What Does a Humane Infrastructure for Research Look Like?

Auteurs-es

  • Estella Carpi University College London, UK

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.25071/1920-7336.40781

Mots-clés :

refugee research, migration studies, humanization, ethics, research hot spots, interdisciplinary research

Résumé

Dans cette intervention, je fais deux suggestions principales pour humaniser la recherche sur les réfugiés. Premièrement, la tendance à choisir des points comme terrains de recherche - où les chercheur.es approchent souvent les mêmes répondant.es et les mêmes espaces - doit être non seulement dénoncée et évitée, mais aussi combattue. Deuxièmement, je suggère que la recherche sur les réfugiés devrait s’effectuer en collaboration directe avec d’autres champs d’études portant sur des phénomènes sociaux, politiques et économiques afin d’éviter de faire du déplacement la condition sine qua non de la recherche, mais plutôt l’une des nombreuses conditions qu’un être humain peut vivre au sein des sociétés d’accueil. La poursuite de cet objectif sera plus facile si les études sur la migration forcée ne se compartimentent pas et ne se développent pas en vase clos par rapport aux autres disciplines et groupes de recherche.

Statistiques

Chargement des statistiques…

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Publié-e

2021-11-22 — Mis(e) à jour 2021-11-22

Versions

Comment citer

Carpi, E. (2021). What Does a Humane Infrastructure for Research Look Like?. Refuge : Revue Canadienne Sur Les réfugiés , 37(2), 38–45. https://doi.org/10.25071/1920-7336.40781

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