An illustration of Anthropology's contribution to refugee law research
The MRN (Migration and Refugees) Network and FRED (Fundamental Rights, Equality and Diversity) Research Group, School of Law and Social Sciences, are pleased to invite you to this talk.

In particular, anthropology can feed into a broader legal conceptualization that accounts for the realities of our diverse societies and helps explain how fear of persecution due to witchcraft can indeed be real and connected with serious human rights violations. Moreover, cultural expertise can assist in assessing asylum claims in their cultural, historical, and political contexts, affording the claimant a fairer and better adjudicated outcome. Nevertheless, the use of anthropology inevitably comes with some challenges related to the different fields’ epistemologies, languages, and styles, as well as a lack of appreciation for interdisciplinarity in some areas of academia.