« Families in Transit : Child-bearing, Child-rearing and Inheritance during Displacement », September 21–23, 2022, Leiden University
Stories about refugees are almost always stories about families. From ancient times when deportations accompanied military defeats to the modern migrations unleashed by conflict, persecution and climate change, children within displaced families have continuously demanded care. And yet, the archival record and the narratives drawn from it rarely capture the seemingly “invisible” work performed by biological and circumstantial caregivers during periods of displacement. Further, while it is clear that child-bearing and caretaking are timeless enterprises, deep lacunae remain around these historical subjects more generally. Diapers necessarily leave different kinds of cloth and paper trails. How does a focus on growing families as well as the individuals and entities who care for them change our understanding of displacement, migration and the complex feelings of belonging to a specific religious, ethnic or cultural “diaspora”?
This conference, Families in Transit, makes the “invisible” work that accompanies children and continues during periods of displacement “visible” across space and historical time. Drawing on multidisciplinary perspectives, the goal of this meeting is to illuminate the connections and disconnections between displaced families within different historical and contemporary contexts, like : deported populations in the Ancient Near East ; indigenous peoples in North America ; families with Nansen passports after WWI ; Polish Jews who survived World War II and Holocaust in the Soviet Union ; displaced people with Greek citizenship ; families uprooted during and after the breakup of Yugoslavia in the 1990s and the dissolution of Mandate Palestine in the 1940s as well as Syrian and Ukrainian parents and their children who have been displaced more recently, over the last decade and up until today. The keynote addresses will be given by Professor Claire Zalc and Professor Ab de Jong. This conference is sponsored by the Royal Academy of The Netherlands (KNAW) which awarded the organizer an Early Career Partnership for this initiative in 2021.
We would like to invite “early career scholars” working on these themes to join our conference. Advanced doctoral students, postdoctoral colleagues and untenured professors at universities and research institutes are welcome to apply. Small travel stipends will be offered on a case-by-case basis and applicants should consider asking their home institutions for full support if they require a larger travel budget and overnight accommodations. Meals and refreshments at the conference will be covered by the organizer.
Application details
To apply please send a proposed paper title, a 250 word abstract summarizing your conference presentation, and your CV to Sarah Cramsey (s.a.cramsey@hum.leidenuniv.nl) by May 1. Questions about the CFP and conference more generally can be directed to her as well.