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ANTHROPOLOGY-MATTERS  December 2019

ANTHROPOLOGY-MATTERS December 2019

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Subject:

CfP Royal Anthropological Institute Conference panel - "Trajectories of refuge: protracted displacement and humanitarian responses"

From:

Tania Kaiser <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Tania Kaiser <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Tue, 17 Dec 2019 16:05:48 +0000

Content-Type:

text/plain

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Dear all,

The theme for the Royal Anthropological Institute conference from 4th to
7th June 2020 is "Anthropology and Geographies: Dialogues, Past, Present
and Future"
As an anthropologist and geographer we are co-organising a panel and
welcome papers on the theme: "Trajectories of refuge: protracted
displacement and humanitarian responses". A description of the panel is
presented below.

If you would like to join, please sign in to the conference webpage with a
title and short abstract of your proposed paper(250 words): The panel
number is AA08 and submissions are due to close on 8th Jan 2020.:
https://nomadit.co.uk/conference/rai2020#8387

Also, happy to answer any questions you may have regarding the panel, focus
etc. You can email us via the panel webpage or directly.

Hope to hear from you.
With best wishes,

Tania Kaiser and Cathrine Brun
https://www.soas.ac.uk/staff/staff31213.php
https://www.brookes.ac.uk/templates/pages/staff.aspx?uid=p0077932


RAI- conference, London: 4th to 7th June 2020
 "Anthropology and Geographies: Dialogues, Past, Present and Future"

*Panel Title: Trajectories of refuge: protracted displacement and
humanitarian responses. *

To what extent are 'humanitarian interventions' in support of the economic
security of displaced people, co-opted by dominant and ideologically driven
visions of aspiration and achievement? How free are displaced people to
identify and pursue their own livelihood and wider goals in such contexts?
Long abstract:

In the 1990s, Harrell-Bond & Voutira highlighted the contribution of
anthropology to understandings of forced migration, emphasising both its
value in elucidating subjectivities and the lived experience, and
connecting these critically to the kinds of political, policy and
humanitarian responses made to refugees. Subsequently, scholars including
George Marcus argued that geography had developed more socially and
politically relevant lines of enquiry. Today, the 'thick' description
offered by rich ethnographic accounts in combination with geographic
insights into the intersection and interaction of social action in diverse
spatial and temporal landscapes offers the prospect of analyses which
integrate the lived experiences of the displaced, the socio-economic
contexts in which they live, and the legal and political regimes to which
they are subject. To what extent are 'humanitarian interventions' in
support of the economic security of the displaced in situations of conflict
and displacement, co-opted by dominant and perhaps ideologically driven
visions of aspiration and achievement? To explore these points of departure
in this panel, we welcome contributions that explore dimensions of
livelihoods, employment and the discourse of self-reliance through
trajectories of individual and collective experiences, and in the practices
and policies of long term displacement. What kinds of economic
opportunities are available to the displaced, via their own efforts or the
efforts of institutional and other actors, and how do these interact with
their familial, educational, political and other objectives? And what can
taking a long view can tell us about the way that ideas are recycled in
humanitarian and political circles?

--

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