Actress Raghad Makhlouf, speaks to Jameela Freitas about how her theatre workshops give young refugees a safe space to express themselves and deal with the stress caused by war and displacement.
Refugees are using other, often more dangerous, routes, contributing to the increase in migrant deaths that we have seen in 2016.
We historians at the University of Warwick are very concerned about the racism that is becoming increasingly commonplace over Britain, especially in the aftermath of the Brexit vote.
Often, things that are seen as a problem in society are not: the house where locals and refugees live and work together.
How best can we Europeans re-establish at least a semblance of moral and economic justice in the future conduct of EU migration policy?
Even where populists don’t win power through the ballot box, they gain it through shaping policy and public debate.
Conflicts arising from refugee integration are perhaps inevitable, but public mediation techniques offer a blueprint for how governments and civil society can help cities adjust.
Labour needs to resist its drift toward a more ambivalent position on free movement.
The 2016 Global Forum on Migration and Development just opened in Bangladesh. Two return delegates from civil society explain what would make this year’s conference, in their eyes, better than the last.
Brexit is the second time Britain has moved to strip citizenship rights from many of its existing citizens.
Brexit was a vote largely against regular movement from the EU, but what about refugees? A new series seek to explore what Brexit will mean for those in search of safety.
These are not simply draconian measures to curb refugee movement towards Europe, but populist ideals presented to the European Parliament as an authentic means of terminating its “refugee crisis”.