This event has now finished.
  • Date and time: Thursday 25 November 2021, 2.30pm to 4pm
  • Location: Heslington Hall, H/G21 Eynns Room
  • Admission: Free admission, booking required

Event details

To what extent are ‘soft power’ and security strategies driven by the assumption that reduced migration will be a beneficial outcome of successful military interventions and development policies? Can and should security and development be aligned or are there inevitable tensions in the nexus between security, migration and conflict?

Our event invites the expert speakers to examine underlying assumptions about the security-development-migration nexus, challenge the meaning of these concepts, and offer ideas about possible ways to re-conceptualise the nexus and its implications for UK policy at home and abroad.

A broader understanding of the nexus shows that there are complex, non-linear relationships between security, migration, and development. So, how well do British and EU regulatory regimes fit with an accurate image of the nexus, and what impacts might recent political challenges and institutional transformation have on the way the nexus is perceived? Additionally, how might recent changes in the political landscape ultimately affect conflict, development, and migration outcomes in the future?

This event is jointly organised by the University of York Interdisciplinary Global Development Centre (IGDC), The Migration Network, and The York Centre for Conflict and Security.

Speakers:

  • Nic Hailey, Director of International Alert, former FCO and lead on the DfiD/FCO merger, 
  • Nancy Porsia, freelance journalist
  • Dr Alistair Shepherd, Senior Lecturer in European Security at Aberystwyth University

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