There is currently a record number of people who have been forcibly displaced: 1 in every 95 people in the world have had to flee in search of safety for themselves and their families. There are many reasons why people may be forced to leave their homes, including conflict, discrimination, persecution, extreme poverty, and environmental disasters. Forced migrants often face many risks as they move in search of safety or better opportunities, including violence, food insecurity, and limited or no access to health services or education.
Forced migration is a complex issue which we believe can be best understood by taking an interdisciplinary approach. This is why the Forced Migration Research Network is made up of scholars based predominantly in the Faculty of Arts, Design and Architecture at UNSW who work across the social sciences, including history, philosophy, media and film studies, cultural studies, education, and social psychology. We partner with civil society organisations, service providers, government bodies and international actors to undertake our research, policy, training, and advocacy activities.
Our objectives include:
- supporting and working in partnership with refugee communities and forced migrants
- building strong partnerships with organisations in the refugee sector
- implementing our commitment to participatory, gender and diversity-sensitive rights-based research
- fostering deeper collaboration across the different research areas
- showcasing the diversity of innovative work undertaken at UNSW, and
- building on and extending industry and academic partnerships.
UNSW now offers the Sanctuary Scholarship for People Seeking Asylum and Refugees with Temporary Protection and the Welcome Scholarship for Students from Refugee Backgrounds. Please direct any questions about these scholarships to the UNSW Scholarships team atÌýscholarships@unsw.edu.au.
Interested in learning more about what we do? Follow the links to explore our projects, training kitsÌý²¹²Ô»å advocacyÌýwork. Want to get in touch with us or subscribe to our newsletter? Drop us an email at fmrn@unsw.edu.au.
Upcoming events
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The FMRSN is a network of higher degree research students (HDR) undertaking research in forced migration based at UNSW. Established in 2020, the FMRSN aims to foster outstanding and original PhD research and provide postgraduate students associated with the UNSW Forced Migration Research Network to have a forum to engage with each other. The FMRSN is open for all postgraduate students involved in forced migration research across various research disciplines. FMRSN offers monthly meetings, several networking opportunities with senior academics and workshops relevant to PhD research.
Co-Convenors
Ruth Horsfall
Title of PhD thesis:ÌýExploring the impact on wellbeing of beginners acting classes for young women with refugee backgrounds in Western Sydney
Supervisors:ÌýDr Caroline Wake, Associate Professor Caroline LenetteSimon Metcalfe
Title of PhD thesis:ÌýAffective Dimensions of Border Regimes: Australia’s violent border policies towards people seeking asylum via boat
Supervisors:ÌýDr Maree Higgins, Dr Yao-Tai Li and Associate Professor Helen PringleCurrent members
Carly Hawkins
Title of PhD thesis: Nauru: The impact of immigration detention on the education of refugee children
Supervisors: Dr Hazel Blunden, Associate Professor Caroline Lenette, and Dr Sarah MaresTim McLennan
Title of PhD thesis: Evaluating equity practices for Students from Refugee Backgrounds in Aotearoa and Australian Higher Education institutions
Supervisors: Associate Professor Sally Baker and Dr Rose AmazanUrvashi Jalali
Title of PhD thesis:ÌýA Search for 91³ÉÈ˰涶Òô in Exile - Placemaking as an evocative concept through the Cornerstones of Identity, Belonging, Rootedness Memory, Materiality, and Beyond in the Aftermath of a Forced Uprooting
Supervisors:ÌýAssociate Prof Dijana Alic and Dr David SandersonMohammad Mehdi Hassan
Title of PhD thesis: Addressing the structural barriers to employment of refugees in construction
Supervisors: Dr Ahmed WA Hammad, Dr Cynthia Wang, Professor Martin Loosemore, Dr Daniel Chamberlain, and Professor Robyn KeastNatasha Yacoub
Title of PhD thesis: Gendering the criteria for voluntary repatriation of refugees and internally displaced persons
Supervisors: Professor Jane McAdam and Associate Professor Christine ForsterXiaxia ZhangÌý
Title of PhD thesis:ÌýTranslating Minor Melancholia: Weird English and Hybrid Languages in the Fiction of Brian CastroÌý
Supervisors:ÌýProfessor Elizabeth McMahon,ÌýProfessor Brigitta Olubas, and Associate Professor Fiona MorrisonAnja Wendt
Title of PhD thesis: The Relationship between Volunteers and the Refugee Settlement Sector in Australia
Supervisors: Dr Linda Bartolomei and Dr Susanne SchmeidlBella ChooÌý(she/her)
University of Melbourne
Title: The "Australian Dream": Aspirations of young migrants with disability
Supervisors: Belinda Hewitt, Irma Mooi-Reci, Zoe Aitken, Paul Ramcharan
Mireille Kayeye
University of Melbourne
Title of research: Empowerment of Women Seeking Asylum: A Voice for Change
Supervisors: Professor Celia McMichael and Professor Bina Fernandez
Tamara Megaw
University of Sydney
Title of PhD thesis: Community-led approaches to refugee protection in Southeast Asia
Supervisors: Professor Michele Ford and Associate Professor Susan Banki
Alumni
Diana Kreemers
Project title:ÌýInstitutional listening to minority voices: representation, recognition, and refugee media
Supervisors: Associate Professor Tanja Dreher, Professor Ramaswami Harindranath, and Dr Linda BartolomeiZoe Bell
Title of PhD thesis:Anna Xavier
Title of PhD thesis: Breaking Barriers or Building Walls: An Investigation into The Role of Education in the Integration of Refugee-Background Students in Regional NSW
Supervisors:ÌýAssociate Professor Sally Baker, Professor Sue Starfield and Dr Rose Amazan -
Our key partnerships include: