Ina R Jahn
I hold a BA in Social Anthropology and Development Studies from SOAS, University of London, and am a recent graduate of the Erasmus Mundus Master in Migration and Intercultural Relations (EMMIR) taught by University of Oldenburg, University of Stavanger and Makerere University Kampala. My research is motivated by a deep-seated interest in the complex issue of belonging and “home”, which led me to conduct fieldwork on reburials from former IDP camps to home villages in post-conflict Northern Uganda. I also hold a M.Sc. degree in Nature, Society and Environmental Policy from Oxford University and have previously worked for the German Agency for International Cooperation in Namibia (2010-2011), and the Refugee Law Project in Uganda (2012).
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multimedia, and peer-reviewed journal of the ESPMI Network. We are delighted to be able to showcase an edition of varied and challenging articles, opinion pieces, practitioner reports, discussions, and interviews from emerging scholars and practitioners around the world.The journal encompasses many themes that can contribute to the places we can look to re-conceptualize forced migration and refugeehood: environmental displacement, citizenship and integration, international law conventions accessions and exceptions, protracted situations of displacement or lack of access to services once settled, statelessness, seaborne migration and state response, domestic and international policy, the recognition of agency, the importance of education, and ignorance of state, regional and ethnic histories.
The journal is available in two forms - an online interactive open source version, and a hyperlinked PDF.
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multimedia, and peer-reviewed journal of the ESPMI Network. We are delighted to be able to showcase an edition of varied and challenging articles, opinion pieces, practitioner reports, discussions, and interviews from emerging scholars and practitioners around the world.The journal encompasses many themes that can contribute to the places we can look to re-conceptualize forced migration and refugeehood: environmental displacement, citizenship and integration, international law conventions accessions and exceptions, protracted situations of displacement or lack of access to services once settled, statelessness, seaborne migration and state response, domestic and international policy, the recognition of agency, the importance of education, and ignorance of state, regional and ethnic histories.
The journal is available in two forms - an online interactive open source version, and a hyperlinked PDF.