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Opportunities and challenges of oral history research through refugee voices, narratives, and memories

  • While academic mobility has generally been positioned in the literature as a ready, at-will movement of people and ideas, this chapter demonstrates how the conditions of mobility and immobility “all at once” impact knowledge production and exchange. By offering a more nuanced window into the experiences of scholars in exile, this chapter challenges dominant discourses of academic mobility and draws on lessons learned from within liminal spaces of knowledge production to elicit more response within higher education communities. Context-rich examples reveal the interpersonal tensions and cultural shifts—including gender, ethnic and race-based stereotypes and discrimination—that affect intellectual outputs, further problematizing the conceptualization of knowledge production in human capital terms. Lessons gleaned from Scholars at Risk (SAR) and related programmes suggest support structures that amplify scholars’ agency; more broadly, higher education should consider ways of adapting to its diverse knowledge producers, rather thanWhile academic mobility has generally been positioned in the literature as a ready, at-will movement of people and ideas, this chapter demonstrates how the conditions of mobility and immobility “all at once” impact knowledge production and exchange. By offering a more nuanced window into the experiences of scholars in exile, this chapter challenges dominant discourses of academic mobility and draws on lessons learned from within liminal spaces of knowledge production to elicit more response within higher education communities. Context-rich examples reveal the interpersonal tensions and cultural shifts—including gender, ethnic and race-based stereotypes and discrimination—that affect intellectual outputs, further problematizing the conceptualization of knowledge production in human capital terms. Lessons gleaned from Scholars at Risk (SAR) and related programmes suggest support structures that amplify scholars’ agency; more broadly, higher education should consider ways of adapting to its diverse knowledge producers, rather than supporting the acclimation to its current environment.zeige mehrzeige weniger

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Metadaten
Verfasserangaben:Marcia C. SchenckORCiDGND, Abdalla Mohamed Zakaria, Richesse Ndiritiro, Shaema Omar, Samson Rer, Kate ReedORCiD, Gerawork Teferra
DOI:https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003109808-18
ISBN:978-0-367-62582-5
ISBN:978-1-003-10980-8
ISBN:978-0-367-62584-9
Titel des übergeordneten Werks (Englisch):Global South scholars in the Western Academy
Untertitel (Englisch):history dialogues
Verlag:Routledge
Verlagsort:New York
Publikationstyp:Teil eines Buches (Kapitel)
Sprache:Englisch
Jahr der Erstveröffentlichung:2021
Erscheinungsjahr:2021
Datum der Freischaltung:17.02.2022
Freies Schlagwort / Tag:Global History Dialogues Project; Global South Researchers; Refugees
Erste Seite:171
Letzte Seite:185
Organisationseinheiten:Philosophische Fakultät / Historisches Institut
DDC-Klassifikation:9 Geschichte und Geografie / 90 Geschichte / 900 Geschichte und Geografie
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