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Refugee Realities

46 episodes - English - Latest episode: 11 months ago - ★★★★★ - 1 rating

To help celebrate and bring awareness to Refugee Week UK 2023, we are pleased to introduce Season 3 of ‘Refugee Realities’, a podcast series created by students on the Forced Displacement and Refugees course in the Department of International Development. In the lead up to UK Refugee Week we’ll be releasing student-recorded podcasts each day. Like the course, the topics covered are eclectic.

For a complete listing of Refugee Week events or to get involved, check out the Refugee Week website at https://refugeeweek.org.uk/ and follow Refugee Week on Instagram @refugeeweekuk and on Twitter and Facebook @RefugeeWeek. In the meantime, stay tuned for the podcasts.

Society & Culture News Politics refugees migration displacement asylum humanitarian aid human experience international development humanitarian crisis conflict
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Episodes

S3, E4: Climate-related Displacement and International Protection

June 12, 2023 05:47 - 22 minutes - 42.3 MB

How can we best protect people displaced for environmental reasons? In this episode María José Maldonado and Natalie Jade Catanach interview Manuel Marques Pereira, Head of Division of Migration, Environment, and Climate Change and Risk Reduction, at the International Organisation for Migration (IOM – UN Migration). Mr. Pereira discusses the protection risks associated with climate-related migration, the difficulties in disentangling the environment from different causes of movement...

S3, E3: Empowering Migrant and Refugee Women to Thrive: The gendered experiences of forced migration

June 11, 2023 13:25 - 29 minutes - 17 MB

How are refugee experiences gendered, and what is the role of education in empowering female migrants and refugees? In this episode, Freya Thompson chats with Olivia Darby, Chief Programmes Officer at the WONDER Foundation. A women-led charity, WONDER seeks to support women and girls through education. Since 2018, the organisation has been working on a collaborative project across the UK, Poland, Slovenia, and Spain to empower migrant women, and it has recently become involved in su...

S3, E2: The Possibilities of Refugee-led Action: perspectives from Turkey

June 11, 2023 13:16 - 25 minutes - 19.9 MB

What role can refugees themselves play in responding to displacement, and how can we improve mechanisms that allow displaced communities to have an input into relief efforts? In this episode, Yanis Amirat and Maud Guibert sit down with Farida Abdulrahman, a Syrian refugee and former Head of Accountability at Violet Organization. Based in Gaziantep in Turkey, Violet Organization is an NGO that has been working with internally displaced persons (IDPs) and communities in Northern Syria...

S3, E1: Trampoline, an inspiring London-based café supporting Refugees’ journeys

June 11, 2023 12:34 - 18 minutes - 12.7 MB

Accessing employment is a challenge facing many refugees wanting to integrate in a new country. Trampoline is a London-based café that aims to tackle this by providing refugees in the city with meaningful employment opportunities. In this episode, Rebecca Huggett, Sales Manager at Trampoline Café, joins Katherine Velastegui Córdova in discussing its mission. Rebecca shares her thoughts on the difficulties facing refugees in the labour market in the UK, the role of employment in faci...

S2, E8: Legal aid, bureaucratic obstacles, and grassroots NGOs

June 17, 2022 06:40 - 33 minutes - 31.2 MB

In this episode, Jasmin Arciero and Oliver Nixon  interview Alexa Netty, the trustee and chair of the steering committee of SolidariTee. SolidariTee is a charity that supports NGOs offering legal aid to forcibly displaced people​, and so they begin with a discussion on the importance of legal ​aid as a key facet of refugee support. They also touch on debates surrounding the role of NGOs in refugee crises: where they fit within a complex system of assistance and whether and how it is...

S2, E7: Contrasting crises: Government responses to refugees in Calais and from Ukraine

June 17, 2022 06:20 - 21 minutes - 20.2 MB

For years, thousands of forcibly displaced people have been left in limbo in Calais, France, where they suffer from a lack of care and police crackdowns. Recently, as the Russian War is devastating Ukraine and forcing millions to flee, European countries (including France) are opening their borders and homes to Ukrainian refugees. What explains such different responses? In this episode, Johana Bretou-Klein sits down with Ruby and Holly, two volunteers of the Calais Food Collective, ...

S2, E6: Afghan evacuees in the UK: Challenges and opportunities 

June 16, 2022 06:30 - 30 minutes - 27.8 MB

Following the Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan in August 2021, tens of thousands of Afghans fled to foreign countries. The UK evacuated around 18,000 people, who are now placed in temporary housing. Organizations such as British Red Cross are now seeking to assist Afghans resettle into more permanent homes. In this episode, Sveto Muhammad Ishoq speaks to two guests: Halima, a British-Afghan evacuated last year from Kabul, and Nadine, the Afghan Relocations Project Officer at the Br...

S2, E5 Resilience in crisis: Reflections from a Ukrainian

June 16, 2022 06:15 - 35 minutes - 32.4 MB

Little has captured our attention like the Russian invasion of Ukraine on February 24th of this year. Constituting Europe’s largest refugee crisis since World War II, the UN estimates that more than 14 million people have fled their homes, with nearly 7 million Ukrainians seeking asylum in neighbouring countries. One of these people is Olena, a 24-year-old Ukrainian national working in the film industry in the suburbs of Kyiv when Russian forces invaded. In this episode, Madison and...

S2, E4 Working towards dignity: Perspectives from refugee social workers in Lebanon

June 15, 2022 09:16 - 33 minutes - 30.5 MB

In this podcast, Yujia Zhang invites two women, Nadia and Fatima, to talk about their stories as both refugees and social workers in Lebanon. Nadia, a third generation Palestinian refugee, lives in the Beqaa Valley. Currently, she is the director of Manara centre of the Lighthouse Peace Initiative, a NGO offering English and art training to refugee students. Fatima, a successful businesswoman in Damascus, became a refugee in 2013 due to Syrian war and fled to Beirut. In 2019, she fo...

S2, E3 Persevering for peace: Understanding the challenges of an asylum journey

June 15, 2022 06:40 - 26 minutes - 23.9 MB

This podcast explores the physical and emotional challenges that arise from refugees' journeys to safety. Sam, a former refugee from Iraq, describes his experience gaining asylum in the UK and how he has persevered through years of challenges. Sam discusses his reasons for fleeing, his time living in displacement, and his assimilation to his new community in the UK. Molly is an MSc student in the Development Studies program. While completing her undergraduate degree in Florida, Mol...

S2, E2 Climate-induced migration in the Caribbean: Where are we now and pathways forward

June 14, 2022 06:30 - 42 minutes - 39.3 MB

In this episode, Leah Trotman chats with Pablo Escribano, the Regional Thematic Specialist at the International Organization for Migration (IOM) for the Americas and the Caribbean on climate change and migration. The Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre reported that nearly 3 million people across the Caribbean and United States were displaced in 2017 due to Hurricanes Irma, Maria, and Harvey. With a rise in global warming, Small Island Developing States (SIDS) can expect an incr...

S2, E1 Relief Chief: Insight on the refugee system from the top of the UN

June 13, 2022 10:53 - 30 minutes - 28 MB

Today’s theme in the Refugee Realities podcast series focuses on a birds-eye perspective of the challenges facing the global humanitarian system. And who better to speak with than the person who was responsible for coordinating this system: Sir Mark Lowcock, the former ‘Relief Chief’ of the UN humanitarian agency. Nina and Shanyce discuss Mark’s experience during his 4-year posting, highlighting the power of the individual stories that stuck with Mark along the way.

S1, E12 Kaweh Beheshtizadeh's journey from asylum seeker to refugee lawyer

July 12, 2021 09:54 - 26 minutes - 37.2 MB

In this bonus episode, Kaweh Beheshtizadeh speaks to Jenifer Elmslie about his journey from asylum seeker to refugee lawyer. Kaweh sought asylum from Iran after participating in pro-Kurdish activism in the country, a group which is heavily persecuted and discriminated against. After a short stay in Turkey under the protection of UNHCR, Kaweh entered the UK in 2004 and gained asylum status after one year. His experience motivated him to study for the bar at University and he now repr...

Kaweh Beheshtizadeh's journey from asylum seeker to refugee lawyer

July 12, 2021 09:54 - 26 minutes - 37.2 MB

In this bonus episode, Kaweh Beheshtizadeh speaks to Jenifer Elmslie about his journey from asylum seeker to refugee lawyer. Kaweh sought asylum from Iran after participating in pro-Kurdish activism in the country, a group which is heavily persecuted and discriminated against. After a short stay in Turkey under the protection of UNHCR, Kaweh entered the UK in 2004 and gained asylum status after one year. His experience motivated him to study for the bar at University and he now repr...

Digital education and displacement

June 18, 2021 10:21 - 19 minutes - 18.3 MB

In this episode, LSE Master’s student Ezgi Ilhan interviews Valentina Spinedi, Director of Student Advising at Paper Airplanes. Paper Airplanes is a fully virtual non-profit organization providing educational services to conflict-affected individuals, focusing on displaced Syrians with refugee status. Though many organizations struggled to transition to operating remotely after the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, Paper Airplanes had the unique advantage of already being virtual, pro...

Digital Education and Displacement

June 18, 2021 10:21 - 19 minutes - 18.3 MB

In this episode, LSE Master’s student Ezgi Ilhan interviews Valentina Spinedi, Director of Student Advising at Paper Airplanes. Paper Airplanes is a fully virtual non-profit organization providing educational services to conflict-affected individuals, focusing on displaced Syrians with refugee status. Though many organizations struggled to transition to operating remotely after the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, Paper Airplanes had the unique advantage of already being virtual, pro...

S1, E11 Digital education and displacement

June 18, 2021 10:21 - 19 minutes - 18.3 MB

In this episode, LSE Master’s student Ezgi Ilhan interviews Valentina Spinedi, Director of Student Advising at Paper Airplanes. Paper Airplanes is a fully virtual non-profit organization providing educational services to conflict-affected individuals, focusing on displaced Syrians with refugee status. Though many organizations struggled to transition to operating remotely after the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, Paper Airplanes had the unique advantage of already being virtual, pro...

S1, E10 Advocating for refugee education

June 18, 2021 10:04 - 35 minutes - 32.5 MB

In this episode, Konstantina Mirtzani and Valeria Miglio speak with Giulia Cicoli, co-founder and Advocacy Director of Still I Rise NGO. Still I Rise was first founded in 2018 to address the lack of appropriate education services for minors living in the Samos hotspot. Since then, the organisation has opened schools for displaced youth in Syria, Kenya, and Turkey. These projects focus on providing education in emergency contexts (Syria, Greece) as well as in protracted refugee crise...

Advocating for Refugee Education

June 18, 2021 10:04 - 35 minutes - 32.5 MB

In this episode, Konstantina Mirtzani and Valeria Miglio speak with Giulia Cicoli, co-founder and Advocacy Director of Still I Rise NGO. Still I Rise was first founded in 2018 to address the lack of appropriate education services for minors living in the Samos hotspot. Since then, the organisation has opened schools for displaced youth in Syria, Kenya, and Turkey. These projects focus on providing education in emergency contexts (Syria, Greece) as well as in protracted refugee crise...

Advocating for refugee education

June 18, 2021 10:04 - 35 minutes - 32.5 MB

In this episode, Konstantina Mirtzani and Valeria Miglio speak with Giulia Cicoli, co-founder and Advocacy Director of Still I Rise NGO. Still I Rise was first founded in 2018 to address the lack of appropriate education services for minors living in the Samos hotspot. Since then, the organisation has opened schools for displaced youth in Syria, Kenya, and Turkey. These projects focus on providing education in emergency contexts (Syria, Greece) as well as in protracted refugee crise...

Solutions for IDPs: from Geneva to Mogadishu

June 17, 2021 12:22 - 48 minutes - 44.9 MB

This podcast takes listeners to the forefront of the internal displacement issue in Somalia where Mogadishu officials are spearheading a policy to address the needs of the hundreds of thousands of IDPs in their city.    In the first part of the podcast, Durable Solutions Consultant for the Municipality of Mogadishu, Amun Osman, speaks with Research and Report Officer for the UN Secretary-General's High-Level Panel on Internal Displacement, Mark Yarnell (speaking in his personal ca...

Solutions for IDPs: From Geneva to Mogadishu

June 17, 2021 12:22 - 48 minutes - 44.9 MB

This podcast takes listeners to the forefront of the internal displacement issue in Somalia where Mogadishu officials are spearheading a policy to address the needs of the hundreds of thousands of IDPs in their city.    In the first part of the podcast, Durable Solutions Consultant for the Municipality of Mogadishu, Amun Osman, speaks with Research and Report Officer for the UN Secretary-General's High-Level Panel on Internal Displacement, Mark Yarnell (speaking in his personal ca...

S1, E9 Solutions for IDPs: from Geneva to Mogadishu

June 17, 2021 12:22 - 48 minutes - 44.9 MB

This podcast takes listeners to the forefront of the internal displacement issue in Somalia where Mogadishu officials are spearheading a policy to address the needs of the hundreds of thousands of IDPs in their city.    In the first part of the podcast, Durable Solutions Consultant for the Municipality of Mogadishu, Amun Osman, speaks with Research and Report Officer for the UN Secretary-General's High-Level Panel on Internal Displacement, Mark Yarnell (speaking in his personal ca...

S1, E8 The UK government’s new plan for immigration: implications for refugees

June 17, 2021 12:22 - 37 minutes - 34.8 MB

In March 2021, the Home Secretary, Priti Patel, made headlines with the announcement of the Governments ‘New Plan for Immigration’. This ‘New Plan’ outlined the most significant overhaul to the UK’s existing refugee and asylum policy in decades. The government stated that this overhaul will create a ‘fairer’ system and insists that it was ‘breaking the business model of people smuggling networks and protecting the lives of those they endanger’. However, despite the government's clai...

The UK Government’s ‘New Plan for Immigration’: Implications for Refugees?

June 17, 2021 12:22 - 37 minutes - 34.8 MB

In March 2021, the Home Secretary, Priti Patel, made headlines with the announcement of the Governments ‘New Plan for Immigration’. This ‘New Plan’ outlined the most significant overhaul to the UK’s existing refugee and asylum policy in decades. The government stated that this overhaul will create a ‘fairer’ system and insists that it was ‘breaking the business model of people smuggling networks and protecting the lives of those they endanger’. However, despite the government's clai...

The UK government’s new plan for immigration: implications for refugees

June 17, 2021 12:22 - 37 minutes - 34.8 MB

In March 2021, the Home Secretary, Priti Patel, made headlines with the announcement of the Governments ‘New Plan for Immigration’. This ‘New Plan’ outlined the most significant overhaul to the UK’s existing refugee and asylum policy in decades. The government stated that this overhaul will create a ‘fairer’ system and insists that it was ‘breaking the business model of people smuggling networks and protecting the lives of those they endanger’. However, despite the government's clai...

Women, peace, and security after Europe’s refugee ‘crisis’

June 17, 2021 12:22 - 42 minutes - 38.6 MB

In this podcast, Gabriele Canavan and Taitum Caggiano interview Dr. Aiko Holvikivi and Dr. Audrey Reeves who recently published an article titled “Women, Peace and Security After Europe’s Refugee Crisis,” and they are here to tell us more about the nexus between the Women, Peace and Security (WPS) agenda and the refugee security regime. For background, the United Nations’ Security Council Resolution (SCR) 1325 is often considered a watershed moment for WPS activists seeking gender e...

S1, E7 Women, peace, and security after Europe’s refugee ‘crisis’

June 17, 2021 12:22 - 42 minutes - 38.6 MB

In this podcast, Gabriele Canavan and Taitum Caggiano interview Dr. Aiko Holvikivi and Dr. Audrey Reeves who recently published an article titled “Women, Peace and Security After Europe’s Refugee Crisis,” and they are here to tell us more about the nexus between the Women, Peace and Security (WPS) agenda and the refugee security regime. For background, the United Nations’ Security Council Resolution (SCR) 1325 is often considered a watershed moment for WPS activists seeking gender e...

Women, Peace, and Security After Europe’s Refugee ‘Crisis’

June 17, 2021 12:22 - 42 minutes - 38.6 MB

In this podcast, Gabriele Canavan and Taitum Caggiano interview Dr. Aiko Holvikivi and Dr. Audrey Reeves who recently published an article titled “Women, Peace and Security After Europe’s Refugee Crisis,” and they are here to tell us more about the nexus between the Women, Peace and Security (WPS) agenda and the refugee security regime. For background, the United Nations’ Security Council Resolution (SCR) 1325 is often considered a watershed moment for WPS activists seeking gender e...

S1, E6 Navigating asylum as an unaccompanied minor in the UK

June 16, 2021 10:53 - 21 minutes - 19.8 MB

In this interview by MSc student in International Development, Gender and globalisation Jenifer Elmslie, Mustafa Ali discusses his experience leaving Afghanistan as an unaccompanied minor at the age of 13, and his 10-year journey to gain asylum in the United Kingdom. Ali discusses his journey to graduate from Cambridge University in 2017with a degree in Architecture. He talks about the difficulties he encountered during his time studying for his undergraduate degree while simultaneo...

Navigating asylum as an unaccompanied minor in the UK

June 16, 2021 10:53 - 21 minutes - 19.8 MB

In this interview by MSc student in International Development, Gender and globalisation Jenifer Elmslie, Mustafa Ali discusses his experience leaving Afghanistan as an unaccompanied minor at the age of 13, and his 10-year journey to gain asylum in the United Kingdom. Ali discusses his journey to graduate from Cambridge University in 2017with a degree in Architecture. He talks about the difficulties he encountered during his time studying for his undergraduate degree while simultaneo...

Navigating Asylum as an unaccompanied minor in the UK

June 16, 2021 10:53 - 21 minutes - 19.8 MB

In this interview by MSc student in International Development, Gender and globalisation Jenifer Elmslie, Mustafa Ali discusses his experience leaving Afghanistan as an unaccompanied minor at the age of 13, and his 10-year journey to gain asylum in the United Kingdom. Ali discusses his journey to graduate from Cambridge University in 2017with a degree in Architecture. He talks about the difficulties he encountered during his time studying for his undergraduate degree while simultaneo...

S1, E5 Call them by their names

June 16, 2021 10:42 - 20 minutes - 18.6 MB

In Western countries, refugees are often seen as a burden, as an indistinct mass of people threatening our “values and well-being”. In this podcast, MSc student in Gender, Development and Globalisation Simona Camillini hears the incredible stories of two of the hundreds of thousands of people who every year are forced to flee their homes and leave everything behind to start a new life elsewhere.    Paul is from Nigeria and, since 2014, he has been living in Sankt Poelten, a city i...

Call them by their names

June 16, 2021 10:42 - 20 minutes - 18.6 MB

In Western countries, refugees are often seen as a burden, as an indistinct mass of people threatening our “values and well-being”. In this podcast, MSc student in Gender, Development and Globalisation Simona Camillini hears the incredible stories of two of the hundreds of thousands of people who every year are forced to flee their homes and leave everything behind to start a new life elsewhere.    Paul is from Nigeria and, since 2014, he has been living in Sankt Poelten, a city i...

Theatre as a Healing Power: Stories of Loss & Displacement, Hope & Friendship

June 15, 2021 12:09 - 32 minutes - 30.2 MB

In this podcast, MSc student in International Development and Humanitarian Emergencies Maria Harb meets two inspirational women - Victoria Lupton and Fida Alwaer. Victoria has been living in Lebanon for the past 10 years and is the co-founder of Seenaryo, a leading specialist in theatre and play-based learning with marginalized communities in Lebanon and Jordan - in particular refugee communities. Fida was forcibly displaced from her home country Syria and arrived in Lebanon in 2012...

S1, E4 Acting with a social purpose

June 15, 2021 12:09 - 32 minutes - 30.2 MB

In this podcast, MSc student in International Development and Humanitarian Emergencies Maria Harb meets two inspirational women - Victoria Lupton and Fida Alwaer. Victoria has been living in Lebanon for the past 10 years and is the co-founder of Seenaryo, a leading specialist in theatre and play-based learning with marginalized communities in Lebanon and Jordan - in particular refugee communities. Fida was forcibly displaced from her home country Syria and arrived in Lebanon in 2012...

Acting with a social purpose

June 15, 2021 12:09 - 32 minutes - 30.2 MB

In this podcast, MSc student in International Development and Humanitarian Emergencies Maria Harb meets two inspirational women - Victoria Lupton and Fida Alwaer. Victoria has been living in Lebanon for the past 10 years and is the co-founder of Seenaryo, a leading specialist in theatre and play-based learning with marginalized communities in Lebanon and Jordan - in particular refugee communities. Fida was forcibly displaced from her home country Syria and arrived in Lebanon in 2012...

S1, E3 Refugee Week as a movement, not a moment

June 15, 2021 12:08 - 34 minutes - 31.3 MB

Refugees and asylum seekers are all too often seen through the narrow prism of their experiences of displacement, but this is only one part of the picture. Refugee artists and their community partners challenge those limits daily through storytelling, creative space-making, and movement organising. Natasha Menon and Sarah Doyel, two International Migration and Public Policy master’s students at LSE, talk to two advocates about the role of art in refugee advocacy work. Usman Khalid a...

Refugee Week as a movement, not a moment: The role of coffee, comedy, and the arts in refugee solidarity work

June 15, 2021 12:08 - 34 minutes - 31.3 MB

Refugees and asylum seekers are all too often seen through the narrow prism of their experiences of displacement, but this is only one part of the picture. Refugee artists and their community partners challenge those limits daily through storytelling, creative space-making, and movement organising. Natasha Menon and Sarah Doyel, two International Migration and Public Policy master’s students at LSE, talk to two advocates about the role of art in refugee advocacy work. Usman Khalid a...

Refugee Week as a movement, not a moment

June 15, 2021 12:08 - 34 minutes - 31.3 MB

Refugees and asylum seekers are all too often seen through the narrow prism of their experiences of displacement, but this is only one part of the picture. Refugee artists and their community partners challenge those limits daily through storytelling, creative space-making, and movement organising. Natasha Menon and Sarah Doyel, two International Migration and Public Policy master’s students at LSE, talk to two advocates about the role of art in refugee advocacy work. Usman Khalid a...

The Human Face of the Climate Crisis: Forced Migration and Protection Challenges

June 14, 2021 13:12 - 31 minutes - 29.2 MB

The UNHCR estimates that 90% of refugees are produced in countries that are the most vulnerable and the least prepared to adapt to the repercussions of climate change. In this episode, MSc student in Health and International Development Aimée Wolff interviews Andrew Harper, special Advisor on Climate Action to the UN Refugee Agency, who illuminates the increasing complexity behind the drivers of migration since the creation of the 1951 Refugee Convention and the implications of clim...

The human face of the climate crisis: forced migration and protection challenges

June 14, 2021 13:12 - 31 minutes - 29.2 MB

The UNHCR estimates that 90% of refugees are produced in countries that are the most vulnerable and the least prepared to adapt to the repercussions of climate change. In this episode, MSc student in Health and International Development Aimée Wolff interviews Andrew Harper, special Advisor on Climate Action to the UN Refugee Agency, who illuminates the increasing complexity behind the drivers of migration since the creation of the 1951 Refugee Convention and the implications of clim...

S1, E2 The human face of the climate crisis: forced migration and protection challenges

June 14, 2021 13:12 - 31 minutes - 29.2 MB

The UNHCR estimates that 90% of refugees are produced in countries that are the most vulnerable and the least prepared to adapt to the repercussions of climate change. In this episode, MSc student in Health and International Development Aimée Wolff interviews Andrew Harper, special Advisor on Climate Action to the UN Refugee Agency, who illuminates the increasing complexity behind the drivers of migration since the creation of the 1951 Refugee Convention and the implications of clim...

Data and migration: in discussion with IOM’s Data Analysis Centre

June 14, 2021 13:12 - 46 minutes - 42.3 MB

Inspired by the decades-long struggle to collect consistent data on international migration globally, this podcast episode explores recent data innovation efforts made by the International Organization for Migration’s Global Migration Data Analysis Center (IOM’s GMDAC) in Berlin, Germany.     In this episode, MSc student in International Migration and Public Policy Sarah Phillips spoke with two LSE alumni: Niklas Sievers, a former student in the MSc in International Migration and ...

Data and Migration: in discussion with IOM’s Global Migration Data Analysis Centre

June 14, 2021 13:12 - 46 minutes - 42.3 MB

Inspired by the decades-long struggle to collect consistent data on international migration globally, this podcast episode explores recent data innovation efforts made by the International Organization for Migration’s Global Migration Data Analysis Center (IOM’s GMDAC) in Berlin, Germany.     In this episode, MSc student in International Migration and Public Policy Sarah Phillips spoke with two LSE alumni: Niklas Sievers, a former student in the MSc in International Migration and ...

S1, E1 Data and migration: in discussion with IOM’s Data Analysis Centre

June 14, 2021 13:12 - 46 minutes - 42.3 MB

Inspired by the decades-long struggle to collect consistent data on international migration globally, this podcast episode explores recent data innovation efforts made by the International Organization for Migration’s Global Migration Data Analysis Center (IOM’s GMDAC) in Berlin, Germany.     In this episode, MSc student in International Migration and Public Policy Sarah Phillips spoke with two LSE alumni: Niklas Sievers, a former student in the MSc in International Migration and ...