OXFORD HUMAN RIGHTS FESTIVAL
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  • 2023 Festival

Events

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Tuesday 15 March 2022
6.00pm - 8.30pm GMT

'This Is Who I Am'
 with Actors for Human Rights
Workshop & Performance
@Brookes Headington 

​​

Registration & More Info
A rehearsed reading of first-hand accounts from LGBT+ people seeking asylum in the UK about their experiences fleeing their own country and on arrival in the UK. Read by Actors For Human Rights Network. The reading will be accompanied by workshop on mapping the asylum process.

This event is in collaboration with the Migration and Refugees Research Network ​
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Wednesday 16 March 2022
6.00pm - 7.30pm GMT

'Rethinking the border in
​times of crisis'

Talk & Q&A
@Brooks Headington

Registration & More Info
Amid the various crises and uncertainties of today, our politics today seems in hock to a 'borderline disorder'. Professor Ruben Andersson delivers a challenging talk. "The border must be rethought, its pathological disorders overcome; and the best way to do so may be to examine how borders have long served as zones of exchange and as mechanisms of protection, rather than as razor-wire-clad monuments to sovereign folly".

This event has been organised  by Migration and Refugees Research Network  at Oxford Brookes.

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Thursday 17 March 2022
4.30pm - 5.30pm GMT
The Vanarmare Tribe:
Our Right To Roam
Panel & Q&A
@ONLINE/WEBINAR

Registration & More Info
Based just outside the city of Ponda, Goa, this community of sixteen families are at a crossroads of a traditional nomadic existence and permanence. In October 2016, the tribe was attacked by neighbouring villagers. It was this outrage that resulted in the government recognising their existence. They received identity cards and birth certificates. Everyone’s birthday is the 1st of January.

This talk accompanies the exhibition at Common Ground, Little Clarendon Street, Oxford, UK. 
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Thursday 17 March 2022
6.30pm - 8.30pm GMT
'Limbo'
Film Screening
@Brookes Headington

Registration & More Info
Ben Sharrock’s critically adored Limbo is a wry, funny and poignant cross-cultural satire that subtly sews together the hardship and hope of the refugee experience. Set on a fictional remote Scottish island, it follows a group of new arrivals as they await the results of their asylum claims.

About the director: Debuting director Ben Sharrock has a strong background in Arab history and suffering that informed his screenplay. He studied Arabic and politics for his undergraduate degree, lived in Damascus for the third year of his degree until the break-out of civil war in 2011 and worked in refugee camps in Algeria.

This event is in collaboration with Oxford Brookes Documentary Club and the Migration and Refugees Research Network ​
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Friday 18 March 2022
6.00PM - 8.00PM

'A talk with Yasmeen Lari: Saving Humanity, Saving the Planet: Low Tech, Low Impact Architecture for the Other 99 percent'
@ONLINE
​

Registration & More Info
Join RIBA International for a talk with Yasmeen Lari, the first woman to qualify as an architect in Pakistan, who is renowned for her work to empowering marginalised communities through architecture and building the world's largest zero carbon shelters programme.

The talk is held to celebrate the RIBA's Women in Architecture programme and the 20th Anniversary of the Oxford Human Rights Festival 2022 which Lari will launch as Oxford Brookes Alumna.

This talk is organised by RIBA and supported by Oxford Brookes University and IStrucE.
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Saturday 19 March 2022
4.00pm - 8.00pm GMT

'Design for the Common Good
online conversations'

 Keynote Speaker: Nabeel Hamdi, Oxford Brookes University
This even has been organised by Design for the Common Good,  is online and will have a global audience. Image Chamanga Cultural Center, Ecuador. Image credit: Sebastian Oviedo

Registration & More Info
Online discussions with public interest designers, community members, and leaders in the field to discuss the themes and projects featured in the Design for the Common Good Exhibition. Project presentations: Agbogbloshie Makerspace Platform, Ghana; Chamanga Cultural Center, Ecuador; Restore Oakland, USA; Naidi Community Hall, Fiji; George Hawkins Memorial Center, USA.
Moderators: Leann Andrews (Pacific Rim Community Network) + Sandhya Naidu
Janardhan / Rohini Singh (Curry Stone Foundation). 


Design for the Common Good has launched a new digital platform to facilitate collaborations along with a database of public interest design projects. For more information contact Jane Anderson j.anderson@brookes.ac.uk
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Saturday 19 March 2022
10am - 4pm

'Queer In The Time of
​Forced Migration'

Virtual Reality Experience & Short Film

This event is to be experienced as a pair. One person per ticket.  18+Please arrive 15 mins before
​CANCELLED 
DUE TO TECH ISSUES

How do you rebuild a life when you know you can never go home?

Another Dream, a hybrid animated documentary and VR experience, brings the gripping, true love story of an Egyptian lesbian couple to life. Faced with a post-revolution backlash against the LGBTQ community, they escape Cairo to seek asylum and acceptance in the Netherlands. An accompanying installation allows audiences to reflect on what they have seen, heard, and felt in VR.

Another Dream is part of Queer in a Time of Forced Migration, an animated transmedia series that follows the stories of LGBTQ refugees from Egypt, Sudan, and Saudi Arabia across continents and cultures — from the 2011 Revolutions in the Middle East and North Africa region to the world today.

This experience is in two parts. First the virtual Reality experience and then a short film. The sessions are delivered with two people at a time so there are limited spaces available.

Part 1: 'Another Dream' VR Experience: 20 - 30 mins

Part 2: Film: Half a Life, a film, 15 mins

VR and Motion Sickness: The VR experience can bring on motion sickness. If you suffer from motion sickness please consider before you register for a space. 

This event is in collaboration with Migration and Refugees Research Network and has been planned and delivered by DEP Post Graduates Jackie Kearney and Kirra Mccollum
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Sunday 20 March 2022
10am - 4pm
'Queer In The Time of
​Forced Migration'

Virtual Reality Experience & Short Film

This event is to be experienced as a pair. One person per ticket.  18+
​CANCELLED DUE TO TECH ISSUES

How do you rebuild a life when you know you can never go home?

Another Dream, a hybrid animated documentary and VR experience, brings the gripping, true love story of an Egyptian lesbian couple to life. Faced with a post-revolution backlash against the LGBTQ community, they escape Cairo to seek asylum and acceptance in the Netherlands. An accompanying installation allows audiences to reflect on what they have seen, heard, and felt in VR.

Another Dream is part of Queer in a Time of Forced Migration, an animated transmedia series that follows the stories of LGBTQ refugees from Egypt, Sudan, and Saudi Arabia across continents and cultures — from the 2011 Revolutions in the Middle East and North Africa region to the world today.

This experience is in two parts. First the virtual Reality experience and then a short film. The sessions are delivered with two people at a time so there are limited spaces available.

Part 1: 'Another Dream' VR Experience: 20 - 30 mins

Part 2: Film: Half a Life, a film, 15 mins

VR and Motion Sickness: The VR experience can bring on motion sickness. If you suffer from motion sickness please consider before you register for a space. 

This event is in collaboration with Migration and Refugees Research Network and has been planned and delivered by DEP Post Graduates Jackie Kearney and Kirra Mccollum
​
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Thank you for supporting

Logo by ​Justin Collins

PAST EVENTS 2022

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Friday 11 March 2022
​6.30pm - 8.00pm GMT
'Rights-Based Development for Climate Migrants through Barefoot Social Architecture'
​Talk & Q&A @Brookes Headington

In Person Registration & More Info
Zoom Registration
The annual Nabeel Hamdi Lecture launches the 20th Oxford Human Rights Festival. Special guest Yasmeen Lari, the first female architect in Pakista, Alunma of Oxford Brookes Universtiy and recipient of many national and international awards delivers a thought provoking lecture.
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Saturday 12 March 2022
9.00am - 11.30am GMT
'Walk for Water'

Approx. 5km guided walk​

Starting @Brooks Headington

Registration & More Info
See the walking route
The average distance that women in Africa and Asia walk to collect water is six kilometers along treacherous paths, carrying up to 20kgs on their head. Depending on the size of the family and the household’s needs, women may make this trip multiple times on the same day. James Leitner, founder of MissionCleanWater shares facts along this 5km walk.

There will be food and drinks available to buy at the venue at the end of the walk. If you want to stay on for the talk please register on the talk link.


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Saturday 12 March 2022
12.30pm - 1.45pm GMT

'The Weight of Water'
Talk & Q&A
@Tap Social Movement Botley​

Registration & More Info
Nearly a billion people worldwide don’t have access to clean water close to home, negatively impacting food security, livelihood choices and educational opportunities. James Leitner, founder of MissionCleanWater delivers a talk around access to clean water and sanitation.

There will be food and drink available at the venue so come along earlier to have lunch with us.
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Saturday 12 March 2022
4.00pm - 5.00pm GMT

"How forensic anthropologists help to identify the missing in human rights investigations"
Talk, Q&A and tour of exhibition
@Wolfson College University of Oxford
​

Registration & More Info
​The analysis of human remains provides a lot of information about a person´s past, as well as the period in which they live in. This talk covers how forensic anthropologists analyse human skeletons to help identify the dead from mass disasters and mass grave scenarios in particular.

Talk by Dr Nicholas Marquez-Grant is a Senior Lecturer in Forensic Anthropology at Cranfield University and is one of only a few practicing forensic anthropologists in the UK, having helped with the police in many forensic cases in England and Wales. 

This talk will include a tour of the exhibitions at Wolfson College.
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Sunday 13 March 2022
1.30pm - 2.30pm GMT 
Pop-up Art Exhibition &
​Poetry Performance

@Brookes Headington

Registration & More Info
Women's Service Group from Refugee Resource in Oxford present their poems and artwork around the theme of movement and human rights.

This event is in collaboration with Refugee Resource Oxford.

​
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Sunday 13 March 2022
3.00pm - 5.30pm GMT
PADDINGTON
Film Screening Cert PG
@Brookes Headington
​

Registration & More Info
Chosen by the Women's Service Group from Refugee Resource in Oxford. Paddington stows away on a ship bound for London from Peru. He arrives undetected and is homeless until the Brown family encounter him at Paddington Station and take him in. The author Michael Bond said "Paddington Bear was a refugee with a label: Please look after this bear".
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Monday 14 March 2022
5.00pm - 6.15pm GMT

'Britain in Palestine 1917-1948’
Britain’s role'

Short film and Q&A
@ONLINE/WEBINAR

Webinar Registration & More Info
After the First World War, Britain and France divided the Middle East between them. It is a story of movement: of the British army moving to defeat the Ottoman rulers of Arabia; of Jews seeking refuge from pogroms in Eastern Europe; of Palestinians suffering domination and being made refugees. Discussion led by historian Dr Mary Embleton and Peter Riddell founding trustee of The Balfour Project. Picture: Britain captures Palestine: British troops parade through Jerusalem in December 1917  (Courtesy of the Matson Collection, Library of Congress)
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Tuesday 15 March 2022
12.30pm - 1.30pm GMT

Human Rights through textile language
Talk and Discussion
@ONLINE/WEBINAR

WEBINAR REGISTRATION & MORE INFO
Conflict Textiles contribution to the festival is titled “Human Rights through textile language”. It incorporates a conversation and in depth discussion of six arpilleras related to the festival theme for 2022 “Movement”.

Through these textiles, which express living experiences that often cannot be articulated in words and which embody the voices of those who engage in the search for the disappeared, Conflict Textiles will explore movement, testimony and resistance.

For the duration of the festival, images of the textiles will be displayed in book cabinets at Wolfson College.


Picture above: ‘For Paul, Disappeared 8 February 2012’ Zimbabwean arpillera, Shari Eppel, 2018. Photo Martin Melaugh, © Conflict Textiles
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Tuesday 15 March 2022
3.30pm - 5.00pm

'Conversations on climate change
​and mobility' 

Panel Discussion
@Brookes Headington

Registration & More Info
According to the UN, an estimated 30 million people have already been forced to move due to the impact of climate change in 2020, and the World Bank predict that up to 216 million people may be displaced due to the impacts of climate change by 2050. 

​In this discussion, we bring together colleagues from across Oxford Brookes University with guest speaker Yasmeen Lari  
to go behind the headlines to understand the connections between climate change and movement and question what we can learn from those on the move.

While the impacts of climate change on migration patterns seem clear, we do not yet fully understand the complex dynamics and relationships between the two phenomena.  
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This event has ended
'Refugee-ness'
How refugees are portrayed in photographs

​Talk and Discussion
Saturday 11 December 2021
1.30pm - 3pm

at Tap Social Movement, Curtis Industrial Estate, 27, North Hinksey Lane, Oxford OX2 0LX

A discussion around the current exhibition at Tap Social Botley.Shafiur Rahman, documentary filmmaker and curator of the exhibition, discusses  the case of Rohingya refugees, how they are represented in photography and argues that the complexities of refugee lives are reduced for the sake of expediency. Venue sponsored by Tap Social Movement, Oxford.


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NO BOOKING REQUIRED
​'The Next Generation
Young Rohingya Refugees'

Photography Exhibition
17 October - 30 Feb 2022
at Tap Social Movement, Curtis Industrial Estate, 27, North Hinksey Lane, Oxford OX2 0LX
​

Incredible stories of young Rohingya Refugees from Myanmar. Photographs taken by refugees. Free exhibition. Exhibition space sponsored by Tap Social Movement, Oxford.


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No Booking Required
Sketch Club and The Hazara
1 - 30 December 2021

At Common Ground Workspace, 
37-38 Little Clarendon St, Oxford OX1 2HF

The persecution against the Hazaras in Afghanistan continues to the present day. This exhibition is the story of an artist, the Sketch Club and his dedication to educate the Hazara refugees of Quetta, Pakistan. Free exhibition. Exhibition space sponsored by Common Ground Workspace

Learn more about the exhibition click here
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  • HOME & HISTORY
    • Our Aims
    • Nabeel Hamdi Lectures
    • Contact
    • Previous Festivals >
      • 2022 Festival >
        • 2022 Exhibitions
        • 2022 Events
        • 2022 Supporters
        • 2022 TEAM
      • 2021 Festival >
        • 2021 Exhibition
        • 2021 Team
        • 2021 Podcasts
        • 2021 Right To Roam Walk
        • 2021 CENDEP Workshop
      • 2020 Festival >
        • 2020 Planning Committee
        • 2020 Essay Competition
        • 2020 Events & Booking
        • 2020 NGO Showcase at Brookes Forum
      • 2019 Festival
      • 2018 Festival >
        • 2018 Exhibitions
        • 2018 Brookes events
      • 2017 Festival >
        • 2017 committee
      • 2016 Festival
      • 2015 Festival >
        • 2015 Supporters
      • 2014 Festival
      • 2008--2017 Previous Films
    • Location
    • Blog
  • 2023 Festival