This collaborative study is funded by the ESRC and aims to explore how bordering practices in the UK impact on social care practitioners and migrant families
A recent publication from the Everyday Bordering project. The persistance of colonial logic in UK immigration legislation and the embodied experience of people seeking asylum in the UK
https://t.co/aVZ6la8avg
Complexities of the immigration System and Entitlement' is the 3rd video local artists made with migrant families in Hull to document experiences of borders in their everyday lives. @JCWalsh5@mareterra382 https://t.co/8fiGbRvMcl
'Working with People for Diverse National and Cultural Backgrounds' is the 2nd video local artists made with migrant families in Hull to document experiences of borders in their everyday lives
https://t.co/hhacmuCTlF
During the 'Everyday Bordering in the UK' project, local artists worked with migrant families in Hull to create 3 short films to document experiences of borders in their everyday lives. 'Communication Barriers' is the first of these film:
https://t.co/0EuL2upAaD
Next BSA FaR Reading Group this week Thurs 26th Jan at 14h GMT. We are reading 'Social reproduction, labour and austerity: Carrying the future' https://t.co/kgU8ddWG25 PM for joining link!
Our briefing note for commissioners, organisations and practitioners working with migrant family members. Please share with your networks and decision makers. https://t.co/eDH5QFm86S
Partner project roundtable exploring how vital co-production is to ensure relevance of uni research and creation of targeted resources useful to #socialcare practitioners & importance of seeing outcomes FOR migrant participants
Thank you to all of those that attended the Celebration Event for the end of our project yesterday. This is, of course, just the start of sharing and using our findings with many more decision-makers, organisations, commissioners, practitioners and others...
A new paper about our reflections on 'portholes of ethnography' is out 🎉🎉🎉! Visit our website to keep up to date with project's progress! @JCWalsh5@mareterra382 @DrAsmaKhan7 @sociologyjnl@ESRC
https://t.co/RQiHlYUv0U
Our new output from the Everyday Bordering in the UK project - our reflections on 'portholes of ethnography' as a research tool, and how much ethnography can be stretched in the context of remote methods.
@BorderingIn@mareterra382 @DrAsmaKhan7
https://t.co/RBTWXBDuA6