Metadata
Title
Human rights and forced migration: policy and practice
Category
graduate
UUID
56df39eea50d4a84a960e85a6469ae06
Source URL
https://www.brookes.ac.uk/research/units/tde/groups/human-rights-and-forced-migr...
Parent URL
https://www.brookes.ac.uk/engage-and-innovate/consultancy
Crawl Time
2026-03-19T05:19:51+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Human rights and forced migration: policy and practice

Source: https://www.brookes.ac.uk/research/units/tde/groups/human-rights-and-forced-migration Parent: https://www.brookes.ac.uk/engage-and-innovate/consultancy

Principal Investigator(s): Dr Zoe Jordan

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About us

Research impact

Leadership

Membership

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About us Research impact Leadership Membership

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About us

Our work concentrates on human rights research and forced migration research where policy, practice and experience are at the centre. We work in a number of countries across the world and study torture prevention, national human rights institutions, conflict induced displacement, the impact of global policies on national refugee responses, and the consequences of protracted refugee situations on different groups of people. We work with a number of organisations and institutions to explore how policy and practice can improve and be more efficient in addressing human rights and forced migration issues. \  \ Our research engages with:

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Research impact

Our research in the human rights field mainly focuses on assessing the impact of various institutional protections of human rights. This includes the work of human rights commissions and Ombuds offices, and particularly the effectiveness of torture prevention measures. We aim to develop close partnerships and exchanges of information with practitioners and institutions at the both the national and international levels.

Research on torture prevention has been particularly impactful, with several international and national NGOs adapting their strategic priorities in line with our research findings. (A multi-country research project led by CENDEP concluded that safeguards at the time of arrest were the most important factor in protecting people from torture).

The United Nations Committee Against Torture and SubCommittee on Prevention of Torture, as well as the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture, have been in continuing consultation with CENDEP’s Richard Carver and Lisa Handley, and have incorporated their findings into their practice. Richard and Lisa have also worked with institutions at the national level, such as the Public Defender’s Office in the Republic of Georgia.

Leadership

Dr Zoe Jordan

Senior Lecturer

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Membership

Staff members Research students

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Staff

Name Role Email
Dr Supriya Akerkar Director, Centre for Development and Emergency Practice (CENDEP) sakerkar@brookes.ac.uk
Dr Zoe Jordan Senior Lecturer zjordan@brookes.ac.uk

Journal of Human Rights Practice (Oxford)

The Journal of Human Rights Practice (Oxford) was co-founded by Dr Brian Phillips of CENDEP in 2009. The journal focuses on the impact of human rights practice and contemporary challenges. Over the past year, it has looked in particular at how human rights can help to understand responses to the coronavirus pandemic, as well as assessing the impact of Covid-19 on the work of human rights defenders.

Oxford Human Rights Festival

CENDEP runs the Oxford Human Rights Festival. Founded in 2003, the Festival was initiated by postgraduates and staff at the Centre of Development and Emergency Practice (CENDEP), the School of Architecture at Oxford Brookes University, Oxford UK. The festival is run by Oxford Brookes students and a coordinator from CENDEP. We collaborate with the public including local community groups, educational institutes, NGOs/INGOs, organisations and individuals.

More information

Every year the festival centres around a theme. In the past, themes have included ‘Resilience’, ‘Identity’ and ‘Home’ exploring what these mean in terms of gender, sexuality, race, ability, class, wealth, religious beliefs, forced migration, homelessness, nationality and much more. In 2021 the theme is ‘Disruption’ which helps to place on the agenda the way we all have been affected by the global pandemic, but also how the pandemic has exposed inequalities and injustices.

Past events have included a talk by peace builder and founder of Oxford Research Group Scilla Elworth in 2019, Ken Loach opening the 2017 festival with a screening of his acclaimed film 'I, Daniel Blake' and Ziauddin Yousafzai, father of equal education activist Malala Yousafzai, speaking at our screening of their film 'He Named Me Malala' in 2016. We curate an exhibition every year around the theme of the festival and include artists and performers from around the globe.

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Publications

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2023

2022

2021

2020

2019

2018

2017

2016

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Image Credits:

All images credited to CENDEP members:\

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