Dear all,
Thank you very much for registering your interest with the International Conference on Development-Induced Displacement and Resettlement (22-23 March 2013, University of Oxford).
This is a gentle reminder of the call for papers, which closes on **31 October 2012.**
With the aims to revive the discussions on DIDR and to facilitate cross-communication between different stakeholders, we are calling for papers from diverse disciplines and perspectives. For further details, please find the call-for-papers below or visit: http://www.didrconference.org/root/callforpapers/index.html .
We are pleased to announce that we have so far received more than 40 abstracts from all around the world. The abstracts cover a wide range of topics from various sectors including civil society, academia and the private sector. We are hoping to receive more abstracts within this month, from which the best of papers will be selected for making this conference an influential event.
The DIDR Conference 2013 can only be meaningful with your engagement and participation. On this note, we are also pleased to inform you that our online registration is now open. For registration, please visit the "registration" page of our website at http://www.didrconference.org/root/registration/index.html .
Should you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us at [log in to unmask] .
We look forward to hearing from you and welcoming you in Oxford!
Best regards,
Irge and Narae
On behalf of the Organisation Committee
International Conference on Development-Induced Displacement and Resettlement
22-23 March 2013
Refugee Studies Centre
University of Oxford
www.didrconference.org
ATTACHMENT:
International Conference on Development-Induced Displacement and Resettlement (DIDR): Bridging Research and Practice, Filling the Knowledge Gaps
22-23 March 2013
Hosted by the Refugee Studies Centre, University of Oxford
Call for Papers
The conference invites papers that will contribute to reviving the discussions on development-induced displacement and resettlement. In view of the conference theme, “bridging research and practice, filling the knowledge gaps”, papers facilitating cross-communications between different stakeholders, disciplines and perspectives are very much welcome. As a forum for critical reflections on the current practice and policies, the conference encourages presenters to engage in discussions on the least studied aspects and unanswered questions of DIDR. How much is enough to compensate an oustee for example, or what is a successful resettlement? How do we define the affected populations in the urban? How can we “re”settle mobile populations that are not settled in the first place? Should the affected people have the right to veto the projects?
For further guidance, key themes of the conference are briefly described below. Papers may fall into one or more of the following categories:
Conceptual and ethical discussions
For a broader understanding and critical engagement of policy and processes, there is a need to continue conceptual and ethical discussions on development-induced displacement and resettlement. Under this theme, the conference invites papers conceptualising and theorising aspects and processes of DIDR and ethical and/or human rights perspectives on DIDR.
Policy and practice
This theme will look into strengths and weaknesses of laws and policies, impracticalities and insufficiencies, what works and what does not. Papers might explore the gaps between policy and practice, address the possibilities of having over-arching legal and policy frameworks or discuss the idea of ’success’ in the context of resettlement. Participants from international financial institutions as well as policymakers from across the world are welcome to explain their efforts and challenges in relation to their own policies.
Diverse emphases
This theme will explore the short, medium and long term consequences of DIDR from different perspectives. Taking into account different segments in the society, gender and generations, diverse socio-economic groups, political and ethnic backgrounds, it will seek to encompass reflections of displaced as well as non-displaced and host populations. Papers might examine impacts on livelihoods and living standards, social and family networks, power and relations as well as mental and physical health.
Different contexts
Displacement and resettlement are taking place in various contexts including developed and developing countries, diverse regions and geographies and amongst urban, rural, indigenous, and mobile populations. This theme will examine the unknowns of DIDR in different contexts and compare and contrast its challenges and repercussions. Case specific studies as well as papers with a broader focus at regional levels are very much welcome.
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