Imaging Social Justice

Imaging Social Justice is an initiative of the King’s College London Visual and Embodied Research Methodologies Network (VEM) led by Jelke Boesten, Rachel Kerr and Cathy McIlwaine and which supports the work of PhD students and early career scholars. Imaging encompasses different modalities to make tangible human experiences of everyday violence and struggle for justice.

The project showcases five initiatives in which social scientists work with artists to explore complex research questions around societies’ tendency to marginalise certain population groups. These five projects explore the dynamics of such active marginalisation and in doing so, give voice to those whose lived realities are shaped by the structures of exclusion and routine violence in Rwanda, Palestine, Ecuador, Brazil, and London.

Curatorial and Editorial Production: Arts Cabinet.

Find out more about Imaging Social Justice here.


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      Keywords


      Acción, Andes, ArtsandPeaceBuilding, Banners, Barrio, Belonging, Body-territory, Cartography, Chronicles, Community, Compromiso, Counterlogistics, Critical Mapping, Decolonial Cartography, DecolonialInfrastructure, Desires, Dialogue, Ecuador, edupage, Embodiment, Experience, FamilyAlbum, Fuerza, homepage, Indigenous Knowledges, IndigenousPolitics, IndigenousWomen, Infrastructure, Justice, Landscapes, LatinAmerica, Loss, Mapping, Memories, Memory, MigrantWomen, Migration, Militant Research, Mobilización, Narratives, ParticipatoryPhotography, PeacePhotography, Photography, PoliticalViolence, RacialCapitalism, Reconciliation, Reenactment, Representation, Resolve, Rwanda, SettlerColonialism, SocialJustice, SocialProtest, Subalterneity, SubalternKnowledges, Survivorhood, Survivors, Technopolitics, Violence, VisualPeaceBuilding, VisualSociology, Voices, Women, WomensRights