Ces articles de blog sont rédigés par les membres de l’équipe GRABS, ses partenaires et ses collaborateur.rices. Leur contenu reflète donc différents points de vue et opinions, tant au sein du projet qu’au-delà. Nous souhaitons faire de ce blog et du site web GRABS un espace ouvert d’échange et de discussion avec toutes les personnes qui travaillent avec nous dans le cadre du projet. Si vous souhaitez contribuer sous quelque forme que ce soit, n’hésitez pas à nous contacter. Il peut s’agir d’un article, d’un commentaire ou d’un éditorial, d’un compte rendu d’événement, d’un reportage photo, d’une illustration ou de tout autre support audiovisuel. Bonne lecture ! L’équipe GRABS

Lisez les derniers articles du blog ici

/

These blog posts are written by GRABS team members, partners and collaborators. The content thus reflects different positions and opinions both within and beyond the project. We want to make this blog, and the GRABS website, an open space for exchange and discussion with any person working with us along the project. If you would like to contribute in any form, please get in touch with us. It can be an article, a commentary or opinion piece, a report from an event, a photo-essay, an illustration, or any other audio-visual media. Enjoy your readings ! The GRABS team

Read the latest blogposts here

 

 

 

 

When Excellence Is Not Enough: Experiences of Accessing Higher Education for Youth with forced migration backgrounds in South Africa 

By Aron Tesfai Neighbourhoods such as Yeoville, Rosettenville, and Hillbrow—dense inner-city areas in Johannesburg—are often described through a language of deficit: crime, poverty, overcrowding, and deteriorating infrastructure. Yet for thousands of migrants and refugees, these places are home. It is a place of survival, community, and aspiration, particularly for young people who have grown up…

Lire la suite

Fieldwork and scoping visit to K’jipuktuk-Halifax, NS, Canada: A Comics-based essay

Fieldwork and scoping visit to K’jipuktuk-Halifax, NS, Canada: A Comics-based essay This comics-based essay is both a report and a methodological exploration produced during my fieldwork and scoping visit to K’jipuktuk-Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, between 18 July and 4 August 2025 K’jipuktuk, which means « Great Harbour » in Mi’kmaw language, forms part of Mi’kma’ki, the ancestral…

Lire la suite

Veils of silence

Veils of Silence : The Hidden Stories of Young Refugee Women in South Africa I have been a refugee in South Africa since 2013. As an activist for refugee rights I have participated in different platforms and events that  exposed me to traumatic experiences of refugees and women in particular. What struck me as different in…

Lire la suite
Illustration of a right foot and clouds shapes made by starling birds flying over a sunset horizon. Title reads "On the move: troubling categories of (im)mobility". Text with categories all over the illustration is associated to birds with small arrows pointing at them. Colours black, grey, and blue over cream white background. Illustration signed by Juanchila, 30 January 2025.

On the move: Troubling categories of (im)mobility

« On the move: Troubling categories of (im)mobility » is inspired from conversations within the GRABS project team, and the horrific, yet hopeful, sight of bird nests built on top of razor wire fences at the entrance of Calais, France. After the original illustration, I made a composite with a long list of these troubling categories and their definitions using various glossaries, encyclopedias, and dictionaries. Finally, I wrote a short commentary piece to accompany the illustration.

Lire la suite
montage figure showing: 1. background: black and white map of bergerac, france. a straight diagonal dotted line crosses the top of map from left to right. 2. foreground: an unravelling green spiral cord wrap with a coloured worldmap printed on it

Balls of yarn

What are the trajectories of those who migrate? What are they like? I was recently asked to contribute my reflections for an arts-based and creative workshop on migrants’ trajectories focusing on the themes of work, family, and housing. I wrote about this influenced by my position and experiences as a male Latino-white, South American with…

Lire la suite