The Market in Albergheria

By Lisa Tilley|July 31, 2023|Uncategorized|0 comments

A morbid reminder of consumerism Author: Tommaso Serra All photos taken in 2023 © Tommaso Serra, Documentary Photographer London, UK The second-hand market in Albergheria – a peripheral neighbourhood of Palermo’s historical centre – is a semi-informal market for trading and buying any sort of objects, from hammers and batteries, to ancient paintings and abandoned dolls. This market represents the last chance for a multitude of old and often faulty

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Quasi-detention: The blurred lines of the UK’s asylum regime

By Lisa Tilley|July 31, 2023|Uncategorized|0 comments

Author: Annabel Miller MSc Migration, Mobility and Development Studies Jane Baker Award Assistantship Through the generous support of MSc Migration, Mobility and Development Studies alumna Jane Baker, this summer I have undertaken a Research Assistantship under the supervision of Dr Anna Lindley. Together we have been working to track the burgeoning elements of ‘quasi-detention’ in UK’s asylum system. I carried out a literature review of academic research, NGO reports and

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“Jin, Jiyan, Azadi:” the Kurdish roots of the Iranian protests and how the arts can help us to feel interconnected struggles

By Lisa Tilley|July 4, 2023|Uncategorized|0 comments

Author: Zoë Ciara Miller This blog is an original submission for the course Feminist Political Economy and Global Development and was written in January 2023. I slip on my jacket, plug in my earphones and step outside, pulling the door behind me. I scrape my hair into a bun, a few strands escaping loose around the sides of my face. I’m on my way to the Barbican Centre to see

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transgender marxism: personal reading thoughts 

By Lisa Tilley|June 30, 2023|Uncategorized|0 comments

Author: Fili Gena The blog is original work for the Feminist Political Economy and Global Development course In the past weeks, I have encountered the book Transgender Marxism (Gleeson and O’Rourke, 2021). For the first time in months, I felt that there had been a fundamental shift in how I problematise my way through my days. I started reflecting on the instances of social reproduction through which I sustain my Non-Binary body

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Shein’s Supply Chain: Consumer Agency and Responsibility

By Lisa Tilley|June 23, 2023|Uncategorized|0 comments

Author: Livia Michelle Capparelli This blog is an original submission for the course Global Commodity Chains, Production Networks and Informal Work Imagine you’re scrolling through TikTok and you spot a content creator re­viewing a top. You click on the spon­sored link: Shein’s web­site opens and the top is only 3£. The pic­tures are question­able, but you want it (and it’s so cheap!). So you buy it, and also grab a few

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Development Studies Immersion Programme – Amali Dias

By Lisa Tilley|January 29, 2023|Uncategorized|0 comments

The Australian Consortium for ‘In-Country’ Indonesian Studies (ACICIS) has recently partnered with SOAS’ Development department to enable single honours Development Studies students the opportunity to take part in the Development Studies Immersion Programme (DSIP) in Yogyakarta, Indonesia with Universitas Gadjah Mada (UGM).Last year, for the first term of our academic year (and slightly more), I took this opportunity. I spent the first half of my final year at SOAS studying

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The Indonesian Semester Abroad Experience – Safia Aminah Shaikh

By Lisa Tilley|January 29, 2023|Uncategorized|0 comments

Over the last month of summer, Term One, and the Christmas break, SOAS, partnering with ‘The Australian Consortium for In Country Studies’ (ACICIS), gave single degree Development Studies students such as myself the opportunity to study a semester abroad in Yogyakarta, Indonesia. The experience has been incredibly formative, and at times, extremely challenging. However, despite facing bumps in the road, I ultimately found the time spent in Indonesia participating in

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Phulkari – A Traditional Art Form That Empowers Women

By Raiyan Mohammad Syed|November 14, 2022|Labour, Social movements, Women's rights|0 comments

Cross-stitching or phulkari has been around me for as long as I can remember. My nanu (maternal grandmother) was skilled in the art of cross-stitching, and she passed it down to my mother as well. Throughout the various homes I’ve lived in, I’ve always been able to admire fully handmade, meticulous, ornate cross-stitch work whether in wall hangings, cushion covers, or as embroidery on clothing. In a similar way, Manpreet

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Trapped by the System – the Plight of Coca Farmers in Colombia

By Raiyan Mohammad Syed|March 16, 2022|Conflict, Health, Labour|0 comments

A reflection from the recent Drugs and Disorder conference (“image of coca farmers Colombia – Bing images,” n.d.) I had a chance to attend the Drugs and Disorder Conference from Feb 14-16, where I had an opportunity to learn about how drugs affect individual lives in Myanmar and Colombia ; I specifically learned how the demand for the cocaine that comes from the manufacturing process of coca leaves has impacted

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Upcoming Drugs & (dis)order Conference

By Raiyan Mohammad Syed|February 9, 2022|Conflict, Peace|0 comments

Learning from research on illicit drug economies in Afghanistan, Colombia, and Myanmar. Starting from February 14, a group of academics and stakeholders will come together to share the latest research findings on the effect of illicit drug economies in Afghanistan, Colombia, and Myanmar. The conference will focus on the role of drugs in terms of peacebuilding and development in these conflict-affected states. The conference will feature country-specific and thematic analysis,

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