Collateral Damages: Tracing Debts and Displacements

From The Observatory
Collateral Damages: Tracing Debts and Displacements
November 13, 2025
Aaron Burr Hall, Princeton University
Pricing
In-person
Free
Categories
November 2025
SMTWTFS
Week 43262712842923053111
Week 4421314354617481
Week 4591011121131141152
Week 46161718119120121221
Week 47232412512612728291
Week 483011223241516
November 13, 2025
    Date
    November 13, 2025
    Location
    Aaron Burr Hall, Princeton University
    Pricing
    In-person
    Free
    Add to a calendar
    Nadia El-Shaarawi is Assistant Professor of Global Studies at Colby College. At Colby, she teaches courses on refugees and migration, humanitarianism, and global health. She is a cultural and medical anthropologist who specializes in transnational forced migration, humanitarianism, and mental health in the Middle East and North Africa and Europe. She is currently working on two research projects. First, her current book project focuses on how Iraqi refugees in Cairo, Egypt negotiated uncertain conditions of protracted urban exile and how interactions with transnational and local humanitarian institutions and policies, especially refugee resettlement, had implications for mental health and well-being. The second project (in collaboration with Prof. Razsa), Insurgent Mobilities, is an ethnography of the Balkan route that tells the story of the migrants who challenged and circumvented borders in their efforts to reach Europe in a struggle for what they and their activist allies called freedom of movement.
    Key Speaker: Nadia El-Shaarawi

    Participants

    Princeton University Department of Anthropology
    Organizer, Host | Homepage
    We take an interpretive approach to the study of culture - an approach that requires intensive ethnographic fieldwork, deep engagement with critical social theories, and historical analysis. In addition to teaching foundational texts, our department is interested in conceptual innovations in the use and organization of evidence and modes of ethical engagement. Our department specializes in Socio-Cultural Anthropology, but we also offer undergraduate courses in biological anthropology, including evolution, epigenetics, adaptation, race, forensics and death.