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Opening session
Mar. 25
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Overcoming racism in healthcare: a European and African perspective on how to improve medical training
Mar. 25
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Challenging the complexities of informal elderly care
Mar. 25
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Building on PolyCIVIS Insights: Enhancing African-European Cooperation in Research and Evidence-Based Policy
Mar. 25
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A cross-continental endeavor towards gender equality
Mar. 25
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Rethinking Aging: Scientific Evidence, Public Perception, and Cultural Practices
Mar. 25
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Polycrisis and forced displacement across Africa and Europe
Mar. 25
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Transregional sustainable development
Mar. 25
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Transcultural memories and narratives
Mar. 25
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Experimentation and the making of experiential knowledge
Mar. 25
Dr. Ripero Nereida - University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg (South Africa)
Dr. Fuentes-Antrás Francisco -
Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Madrid (Spain)
Dr. Solic Mirna - University of Glasgow, Glasgow (UK)
Dr. and Pr. Mendy Louis -
Cheikh Anta Diop University, Dakar (Senegal)
Environmental Violence and Migration in West Africa.
Collective proposal
The CIVIS Open Lab project “Migrant Storytelling on Home and Belonging
as Transformative Tools” is an international collaboration between the
University of Glasgow, the University of the Witwatersrand, and the
Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, together with refugee-support
organizations CEAR (Spain), Migrant Voice (UK), and Windybrow Arts
Centre (South Africa). Its aim is to empower refugees and displaced
people to tell their stories through participatory arts, countering
stereotypes and fostering empathy.
Between May and August 2025,
workshops took place in Madrid, Glasgow, and Johannesburg with refugees
from various countries like Russia, Ukraine, Afghanistan, Iran, Sudan,
or Zimbabwe, now living in Spain, South Africa, and the UK.
Participants
reflected on “home” and “belonging” as both physical spaces and
emotional experiences, expressing the trauma of displacement and the
resilience of rebuilding. Activities were structured around narrative
elements—character, object, plot—while allowing freedom of expression in
multiple languages.
The project’s main outcome is a collective eBook
compiling 60 contributions—textual, oral, visual, and non-verbal—such as
drawings, photos, textiles, and other creative forms. Beyond artworks,
the project highlights both shared and contrasting contexts of refugee
reception in Europe and South Africa.
Despite different asylum systems
and resources, participants voiced remarkably similar themes of memory,
food, tradition, safety, and identity, underscoring migration as a
global human experience.
Our presentation will share findings on
specific methodological frameworks and empirical data arising from work
in three different geographical and cultural urban areas – Johannesburg,
Madrid, Glasgow – regarding project management and outcomes.
By
centering refugees’ voices, we will discuss how the project fosters a
transnational artistic dialogue that humanizes migration.
This
contributes to updating the CIVIS agenda by stressing the importance of
transnational activities that address global issues such as forced
displacement. It also boosts civic engagement beyond borders by
connecting associations that rarely collaborate despite shared
objectives.
Individual paper
Dr. and Pr. Mendy Louis -
Cheikh Anta Diop University, Dakar (Senegal)
Environmental Violence and Migration in West Africa.
Environmental Violence and Migration in West Africa. By Louis Mendy,
Professor of American Studies at Cheikh Anta Diop University, Dakar,
Senegal. When we talk about violence, we automatically think of
physical, moral or verbal violence between individuals or groups of
people. We, often, tend to overlook man’s violence on nature or on his
immediate environment ; which causes people, animals and even Spirits to
migrate locally or internationally.
We all know that the quality
of our lives is closely related to the environment. Unfortunately, man
has been aggressing nature for such a long time. For quite a few
decades, the issue of global warming has been a universal concern
Environmental Violence is mostly defined as follows: ‘’The violence on
the natural world as a result of human degradation of the earth and
direct damage to the environment by humans that threatens their own
survival. It may also include environmental policies that can be harmful
to people, other living species and biodiversity’’.
Migration of
people and other species has been quite rampant in West Africa and
Africa in general, due to man’s violent agressions on nature.
Deforestation, overfishing and coastal erosion are among the worst
consequences of humans’ actions.
The excessive cutting of trees, for
example, has caused forests to lose their traditional importance. In
Africa, they have always been known as the homes of good and bad
Spirits, wild games, the reserve of medicinal plants and the sanctuaries
for religious celebrations. Overfishing and coastal erosion are also
wdespread in Africa. Thus, it is more than urgent for African leaders
and their populations to join efforts in order to limit the
environmental violence and avoid jeopardizing next generations’ living
conditions.