Pictured above: Dr Janet Wilson
Researchers from The University of Northampton's School of The
Arts are celebrating after winning a prestigious funding bid to
explore the global issue of migration.
The three year research project - a collaboration between
Northampton, Germany's University of Münster, India's
University of Mumbai, Stockholm and two other UK universities, The
School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) and University of
Oxford - has been given the green light thanks to a
£3.2million grant from the Marie Curie Initial Training
Networks fund.
It was only one of seven applications, out of the several
hundreds submitted, to be accepted for funding.
Dr Janet Wilson, Professor in English and Postcolonial Studies
at The University of Northampton, said:
"This is wonderful news and a real coup for all the universities
involved. Research funding in the UK is very limited at the moment
and hundreds of bids were submitted, so we are delighted to be
bringing continents together to research this essential issue.
"In the last 10 years migration around the world has soared. As
transport links have developed, more people have been able to go
back and forth between countries and large numbers of people, and
often entire groups or even nations, are on the move for a wide
variety of reasons - everything from financial to political.
"Refugees are searching for work, asylum seekers are fleeing
their own countries, migrants are on the move seeking seasonal work
and contract professionals like health and care workers around the
world are in search of work. After finding employment overseas they
often send money back to families in their home countries. This
whole issue of increased mobilization - known as diaspora - means
that our globalised world is shaped by international migration.
"This creates massive challenges to nation states and civil
societies, culturally, economically and politically, but it also
creates opportunities and new perspectives in an unprecedented
degree. In-depth research on a major scale is urgently called for
to grapple with this complex development."
The consortium's bid is called CoHaB and will include the
training of doctoral and postdoctoral scholars who will focus on
the theme 'Constructions of Home and Belonging'.
Janet is now preparing to meet with the other UK universities
involved, with priorities, time lines and research areas set to be
agreed.
"At The University of Northampton we are rightly proud of the
partnerships we already have with other institutions around the
world," said Janet. "We have been working closely with Mumbai and
Münster for over five years - meeting at conferences and on
research visits to each others' institutions, collaborating and
publishing work together - so we are looking forward to continuing
this partnership over the next three years, as this exciting and
essential piece of research unfolds."