The Frame Issue 30 Rediscovering Justice has just landed in your inbox! We commemorate World Social Justice Day and highlight various global initiatives that are redefining justice in uncertain times.
Check your inboxes or follow this link: mailchi.mp/8ab75155d7ac/the-…
Check your inbox!
The Frame Issue 29 has landed. We’re looking back on a year of progress, propelling us forward into 2025.
mailchi.mp/e28273caae91/the-…
Book launch and panel discussion on Refugee Reception in (Southern) Africa next month.
To join friends and colleagues at the School for Advanced Study UoL register now!
📢You can now register for the @RLI_News in-person short course at the @LondonU:
Research Methods in the Refugee and Forced Migration Field
3-7 March 2025
Learn more here: rli.sas.ac.uk/study-us/short…
Or send me a message!
Are you ready to level up your climate advocacy game?📢 FEMNET's 3rd African Feminist Academy for #ClimateJustice is open for applications until October 7th, 2024. 📚 Unpack matters climate change from a feminist perspective🔎.
➡️bit.ly/3MUvqWh#AfricanFeministStories
Today we’re extremely proud to launch Migration Sounds! The result of a year-long partnership with the
@citiesandmemory, one of the world's biggest sound projects.
This is the world’s first publicly curated collection of the sounds of human migration. Check out the press release here: compas.ox.ac.uk/article/worl…
and here: citiesandmemory.com/2024/09/…
The Frame Issue 28
"Labour has been, at best, cautious in its approach to migration since coming to power. The language is awkward and restrained, avoiding the language favoured by the tories while promising much the same result."
The Frame Issue 28
It has been almost seven weeks since Keir Starmer’s Labour party swept the polls, and won an absolute majority in the UK’s general election on July 4th. We’re taking a closer look at Labour’s immigration policy and what the future may hold.
COMING SOON 📢The Frame Issue 28
This time last year, we wrote about the Conservative government's Migration and Economic Development Plan with Rwanda, which had just suffered a blow in the European Court of Human Rights.
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frame45.com/updates/issue-21…
This month, we're reflecting on what Labour promised and a few of their earliest policy decisions. We'll also explore the framing they're using and what it says about their approach to migration in general.
Keep an eye on your inbox for the latest issue, dropping soon!
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Liberty has held every UK Government to account since 1934
We now look forward to making sure the @UKLabour Government stays focused on fulfilling its promises of "change" and a society where "everyone should be treated with respect and dignity"
Today's UK general election is an opportunity to right the ship, to reintroduce kindness and mutuality into the conversation. Whether or not Labour will seize the opportunity or flounder in the face of rising nationalism at home and abroad is yet to be seen.
Watch this space.
Wrote a short piece for @openDemocracy on detention, migration and the UK election, fuelled by my disappointment and rage at the discussion around migration during the 'leaders debate' last week...
opendemocracy.net/en/beyond-…
🎺 #CallForPapers: Urban Imaginations and Urban Futures 🏙️
This theme aims to spur a reinvigoration of cutting-edge research that sets urban imaginations and #UrbanFutures at the heart of the ways in which we investigate #cities.
Visit urbanstudiesonline.com/callf… for details.
ALT Critical and Conceptual Advances in Urban Studies Call For Papers. Urban Imaginations and Urban Futures. The Journal welcomes both empirical and conceptual papers that tackle the nexus of imagination and futures in cities and urban theorising. A focus on conceptual novelty in urban research, and a clear contribution to advancing current and emergent global urban studies debates is essential. Visit urbanstudiesonline.com/callforpapers for details.
The Frame & "Alternatives to Development"
Our work with the @northerncouncil involved reflecting on the canon of decolonial literature over time. Issue 27 includes a bibliography & visualisations illustrating changes in authorship and geography over time.
frame45.com/updates/tracing-…
ALT Word map of the most common decolonial authors of the 2010s.
Check your inboxes, the Frame Issue 27 is here!
This month we're tracing decolonial literature through time. As part of our collaboration with the @northerncouncil, we've been reflecting on the biases undergirding international development and coallating our resources as we go.