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[Commlist] Call for Papers: Crossings: Journal of Migration & Culture Special Issue
Thu Feb 02 20:17:04 GMT 2023
Call for Papers: Crossings: Journal of Migration & Culture
Special Issue: ‘Women’s Health and Digitalisation in Forced Migration’
SPRING 2024
Abstracts due 15 March 2023
View the full CFP here>>
https://www.intellectbooks.com/crossings-journal-of-migration-culture#call-for-papers
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/crossings-journal-of-migration-culture#call-for-papers>
Digital Solutions to promote Intercultural Mobility in access to SRH
services in Europe
Editor: Dr. Nena MOCNIK, GRITIM, Pompeu Fabra University, Barcelona, Spain
In the last ten years, experts from academia, think tanks and civil
society have engaged with the topic of linking technology and human
rights, recognizing the importance of new policies and advocacy that
would push governments to provide all communities with the access to the
internet and devices in an increasingly digital, automated world. The
2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development states that despite the risks of
facilitating the control, dominion and marginalization, the spread of
information and communications technology and global interconnectedness
has great potential to accelerate human progress.
In the context of mass migration to Europe in 2015–2016, researchers
have provided rich evidence for how mobile internet devices have played
an essential support role in planning, navigating and documenting the
journeys and enabling regular contact with family, friends, and others
who help the refugees. In the current refugee crisis as the consequences
of the war in Ukraine, interconnectedness and digital technologies have
played an essential role in humanitarian interventions and public
response since the beginning of the conflict.
However, while popularization of smartphones and social media have
revolutionized migration in general, UNCHR have reported the
unproportionally higher use of digital technologies among male refugees,
deepening the existing gender gap and thus leaving female refugees
deprivileged in accessing any type of service and information, and
particularly those related to sexual and reproductive health (SRH).
Closing the mobile gender gap is proven to positively impact the
quality of refugee women’s day-to-day life, from generating a livelihood
through a small business to sharing important information about the
camps and exchanging goods and mutual emotional support. When it comes
to women's health, the usual obstacles, like poor infrastructure
(internet connection, autonomous use of digital tools, insufficient
digital literacy), are being further exacerbated by social control, and
culturally facilitated ideas and practices related to gender and sexuality.
Thus, topics related to SRH are often stigmatized or subjected to rigid
cultural taboos that prevent women from getting sufficient information
and safe approach toward needed services. The urgent need is no longer
in creating new online tools or content, but more in facilitating the
intercultural mobility from the country of origin to Europe, where SRH
knowledge and information might be accessible online without putting
refugee women at further risk. By physical relocation, individuals
undergo also a process of sexual resocialization, where they learn anew
about dynamics between sexes, and cultural understandings of desires,
roles, and practices. But by adopting a culturally sensitive approach,
many services provided in the European Union, further construct race and
culture as taken for granted categories to locate non-European women as
essentialized, inferior and subordinate Others. These patterns influence
understanding of sexual/reproductive health and rights related to it in
a country of resettlement. In the Special Call we invite authors to
reflect on those topics from theoretical and practical perspective, and
to address questions of universal human (reproductive) rights, cultural
relativism, transcultural and transnormative mobility, and neocolonial
discursive practice surrounding some of the most controversial,
culturally relative sexual behaviors, taboos and stigmas, like war
rapes, female genital mutilations and child marriages.
Topics considered for publication may include, but are not limited to
the questions as:
*
the role of online peer-to-peer in enhancing digitalisation of
digitally illiterate individuals;
*
the importance of cultural communities to facilitate behavioral
changes in cultural mobility of SRH understanding (use of
contraception tools, right to abortion, prevention and treatment of
STDs.
The papers can furthermore showcase good practices as well as shortfalls
that describe:
*
inaccessibility of devices and tools and marginalized communities;
*
processes, tactics, strategies that bring technologies closer to the
targeted groups;
*
actions, projects activities that promote behavioral changes and
cultural mobilities with the help of digital solutions/tools;
*
dialogues between initiators, developers and target communities.
Keywords: women’s health, refugee women, migrant women, digital
solutions, cultural barriers
The above list of topics is not exhaustive, and the editorial board will
consider other topics related to the main themes of this special issue.
We also welcome book reviews addressing the topics and themes
illustrated above. Prospective contributors should contact the editor to
discuss their proposals in the form of a maximum 250 words abstract
along with a brief biography via email to: (nena.mocnik /at/ upf.edu)
<mailto:(nena.mocnik /at/ upf.edu)>.
TIMELINE
January 2023Call for Abstracts (up to 250 words)
15 March 2023Deadline for Abstracts
April 2023Notification of Accepted Abstracts
September 2023Deadline for Draft Papers (send to peer-review)
November 2023Reviews Feedback
15 December 2024Submission of Revised Papers
SPRING 2024PUBLICATION
ABOUT THE EDITOR
Nena Mocnik, Ph.D., is a Maria Skłodowska Curie EUTOPIA-SIF COFUND
Research Fellow at GRITIM-UPF (Interdisciplinary Research Group on
Immigration at the Department of Political and Social Sciences at
Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Catalonia). As a researcher,
educator and community worker, she is interested in the topics of
collective traumas, identity (gender) violence, and art-based
sociotherapy. In her current participatory action research, she explores
the rapidly expanding internet and digital realms to offer solutions in
reproductive health-related knowledge and community support to refugee
mothers in displacement. She is the author of two monographs (Trauma
Transmission and Sexual Violence: Reconciliation and Peacebuilding in
Post-Conflict Settings, 2021) and her first book Sexuality after War
Rape: From Narrative to Embodied Research (Routledge 2017) was awarded
Bank of Montreal Award in Women's Studies (University of Ottawa, 2018).
She acted as an editor in chief at several special issues, edited
monographs and textbook editions and as a consultant and coordinator at
European projects and was first 2022 Digital Humanism Fellow awarded by
Austrian Federal Ministry for Climate Action and IWM Vienna.
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