Lagat Mercy
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chep24.bsky.social
Lagat Mercy
@chep24.bsky.social
I am a passionate researcher and political scientist with a strong background in International Relations, Refugee Protection, and Gender Studies. My work sits at the intersection of migration, forced displacement, and the political economy of migration.
Happy to share my latest Op-Ed published by African Arguments.
It highlights the challenges refugee women in Nairobi face around work permits and livelihoods.
Read it here: africanarguments.org/2025/11/with...
Without Work Permits, Refugee Women in Nairobi Face Exploitation and Hardship | African Arguments
Refugee women in Nairobi
africanarguments.org
November 20, 2025 at 12:24 PM
Reposted by Lagat Mercy
November 13, 2025 at 7:50 PM
Reposted by Lagat Mercy
Forthcoming Evening Dialogue 👇👇👇

'Ethical Futures in Research and Publishing: Centring Ethics, Access and Equality in Refugee Studies', 14 November 2025, Online, 3pm- 4:30pm UK time | 5pm-6:30pm Beirut time

rli.sas.ac.uk/events/ethic...

#Refugees #GlobalSouth #Ethics #Equality #RefugeeStudies
November 6, 2025 at 11:10 AM
Reposted by Lagat Mercy
Volume 44, Issue 3
Meltem Ineli Ciger writes on Rethinking Mass Influx and Derogation in the Age of AI: The Role of New Technologies in Redefining Crisis, Protection and State Obligations.
🔗 Read more: doi.org/10.1093/rsq/...
October 13, 2025 at 8:11 AM
Reposted by Lagat Mercy
RSQ is still accepting short responses to Dr. Romola Sanyal's Article, "The Space that Refuge Makes: Rethinking Displacements and Protection". doi.org/10.1093/rsq/...
Responses should be between 1,000 and 2,500 words
Submissions should be made via the RSQ website
academic.oup.com/rsq/pages/su...
The Space that Refuge Makes: Rethinking Displacements and Protection
Abstract. Space is foundational to questions of refuge and asylum, but this space is one of conditional hospitality, extended to those deemed worthy of pro
doi.org
October 14, 2025 at 10:49 AM
Reposted by Lagat Mercy
📢 Publication Alert
NEW ADVANCE ARTICLE
Complementary Pathways at the Crossroads Between Migration and Asylum: Enhancing or Diluting the International Refugee Regime? by Emiliya Bratanova van Harten Lund University
🔗Read More: doi.org/10.1093/rsq/...
October 30, 2025 at 3:00 PM
Reposted by Lagat Mercy
From the RSQ Archives is back!

This November, Refugee Survey Quarterly revisits key articles on RESETTLEMENT — exploring its past, present, and future in refugee protection.

www.linkedin.com/company/1076...

#RefugeeSurveyQuarterly #RSQArchives #Resettlement #RefugeeProtection #ForcedMigration
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www.linkedin.com
October 31, 2025 at 10:31 AM
Reposted by Lagat Mercy
What do RSQ reviewers look for:

🔹 Does it engage refugee & forced migration debates?
🔹Does it go beyond description and add fresh insights?
🔹 Clear intro, argument, conclusion, sound methodology?
🔹 RSQ style guide, references, submission rules?

💡Read more: academic.oup.com/rsq/pages/fi...
First-Time Authors: What Do Reviewers Look For?
Authors often ask what editors and reviewers look for in a submission to the RSQ. The following pointers may help orient (new) authors who are keen to publish i
academic.oup.com
September 16, 2025 at 12:53 PM
Reposted by Lagat Mercy
📢 Call for Extended Abstracts
Refugee Survey Quarterly invites extended abstracts (max 600 words) for its Perspectives on Displacement series.
📌 Deadline: 29 September 2025
📧 Submissions: nicholas.maple@sas.ac.uk
More details: academic.oup.com/rsq/pages/Ge...
September 11, 2025 at 1:02 PM
Reposted by Lagat Mercy
📢 Call for Short Responses
We invite short responses to Dr. Romola Sanyal's article, The Space that Refuge Makes: Rethinking Displacements and Protection
See: doi.org/10.1093/rsq/...
✅ Responses should be between 1,000 and 2,500 words submitted via the RSQ website: academic.oup.com/rsq
The Space that Refuge Makes: Rethinking Displacements and Protection
Abstract. Space is foundational to questions of refuge and asylum, but this space is one of conditional hospitality, extended to those deemed worthy of pro
doi.org
August 22, 2025 at 7:06 AM
Reposted by Lagat Mercy
📢 New in Refugee Survey Quarterly:
“Agency in Action: Mobilisation Efforts of South Sudanese Refugees in Ethiopia” by Samuel Zewdie Hagos
🔗 Read More: doi.org/10.1093/rsq/...
August 26, 2025 at 8:02 AM
Reposted by Lagat Mercy
📢 Call for Extended Abstracts – Refugee Survey Quarterly’s Perspectives on Displacement
If you would be interested in writing a piece for the Perspectives on Displacement series, for publication in late 2026, please submit an extended abstract (maximum 600 words)
📝 Deadline: 29 September 2025.
August 25, 2025 at 8:12 AM
Reposted by Lagat Mercy
📄From RSQ Volume 44, Issue 2
Failing Asylum-Seekers: Limited Judicial Review of Refugee Status Determination Decisions in Brazil (OPEN ACCESS)
By Mariana Ferolla Vallandro do Valle @gvagrad.bsky.social
🔗Read more: academic.oup.com/rsq/article/...
July 7, 2025 at 11:12 AM
Reposted by Lagat Mercy
Let Them Stay: Guervens’ Story #Refugees
Let Them Stay: Guervens’ Story
We’re sharing Guervens’ story as part of our Let Them Stay campaign , to push back on the Trump administration’s targeting of people who arrived in the United States through humanitarian parole programs. Learn more , read on, and take action today. Vicki, a former security professional from Illinois, first met Guervens in 2011 when she taught online English classes to people in Haiti following the devastating 2010 earthquake.  Guervens stood out.  “Fifteen young men, including Guervens, connected daily at 4:00 p.m. using a car battery-powered computer. Some days, Skype worked; others, it failed, leaving us in tears. Yet we persisted.”  “We formed a pact: I’d teach them English for free, and they’d pass it on. Our motto, ‘Each one teach one,’ fueled our growth.” Vicki traveled to Haiti and ultimately started working there for a Haitian construction company in 2014. Meanwhile, she continued teaching English and kept up her friendship with Guervens, who by then followed in her footsteps as an English teacher. Vicki with Guervens and students in Haiti (2015). “When a town five hours from Port-au-Prince, Port Salut, requested lessons, I sent Guervens. With no pay, just a place to stay and one daily meal, he taught the entire community.” Even after Vicki returned to the United States, she kept in touch with Guervens. After the assassination of former President Jovenel Moise in July 2021, Haiti was plunged into violence and political chaos. Guervens endured Haiti’s relentless gang violence, poverty, and systemic corruption; faith in God sustained his hope.  In 2023, after reflection and prayer, Vicki and her husband Tom sponsored Guervens’ entry to the United States through the CHNV humanitarian parole program, and helped Guervens rebuild his life in their community outside Chicago, Illinois. Humanitarian parole was his path to a safer, brighter future “Guervens arrived in our Midwest town with a backpack, two shirts, pants, and his Bible. He joined a local church, found work at an Amish-owned company 42 minutes away, and learned to drive. We drove him daily until he bought his first car from a church couple. From welding to operating a million-dollar CNC machine for bridges and overpasses, Guervens has thrived.” Guervens with Vicki’s husband Tom in Illinois (2023). In Illinois, Guervens now has a car, an apartment, a life partner, and a baby on the way. As he rebuilt his life in the United States, in 2024, Guervens also applied for another form of humanitarian protection in the United States, temporary protected status (TPS), as conditions in Haiti have worsened considerably.  But the Trump administration is trying to terminate TPS for Haiti and has now revoked Guervens’ humanitarian parole status – alongside more than 530,000 others who came to the United States through the CHNV program.  With his status taken away, he’s now vulnerable to detention and deportation back to Haiti.  Guervens continues to work as a volunteer English teacher (2024). “‘Each one teach one’ wasn’t just a motto; it was our promise to lift each other up,” Vicki said. “Guervens arrived with nothing but determination and faith. Watching him grow from a student in Haiti to a skilled worker in our community proves the power of opportunity and support. His heart for others is why we sponsored him – he’s not just an immigrant, he’s family. The U.S. immigration system must recognize people like Guervens, who contribute, work hard, and inspire.  Supporting Guervens through CHNV was a leap of faith, but seeing him thrive in our Midwest community proves that opportunity can change lives. The system needs to see Guervens for who he is: a man who turned loss into leadership.”
www.refugeesinternational.org
July 7, 2025 at 8:43 PM
Reposted by Lagat Mercy
📄From RSQ Volume 44, Issue 2
"Criminalisation and Control: Mediterranean Maritime Search and Rescue Workers’ Perceptions of Uses of Law" (Open Access)
By Neil Graffin, Matt Howard and Joanne Vincett
🔗Read more: academic.oup.com/rsq/article/...
July 2, 2025 at 12:34 PM
Reposted by Lagat Mercy
Apply to our MA in Refugee Protection and Forced Migration Studies from the University of London!

Apply by 1 August for the October 2025 start:

www.london.ac.uk/study/course...

#Refugees #RefugeeProtection #ForcedMigration
July 2, 2025 at 2:51 PM
Reposted by Lagat Mercy
WFP Kenya Country Brief, May 2025 #Refugees
WFP Kenya Country Brief, May 2025
reliefweb.int
June 27, 2025 at 7:44 AM
Reposted by Lagat Mercy
📝Refugee Survey Quarterly (RSQ) Volume 44, Issue 2 is now out!
The new issue features: Perspectives on Displacement Paper Series responding to David Owen’s: “From Forced Migration to Displacement?” and Six original research articles.
📄 Contents below
🔗 Read the issue online: lnkd.in/dFWfc4FP
June 26, 2025 at 12:38 PM
Reposted by Lagat Mercy
‪Refugee Survey Quarterly (RSQ) is now on Bluesky! One of the oldest refugee studies journals, RSQ publishes peer-reviewed work at the intersection of research, policy & practice on forced displacement. Follow us @refugeesurveyquart.bsky.social for updates, calls & critical insights. #RSQonBluesky
June 4, 2025 at 12:01 PM
Reposted by Lagat Mercy
📢 Great news from Refugee Survey Quarterly (RSQ)!

Our 2024 journal metrics are in:
📈 Impact Factor (Clarivate): 2.2
📈 5-Year Impact Factor (Clarivate): 2.3
📈 CiteScore: 3.0

Thanks to our amazing authors, reviewers & readers for making this possible!

🔗 Read & submit here: academic.oup.com/rsq
Refugee Survey Quarterly | Oxford Academic
Publishes research focusing on the challenges of forced migration from multidisciplinary and policy-oriented perspectives. The journal provides a vehicle for wide-ranging analyses and exploration of f...
academic.oup.com
June 24, 2025 at 10:59 AM
Reposted by Lagat Mercy
New on the #RLI blog: 'Resettlement or Relocation? The Politics of Palestinian Resettlement in Eastern Africa' written by Mercy Chepkirui Lagat

rli.blogs.sas.ac.uk/2025/06/11/r...

#EasternAfrica #Palestine #Refugees #Resettlement
June 13, 2025 at 11:19 AM
I'm excited to share my latest blog published by the Refugee Law Initiative: "Resettlement or Relocation? The Politics of Palestinian Resettlement in Eastern Africa."
Read more here: rli.blogs.sas.ac.uk/2025/06/11/r...
Resettlement or Relocation? The Politics of Palestinian Resettlement in Eastern Africa - Refugee Law Initiative Blog
Blog post by Mercy Chepkirui Lagat* The Palestinian refugee situation remains a protracted and politically sensitive displacement crisis. Since 1948, over six million Palestinian refugees living acros...
rli.blogs.sas.ac.uk
June 11, 2025 at 3:44 PM
Reposted by Lagat Mercy
In our new article, Can Mutlu, @biometricstate.bsky.social and I argue for more attention to how smartphone apps are used at borders. Available in #openaccess!
The appification of borders: Data, migration and digitalization - Can E Mutlu, Philippe M Frowd, Benjamin Muller, 2025
The intersection of migration, borders, and technology has been extensively studied in critical security studies, science and technology studies, law, and beyon...
journals.sagepub.com
May 7, 2025 at 5:12 PM
🥁New Blog Alert!
As we push for more inclusive urban futures, let’s rethink integration — not just as legal absorption, but as everyday moments of dignity, coexistence, and solidarity.
📖 Read the Article Below
www.sportanddev.org/latest/news/...
Rethinking Refugee Integration through Sports in Nairobi
Sports has emerged as a potent social tool for urban refugee integration, resilience building, and psychosocial protection in Nairobi city.
www.sportanddev.org
April 15, 2025 at 9:38 AM