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Subject:

Inter-University Forced Migration Conference, Fletcher School

From:

Forced Migration List <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Forced Migration List <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Mon, 31 Jan 2005 15:43:47 +0000

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

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Forced Migration Conference ** February 11-12, 2005 ** The Fletcher School



Join us for an exciting 1 1/2 day conference exploring the linkages between

different stages of displacement for FORCED MIGRANTS.  Panel session

will cover: EDUCATION, HEALTH & NUTRITION, SECURITY, AND LIVELIHOODS.



'The Inter-University Forced Migration Conference at the Fletcher School'

"From Flight to Freedom?: Tracing the Path of Displacement"

February 11-12, 2005



http://fletcher.tufts.edu/refugeeconference/



Don’t miss this opportunity to engage in dialogue with representatives

of refugee communities, practitioners, academics, government officials,

students, and representatives of international organizations on issues

of relevance to the study of forced migration!  We are especially

honored to include the Honorable Leonard Ngaithe, The Kenyan Ambassador

to the United States.



KEYNOTE ADDRESS:    



  *** Lavinia Limón ***

  

  Lavinia Limón is the President and Chief Executive Officer of the U.S.

  Committee for Refugees and Immigrants. During the Clinton Administration, Ms.

  Limón served as the Director of the Office of Refugee Resettlement, Department

  of Health and Human Services designing and implementing programs to assist

  newly arriving refugees in achieving economic and social self-sufficiency.



  In her keynote address, Ms. Limón will be discussing how long term refugee

  wharehousing denies refugees their rights to livelihood, health, education,

  and self-determination.



REGISTRATION:



The conference is free of charge and open to all individuals interested

in forced migration issues. Please register online.



      - http://fletcher.tufts.edu/refugeeconference/



PANELIST ORGANIZATIONS INCLUDE:



• Catholic Relief Services

• Embassy of Kenya

• Famine Center, Tufts University

• Harvard School of Public Health, Harvard University

• Institute of War and Peace Studies & Program on Force Migration and

  Health, Columbia University

• International Institute of Boston

• International Rescue Committee

• Refugee Community

• Refugees International

• Refugee Livelihoods Network, a UNHCR Initiative

• Refugee Studies at AMIDSt, University of Amsterdam

• World Health Organization

• UNICEF

• UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs

• USAID

• U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants



=========================================



PANEL DESCRIPTIONS



LIVELIHOODS PANEL                              

     "Surviving or Thriving? The Challenging Pursuit of a

                  Sustainable Livelihood"



The ability to secure a sustainable livelihood is a primary concern for

persons who are forced to flee from their homes.  The livelihood

strategies employed by forced migrants as an adaptation to new

environments often impact existing social structures and concepts of

identity. In light of these issues, international organizations, aid

agencies and advocates must carefully assess how they can best assist

forced migrants in securing sustainable livelihoods.



EDUCATION PANEL

       "Who Gets to Learn What? Challenges in the Field of Forced

                       Migrant Education"



Although education is enshrined as a human right in international law,

in practice opportunities for education are often restricted in forced

migration settings. Even where education exists, it is limited and of

questionable content and utility. These inadequacies obstruct refugee

and internally displaced persons’ abilities to ensure future livelihoods

and adapt to changing environments, as well as affecting their own

perceptions of productivity and self-worth. This panel hopes to address

some of these challenges and offer potential solutions for overcoming

current limitations in the field of education for forced migrants.



SECURITY PANEL

    “Threats & Opportunities for Protecting National and Human Security”



States often look at forced population movements as a threat to their

territorial integrity and as a destabilizing factor in their political

and socio-economic order.  During the past decade, the human rights,

humanitarian and development fields have pushed for greater emphasis to

be placed on understanding the security and protection of persons in

complex situations of forced migration.  Human security, as opposed to

state security, includes the protection of an individual’s physical

safety, economic and social well-being, and the protection and promotion

of human rights and fundamental freedoms.  It is between these differing

rights, priorities, and responsibilities where the most pressing

tensions between state security and human security lie.



HEALTH & NUTRITION PANEL

         “Competing Interests in the Realization of Health Rights”



A number of refugee crises during the last two decades have forced

practitioners and academics to rethink how they approach refugee and IDP

issues relating to health and nutrition. Increased health and

nutritional needs and vulnerabilities have always defined displaced

populations, but several issues appear particularly significant to

today’s forced migrants:  HIV/AIDS, Reproductive Health, mental health,

needs of the young-adult population, and a reassessment of nutritional

needs and interventions.  However, a number of tensions still exist

within the field of health and nutrition, representing competing demands

that complicate interventions.



SPONSORS:



The Inter-University Committee on International Migration, The Institute

for Human Security, Harvard Law School Program on Negotiation, The

Feinstein International Famine Center, FIFC Livelihoods Program, International

Security Studies Program, Fletcher Office of Career Services, Ralph Bunche

Society, Human Rights Project, International Negotiation & Conflict Resolution

Club, Global Women, Fares Center for Mediterranean Studies, Tufts International

Relations Program, Refugee Roundtable

 

QUERIES:

   [log in to unmask], Logistics Coordinator





++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Note: The material contained in this communication comes to you from the

Forced Migration Discussion List which is moderated by the Refugee Studies

Centre (RSC), University of Oxford. It does not necessarily reflect the

views of the RSC or the University. If you re-print, copy, archive or

re-post this message please retain this disclaimer. Quotations or extracts

should include attribution to the original sources.



List archives are available at: http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/forced-migration.html



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