28th January 2022
21st January 2022
14th January 2022
2021 Year in Review
The Depiction of Violence in Palestine is a Crisis of Framework
Prepared by the Rights for Time Network Palestine strand Headlines grabbing attention this week obscure the reality of the long-times of violence and trauma in Gaza. In this post, we showcase an excerpt from a forthcoming report prepared with our Rights for Time Network partner, Palestine Trauma Center UK (PTC). Photo courtesy of the Palestine […]
Webinar: Rights for Time Webinar: Migration and Time
On July 14th 2021 we presented our first webinar in a bimonthly series. PhD researcher Paladia Ziss delivers a presentation on her working paper Refugee Times as Exceptional Times: Time, Forced Displacement and the State. About Paladia Ziss Paladia is pursuing her PhD in Social Policy/Sociology at the University of Birmingham. She looks at how […]
World Refugee Day: Rights for Time’s Lebanon Study
To coincide with World Refugee Day, we provide this article on Rights for Time’s refugee focused case study in Lebanon. Rights for Time Lebanese Case Study ‘Politico-legal temporalities and refugee policy making’ Our case study in Lebanon works on understanding how the practical times of refugee policy, such as the Global Compact for Refugees, interact […]
Webinar: Online Global Challenges Research Webinar
Last April, we supported several University of Birmingham PhD students in their delivery of a webinar that covered challenges to global research during the Covid-19 pandemic, and how such challenges could be overcome. The webinar was recorded, and we strongly recommend watching it back below!
Rights for Time Network Statement on Palestine, 17 May 2022
As a Network project invested in the cessation of detrimental crisis politics–where international attention is only paid to immediate.
Podcast: Interview with Rights for Time Investigator Professor Rana Dajani
Professor Dajani introduces the We Love Reading program, which works in more than 50+ counties for individuals and communities to realize their potential and become change makers. She discusses her Rights for Time research on the role of language in shaping refugees’ experiences, memories, and hope, and how it is impact policy and practice.