global south have participated in, expanded on, and responded to the convention.