Dear colleagues,
The McGill-Queen’s Refugee and Forced Migration Studies Series (https://www.mqup.ca/browse-books-pages-46.php?filters=a%3A1%3A%7Bi%3A2%3Bs%3A4%3A%224810%22%3B%7D&do=changeFilter) aims to advance in-depth examination of diverse forms, dimensions, and experiences of displacement, including in the context of conflict and violence, repression and persecution, and disasters and environmental change. The series explores responses to refugees, internal displacement, and other forms of forced migration to illuminate the dynamics surrounding forced migration in global, national, and local contexts, including Canada, the perspectives of displaced individuals and communities, and the connections to broader patterns of human mobility.
The series is open to researchers from fields including politics, international relations, law, anthropology, sociology, geography, and history. It seeks to highlight new and critical areas of enquiry within the field, especially conversations across disciplines and from the perspective of researchers in the global South. Through a partnership between MQUP and the SSHRC-funded Local Engagement Refugee Research Network (LERRN), resources are available to widely distribute work published in the series by a number of colleagues in the global South, both in print form and on an open-access basis.
The series editors are Megan Bradley (Associate Professor, Political Science and International Development Studies, McGill University) and James Milner (Associate Professor, Political Science, Carleton University). The series has the support of an international advisory board including Paula Banerjee (MCRG, India), Leah Basel (University of Roehampton, UK), Catherine Dauvergne (University of British Columbia, Canada), Alexandra Delano (New School, USA), Matthew Gibney (University of Oxford, UK), Sari Hanafi (American University of Beirut, Lebanon), Cindy Horst (PRIO, Norway), Jennifer Hyndman (York University, Canada), Walter Kälin (University of Bern, Switzerland), Loren Landau (University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa), Laura Madokoro (Carleton University, Canada), Jane McAdam (University of New South Wales, Australia), Delphine Nakache (University of Ottawa, Canada) and Roberto Vidal López (Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Colombia).
If you have any questions about the series, or are interested in exploring the publication of your work through the MQUP Refugee and Forced Migration Studies series, please reach out to the series editors by email ( [log in to unmask] and [log in to unmask] ). Authors may also contact Jacqueline Mason, MQUP politics and international studies editor and focal point for the MQUP Refugee and Forced Migration Studies series, at [log in to unmask]
Best wishes,
Megan Bradley and James Milner
Megan Bradley, Associate Professor
Department of Political Science
Institute for the Study of International Development
McGill University
Leacock Building, Room 539
855 Sherbrooke St. West
Montreal, Quebec
H3A 2T7, Canada
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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), Oxford Department of International Development, 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.
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