Events
Rimsha Syed
Event: In Conversation with... Dr. Sahar Ahmed and Rimsha Syed
Academics for Reproductive Justice Ireland
Tuesday 21 April from 6.30-8.00pm
at Fire Station Artist Studios
9-12 Buckingham Street Lower, D01 R6P3
At this In Conversation with... event, Dr Sahar Ahmed and Rimsha Syed will discuss their experiences living, working, and being activists in reproductive justice spaces. With perspectives that range from the Pakistani, Texan and Irish lived experience, they will speak to their work challenging systemic barriers around reproductive healthcare and advocating for reproductive freedom for people of colour. Topics discussed will include the migrant lived experience, methodological praxis in the reproductive justice sphere and intersections of activism, legal work and abortion care.
All are welcome, RSVP to maeveobrien85@gmail.com is essential.
Event: One day conference on Friday 27 February, 2026:
They are here too: Experiences of Domestic, Sexual and Gender-Based Violence
In 2020, 48 percent (134.9 million) of all international migrants worldwide were women or girls, according to mid-2020 UN estimates1. 1 in 3 women (approx. 736 million) worldwide have experienced physical and/or sexual violence from an intimate partner or non-partner in their lifetime (WHO 2021). This means that statistically, 44.97 million transnational migrant women have faced IPV. This estimate is consistent with a meta analysis of ~26,000 migrants which found prevalence of physical violence at around 30.9% overall (Ines et al. 2024).
Migration has always been seen as a potential escape for survivors of domestic abuse, a chance to live life beyond the control of their abuser. From pre-migration vulnerabilities to violence at borders, in asylum systems, and within host societies, the experiences of migrant and displaced communities remain underexamined in both scholarship and policy. Domestic, Sexual and Gender-Based Violence (DSGBV) intersects with race, class, religion, sexuality, and legal status, creating complex challenges for justice, protection, and solidarity.
This interdisciplinary conference aims to bring together researchers, frontline practitioners, community advocates, and migrant voices to critically examine the connections between migration and DSGBV in Europe. We welcome not only academic papers but also research-informed discussions, workshops, storytelling formats, and grounded contributions based on practical experience or community engagement.
The event will also feature the presentation and discussion of findings from the four-year IRC-SFI funded project “They are Here Too: Gendered Violence in the South Asian Immigrant Community in Post-COVID Ireland”, which explores gender-based violence and South Asian communities in Ireland through an intersectional and collaborative lens.
This conference marks the conclusion of the Pathway Project of the same name funded by Research Ireland.
Register her:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/they-are-here-too-experiences-of-domesti…