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DTSTAMP:20260404T040253Z
DTSTART;TZID=Pacific/Auckland:20260217T090000
DTEND;TZID=Pacific/Auckland:20260218T170000
SUMMARY:Crossing Borders Symposium
UID:20260404T081224Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-f5d4878dd-4s97k
TZID:Pacific/Auckland
LOCATION:University of Otago\, Dunedin\, New Zealand
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>Centre for Global Migrations Symposium</a></strong></p>\n<p><strong>Crossing Borders</strong></p>\n<p><strong>Ōtākou Whakaihu Waka | University of Otago</strong></p>\n<p><strong>17-18 February 2026</strong></p>\n<p><strong>Keynotes</strong><strong>: Anne McNevin |&nbsp\;</strong><strong>Simon Barber &amp\; G</strong><strong>abriella Makerita Hinetu Brayne</strong></p>\n<p>Borders divide\, define\, and redefine territories\, migrations\, mobilities\, languages\, bodies\, disciplines\, discourses\, and ideas. They are not inert lines or boundaries. Rather\, as Sandro Mezzadra and Brett Nielson famously put it\, borders are a &ldquo\;method&rdquo\; that brings social\, political\, and cultural worlds into existence. The&nbsp\;<strong><em>Crossing Borders</em></strong><em>&nbsp\;</em>symposium invites scholars and artists to critically engage with the question of how borders &ndash\; historical\, geographical\, political\, intellectual\, cultural\, technological\, ecological\, artistic\, bodily\, or epistemological &ndash\; are produced\, maintained\, and challenged at a time when borders dominate the social and political imagination.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>This symposium seeks to bring together scholars and artists who engage&nbsp\;<em>with</em>&nbsp\;borders\, bordering\, and border crossing in their scholarship across a wide range of disciplines and practices. We welcome contributions that reflect the processes and consequences of&nbsp\;<em>crossing borders</em>&nbsp\;literally\, symbolically\, and metaphorically.</p>\n<p>The potential areas of contribution are\, but not limited to:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>Migration\, (im)mobilities\, and transnationalism</li>\n<li>Borders\, bordering\, and solidarity</li>\n<li>Reimagining borders and border-crossing</li>\n<li>Aesthetic\, linguistic\, and temporal borders</li>\n<li>Border walls\, prisons\, and policing</li>\n<li>Bodily borders\, corporeal boundaries\, and the body politic</li>\n<li>Interdisciplinary\, transdisciplinary\, and genre crossings&nbsp\;</li>\n<li>Artistic and performative interventions across disciplinary borders</li>\n<li>Decolonial\, feminist\, and queer border-thinking</li>\n<li>Liminality\, hybridity\, and in-betweenness</li>\n</ul>\n<p>This is an in-person symposium only. Please submit a&nbsp\;<strong>250-word abstract&nbsp\;</strong>including your&nbsp\;<strong>presentation title</strong>\,&nbsp\;<strong>institutional affiliation and contact details\, and</strong>&nbsp\;<strong>preferred presentation format</strong>&nbsp\;(oral presentation\, panel discussion\, workshop\, performance\, or any other creative format) to the Symposium co-chairs by&nbsp\;<strong>18 December 2025</strong>:</p>\n<p><strong>Dr Pooneh Torabian&nbsp\;</strong>(Tourism)<strong><u>&nbsp\;</u></strong><u>pooneh.torabian@otago.ac.nz</a></u>&nbsp\;and&nbsp\;<strong>Dr Neil Vallelly</strong>&nbsp\;(Sociology\, Gender Studies and Criminology)<u>&nbsp\;</u><u>neil.vallelly@otago.ac.nz</a></u></p>\n<p><strong>Conference fee:&nbsp\;</strong>$60NZD for waged participants\; Free for postgraduate students and unwaged&nbsp\;participants</p>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p><strong>Keynote Speakers</strong></p>\n\n<p><strong>Anne McNevin</strong>&nbsp\;was Associate Professor of Politics at The New School for Social Research from 2015 to 2025. She is currently based in Sydney as a non-resident research fellow at The New School&rsquo\;s Zolberg Institute on Migration and Mobility. Anne&rsquo\;s research spans the transformation of citizenship and sovereignty\, the regulation of borders and migration\, and spatial and temporal dimensions of world politics. She is author of&nbsp\;<em>Worldmaking and Border Politics&nbsp\;</em>(Stanford UP\, 2026) and&nbsp\;<em>Contesting Citizenship</em>&nbsp\;(Columbia UP\, 2011). She is co-editor of the forthcoming&nbsp\;<em>Routledge Handbook of Ideology and Temporality</em>&nbsp\;and a forthcoming special issue of&nbsp\;<em>Migration Studies</em>\, outlining a new agenda on &ldquo\;Mobile Temporalities.&rdquo\;</p>\n<p><strong>&nbsp\;</strong></p>\n<p><strong>Simon Barber &amp\;</strong>&nbsp\;<strong>Gabriella Makerita Hinetu Brayne</strong></p>\n<p><strong>Simon&nbsp\;</strong>(Kāi Tahu) is a Senior Lecturer in Sociology at Ōtākou Whakaihu Waka | University of Otago. He is a student of Indigenous thought and politics\, Marxist and critical theory\, black studies\, communism\, and conjunctions thereof. He completed his Master&rsquo\;s at the Centre for Cultural Studies\, Goldsmiths\, University of London and his doctorate in the Centre for Research Architecture\, also at Goldsmiths. As part of his doctoral research\, he undertook a postgraduate diploma in Ahunga Tikanga (Māori Laws and Philosophy) at Te Wānanga o Raukawa in Ōtaki. Simon co-edited a book with Miri Davidson (<em>Through That Which Separates Us</em>\, 2021) centred around themes of deportation\, incarceration\, and colonialism. In a series of academic articles\, he continues to think through and describe possible contours of an Indigenous historical materialism. Simon is a researcher for Economic and Social Research Aotearoa and is a member of the editorial board of&nbsp\;<em>Counterfutures</em>.</p>\n<p><strong>Gabriella&nbsp\;</strong>is of Samoan (Falefa)\, Māori (Ngāti Maniapoto) and Pākehā lineage. She currently works as a junior lawyer on Indigenous issues in Aotearoa\, and has recently completed her LLM in Indigenous Legal Studies at the University of Arizona. As a student\, she has contributed to community research on issues spanning prison abolition\, constitutional transformation\, and migration studies from a Pacific Indigenous perspective.&nbsp\;</p>\n&nbsp\;
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