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Displacement Workshop on Collaborative Work

19 March 2025, 6:00 pm–8:00 pm

a group of women smile at the camera

Join UCL History for a panel discussion and networking event on 'How can historians of displacement work collaboratively with artists, government, and the third sector?’.

This event is free.

Event Information

Open to

UCL staff | UCL students

Availability

Yes

Cost

Free

Organiser

Queenie Lee – UCL History

Location

Room 105
24 Gordon Square
London
WC1H 0AW

The nature of research on displacement within the academy invites opportunities to connect and collaborate, to place this work within a wider network of activities and stakeholders invested in the causes, processes and consequences of dislocation and displacement. In this roundtable conversation, we invite three speakers who have worked collaboratively on displacement beyond the academy through multiple genres to reflect on this practice as well as questions of ethics and positionality. 

display at pop up exhibition
Images: Taken by © Lydia Powell from the collaborative project between UCL and Creating Ground (a non-profit organisation working with women from a migrant background) from April-June 2024, including our pop-up exhibition at the Maritime Museum.
 

About the Speakers

Mette Louise Berg

Professor of Migration and Diaspora Studies and co-director of the Thomas Coram Research Institute at UCL Social Research Institute

Mette Louise Berg is a social anthropologist with research interests in migration, asylum, diasporas and migrant transnationalism; urban diversity; gender, belonging and generation; decolonial and collaborative research methods. Her early work focused on Cuba and the Cuban diaspora. More recently she has worked on migration, diversity, and asylum in the UK. Mette is Professor of Migration and Diaspora Studies and co-director of the Thomas Coram Research Institute, UCL Social Research Institute.

More about Mette Louise Berg

Issam Kourbaj

Artist

Issam Kourbaj was born in Syria and trained at the Institute of Fine Arts in Damascus, the Repin Institute of Fine Arts & Architecture in Leningrad (St Petersburg) and at Wimbledon School of Art. He has lived in Cambridge, UK, since 1990. Since 2011 his artwork has related to the Syrian Crisis and reflects on the suffering of his fellow Syrians and the destruction of his cultural heritage.

More about Issam Kourbaj

Lydia Powell

Project Leader

Lydia Powell is a Project Leader specialising in changing power dynamics in community projects. She co-produces history projects and makes social change with communities, influenced by her background in History, Migrants’ Rights and International Development.

More about Lydia Powell