People are on the move. Globally 281 million people are estimated to be international migrants voluntarily moving from their place of birth (IOM, 2024) and simultaneously 108.4 million people worldwide are forcibly displaced (UNHCR, 2022). While the causes and experiences of both voluntary migration and forced displacement are complex and diverse, at their heart are issues relating to unequal state formation, enduring inequality and bordering practices. Race, Refuge & Repair aims to explore the intersection of migration and racialised border practices taking Tendayi Achiume’s work on decolonial migration as its intellectual entry point to address the central question of what is owed, by whom, to Global South citizens on the move? This colloquium encourages the submission of papers that draw on insights from law, criminology, history, critical race and ethnic studies, refugee studies, and anthropology to explore and offer a new understanding of the relationships between, and the co-constitution of, colonial and postcolonial governance, international law, migration, and refugee protection.
In her ground-breaking work on migration as decolonisation, Achiume proposes that former colonial and current imperial powers are obliged to open their borders to their former colonial subjects to redress past and on-going relations of domination and subordination. Using this insight as the starting point for our discussion, we would welcome submissions of papers that explore five distinct lines of enquiry:
How did colonialism and de-colonisation shape the development of international law and the protection of refugees?
How might we unpick the historical specificities of the colonial and neo-colonial economic, political and cultural ties that inform current-day migration?
What does close attention to how asylum, criminalisation, and racialisation are configured and deployed at the border illuminate about current legal conceptions of the obligations owed to Global South citizens?
How do we think about South-South migration and refugee practices in a globally stratified refugee protection system?
How do we conceptualise reparation and decolonial repair in the context of global mobility?
SUBMISSION DETAILS
We request that you submit your abstracts (300 words) by 14 February 2025 to racerefugerepair@gmail.com. Final papers of 5000 - 6000 words will be due by 1 May 2025. Limited funding is available to support the travel and accommodation of participants coming from the Global South. Please indicate in your submission if it is not possible for you to secure institutional funding to support your participation.