Eroding Solidarity?
Forced Migration, Protection, and Inclusion
in a World Beyond Order

6th Conference of the German Network for Forced Migration Studies

September 28 – 30, 2026 | University of Hildesheim | Germany

Organised by the German Network for Forced Migration Studies and
Centre for Diversity, Democracy and Inclusion in Education, University of Hildesheim

 

1. Conference Theme and Objectives

This international academic conference critically explores how forced migration, refugee protection, and inclusion are being redefined in an increasingly fragmented and uncertain global order. It seeks to examine the impact on solidarities across international, national and local contexts. Which forms of solidarity are currently under stress, and which are gaining in importance and how? What does this mean for the rights, recognition, protection, and participation of displaced people?

Over the past decade, forced migration has increased globally, reaching 123.2 million people being displaced in 2024. A convergence of factors shapes this rise: continuing and (re)escalating conflicts in places such as Sudan, Myanmar, Ukraine, Gaza, the broader Middle East and the Horn of Africa; authoritarian resurgence and weakened multilateralism; environmental degradation; and entrenched global inequalities. Adding to the intersecting factors and their complexity, international development aid has been used for years to address the “root causes of migration”, but paradoxically, large-scale infrastructure projects drive further displacements. These overlapping challenges have strained traditional protection frameworks and hindered the capacity of existing governance systems to respond effectively.

Seventy-five years after the adoption of the 1951 Refugee Convention, its core principles remain formally intact but are routinely questioned, reinterpreted, or circumvented. Thus, the normative foundations of refugee protection are under increasing pressure. For instance, European governments are shifting from multilateral agreements to bilateral deals with countries of origin, allowing them to control and manage migration through carefully chosen partnerships. Such deals circumvent UN-led efforts and risk both perpetuating colonial-era inequalities and marginalising migrants, particularly without robust human rights protections. Moreover, deterrence, externalisation, and securitisation strategies are intensifying, even in long-standing asylum states. Across many democratic countries, right-wing populist parties and narratives are gaining traction, while centre-left parties shift rightward on migration and asylum policy. Public discourses around migration are often polarised and erode social cohesion and political support for inclusive policies, while often lacking a factual, scientific base. Unequal access and exclusion processes persist in post-migrant societies. In this situation, relevant civil society initiatives are subject to growing pressure; yet, examples of everyday solidarity, mutual support, and conviviality continue to emerge.

Geographically, while current media output and research often focus on the receiving states in the Global North, most refugees end up in neighbouring countries, which are predominantly in the Global South. This highlights a mismatch between the global focus on displacement from the South to the North and the actual patterns of forced migration, as well as the nuanced and diverse practices of solidarity. For some time, media representatives, politicians, researchers and others framed refugees solely as victims. Yet, recent scholarly work has led away from this type of framing, viewing displaced people as actors who are mobilising to create new forms of solidarity and care.

This conference invites interdisciplinary and cross-sectoral dialogue to explore how actors—ranging from policymakers and frontline practitioners to scholars and community organisers—are responding to these developments. We are particularly interested in contributions that examine how protection and inclusion are conceptualised and practised amid growing political uncertainty, administrative constraints, and social fragmentation.

Inter- and transdisciplinary Engagement

The conference is open to researchers with and without refugee experience at all career levels, as well as practitioners, students, and other interested parties. We aim to bring together participants from diverse sectors of society as well as academic fields—including, but not limited to, political science, sociology, anthropology, social work, human geography, education, law, public health, media and communication studies, and psychology. The goal is to bridge empirical knowledge and practice-based expertise to foster critical, collaborative conversations.

We welcome papers that address, but are not limited to, the following topics:

We invite theoretical, empirical, and practice-based contributions. We particularly encourage submissions that speak across disciplinary or sectoral boundaries and those that amplify underrepresented voices, including scholars and practitioners with lived experience of displacement.

 

2. Submission Guidelines

Accepted Formats

Selection Criteria and Guidelines for Panel, Roundtable and Workshop Proposals

3. Key Dates

 

Event Date
Deadline for Abstract Submissions January 9, 2026
Notification of Acceptance March 2026
Registration March 1– June 30, 2026
Conference Dates September 28 – 30, 2026

 

4. Conference Details

The conference is organised as an in-person event to be held at the University of Hildesheim in Germany.

Our conference prioritises a fully in-person experience for all panel participants. While we strongly encourage attendance at the venue, a highly restricted number of hybrid panels (up to 3 per time slot) can be considered under truly exceptional circumstances. These exceptions, such as health concerns, visa limitations, or specific care requirements, require thorough justification and advance notification to the Organising Team, prior to the close of registration.

Location:
University of Hildesheim
Main Campus/Campus Marienburger Höhe
Universitätsplatz 1
31141 Hildesheim

Registration Information:

Funding or Travel Grants:

Scholarships for refugees as well as (limited) financial support for applicants without institutional funding will be made available – contingent upon the outcome of the ongoing fundraising efforts. Further details will be published on the conference website in early 2026.

Languages: German and English

5. Organising Committee

The Board of the German Network for Forced Migration Studies

German Network for Forced Migration Studies
c/o German Institute for Global and Area Studies | Leibniz-Institut für Globale und Regionale Studien (GIGA)

Neuer Jungfernstieg 21

20534 Hamburg
https://fluchtforschung.net/home/

Conference Convenors and the Local Organisation Committee

Centre for Diversity, Democracy and Inclusion in Education, University of Hildesheim

Prof. Dr. Sybille Münch

Anna-Christine Görg

Miriam Kühne


Migration Policy Research Group,
University of Hildesheim

Prof. Dr. Hannes Schammann

Zeynep Aydar

Christin Younso

 

University of Hildesheim
Universitätsplatz 1

D-31141 Hildesheim

Germany

www.uni-hildesheim.de/zbi/en

www.uni-hildesheim.de/migrationspolitik

 

6. Contact and Website

📧 Email:             nwff2026@uni-hildesheim.de

🌐Website:          https://fluchtforschung.net/6th-conference/
https://www.uni-hildesheim.de/en/zbi/nwff2026

📝Submissions:    www.conftool.pro/nwff2026/