2–5 Jun 2026
Europe/London timezone

Who speaks for borders? Contested sites of solidarity and refugee simulations

5 Jun 2026, 09:00

Description

Over the last decade, ‘stepping into the lives of refugees’ and ‘walking in their shoes’ through refugee simulations have become increasingly popular advocacy tools among humanitarian actors. Driven by highly emotive language of care and compassion, these events invite participants to actively engage with lived experiences of refugees, to feel and to sense what they endure, and to encounter their realities in a deeply embodied and intimate way. In doing so, they aim to raise awareness about refugees, change participants’ attitudes towards them, and mobilise solidarity with them. Despite their popularity, refugee simulations are neglected sites in border studies as well as in International Relations (IR) more broadly. Drawing on Deleuze’s reformulation of the concept of the simulacrum, and mobilizing the concept of minor passages, this paper explores how these simulations might produce, sustain, or destabilise the diagrams of borders while modelling the very borders that they seek to challenge. The paper shows that refugee simulations are performative border sites with a multiplicity of possibilities, some of which may reinforce the violence of borders, while others with their minor politics offer realisable glimpses of hope for solidarity with those on the move.

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