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Event

From the Frontlines: The Global Refugee Crisis

Event Date:

October 18, 2017 | 4:30 PM EDT

ADDRESS:

Georgetown University
Riggs Library
Library Walk

Washington, DC 20007

Participants:
Blessing and two other teen-age Nigerian girls watch a rainbow over the short stretch of water separating Sicily from mainland Italy. Eighty percent of young Nigerian women who cross the Mediterranean are trafficked into sexual exploitation. Image by Ben Taub. Italy, 2017.
English

Most African migrants heading to Europe unwittingly follow the ancient caravan routes of the trans...

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Roughly a hundred and fifty people wait to be rescued from an inflatable dinghy in the Mediterranean Sea, twenty miles north of Libya. The boat left with only enough fuel to reach international waters. Image by Ben Taub. Libya, 2016.
Roughly a hundred and fifty people wait to be rescued from an inflatable dinghy in the Mediterranean Sea, twenty miles north of Libya. The boat left with only enough fuel to reach international waters. Image by Ben Taub. Libya, 2016.

For the past several years, the global migrant crisis has dominated international headlines, and journalists have been at the frontlines of the issue, documenting the plight of displaced persons and their reception in and impact on their new host countries. Among these journalists are Pulitzer Center grantees Ben Taub, Robin Shulman, and Alice Su, whose work on refugees and migrants has been published by media outlets from around the world, including the New Yorker, NPR, Time, Politico, and The Washington Post.

Taub, Shulman, and Su join Shaun Casey, director of the Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs at Georgetown University, on Wednesday, October 18, 2017, at the Georgetown University's Riggs Library to discuss how communities worldwide have reacted to the refugee crisis. They will analyze the ethics of resettlement and explore religion's role in refugee integration.

Casey also is the former director of the U.S. Department of State's Office of Religion and Global Affairs. Taub's focus on African migrants heading to Europe has shed light on issues of human trafficking in the region, while Shulman and Su have focused on resettlement and the impact of migrants and refugees on host societies in North America and Germany, respectively.

Georgetown and its Berkley Center are members of the Pulitzer Center's Campus Consortium network, which is made up of more than 30 colleges and universities.

Event is free and open to the public. Reception follows the event.

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