Here at our sunset gates shall stand a mighty woman with a torch… Mother of Exiles. From her beacon-hand glows world-wide welcome—Emma Lazarus, 1883
On International Women’s Day 2016, during Women’s History Month, please join us for a dialogue about the refugee crisis.
What does gender look like at the borders? What is the politics of refugee women's integration? What impact do our current human rights laws have on women refugees and asylum seekers? How do we stereotype refugee women? More than half a million of Syria’s refugees are thought to be pregnant, and many women make the dangerous passage to Europe alone or with young children: what physical and psychological challenges do they face on their journey? What do they face when they arrive in cities such as Nottingham? What should a new refugee advocacy look like?
Debating these issues are gender and migration specialist Dr. Leah Bassel (University of Leicester), media and migration expert Dr. Olga Bailey (Nottingham Trent University), human rights and asylum specialist Dr. Helen O’Nions (Nottingham Trent University), and Victoria Mponda and Edith Luck-Weh from the Women’s Culture Exchange (Nottingham & Nottinghamshire Refugee Forum) which works with women refugees and asylum seekers. Dr. Hannah Durkin (University of Nottingham) is chairing the discussion.
Wine and dessert reception to follow.
Free, open to all, but please register.
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Hosted by:
The Rights and Justice Research Priority Area (University of Nottingham)
The Centre for Conflict, Rights and Justice (Nottingham Trent University)
The Centre for Research in Race and Rights (University of Nottingham)