Staff Profile
Professor Jen Bagelman
Professor in Human Geography, Deputy Director for the Institute for Social Science
I grew up on Coast Salish territories (Vancouver Island, Canada) where I completed my BA and MA at the University of Victoria. After finishing my PhD at the Open University, I taught at both Durham University and Exeter University. I am now based at Newcastle, as Professor in Geography & Deputy Director for the Institute of Social Science.
Broad research specialisms:
- Migration & climate change
- Reproductive geographies
- Anticolonial environmental justice
- Creative & community-engaged methods (ie: cookbooks, comics, zines, body-mapping)
My work explores the conditions and intimacies of displacement as encountered by diverse migrant and Indigenous communities. I am also interesting in the ways in which communities enact solidarities and respond to the challenges of displacement. I aim to co-design creative and participatory methods to document these accounts and pursue this work through two main streams of research.
The first stream of my work examines how Inuit communities are impacted by persistent settler colonial politics and climate-induced change. I am the UK lead on a 3-year POLAR Knowledge Canada/UKRI NERC grant entitled ‘Carving out Climate Testimony' which brings together a team of Inuit youth with UK and Canadian collaborators to trace how unikkausivut (Inuit forms of storytelling) might articulate the links between climate change, displacement and mental health. This project is inspired by and seeks to support Inuit youth who are leading in this work within their communities.This project builds on my collaborative involvement in a 5-year Social Science and Humanities Research Canada (SSHRC) grant 'Seascape Stories' which examined how energy development projects displace Indigenous relations to and sovereignty over land and water. This project also highlights how Indigenous marine epistemologies provide robust critique of and alternatives to destructive energy futures.
The second stream of my research explores how the practice of 'sanctuary' can challenge (and sometimes inadvertently reproduce) the hostile treatment of refugees and other displaced peoples. My manuscript, Sanctuary City: A Suspended State, explores this topic. Beyond global-north sanctuary movements I exaimine how women with precarious status living in Kenya's Dadaab refugee camps mobilise sanctuary to establish alternative networks of maternal care. To do this work I lead a GCRF-UKRI Network Grant entitled 'Migrant Mothers: Digital Health Network' which brings together scholars from Kenyatta and Newcastle University with UNHCR practitioners and refugee midwives to consider diverse experiences of birthing across borders.
Within the university, I am a member both 'Power, Space, Politics' and 'Geographies of Social Change' research groups. I am also the Deputy Director for the Institute for Social Science where I aim to elevate exciting Social Science research happening at Newcastle University. In this role I co-lead Migrations Collective, which connects academic and non-academic partners to think and work together towards migrant justice.
Beyond the university, I volunteer in my community to support various sanctuary initiatives. With my sister, Carly, I also run a non-profit organization called Glean, which seeks to nourish more equitable foodscapes. When not working I'm crafting, surfing, yoga-ing or being walked by my dog.
I am passionate about working with students as I see education as a powerful catalyst for generative change. I have written on creative pedagogy and, in keeping with a ‘service-led’ teaching model I aim to make coursework relevant to and useful for communities that extend beyond the classroom. In the past my students have created beautiful community maps that have been used by NGOS and urban designers and zines that have informed campus policies to embed diversity and ensure more sustainable food practices.
I warmly welcome the opportunity to work with students interested in the themes outlined on my research page.
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Articles
- Johnston C, Bagelman J, Tosch J. Relearning black presence in Amsterdam through guided tours: Teaching beyond the classroom. Cultural Geographies 2024.
- Ndegwa P, Gitome J, Mainah M, Mwoma T, Kituku J, Kahumbi N, Bagelman J. Gender Differentiated Attitude Towards Cesarean Section: A Case of Somali Refugees in Dadaab, Kenya. Acta Scientific Women's Health 2024, 6(2), 39-46.
- Lugt E, Bagelman J, Vibeke Mou A, Jessen-Williamson K. In Tuktoyaktuk, nail art offers a novel record of climate change : A research project engages youth in creative documentation of the environment. Victoria, BC, [Canada]: The Narwhal, 2024. Available at: https://thenarwhal.ca/tuktoyaktuk-nail-art-arctic-research/.
- Bagelman C, Bagelman J. "Digital geographies of miscarriage: A ‘sister‐ethnographic’ approach to pregnancy apps and loss". Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 2024, e12683.
- Bagelman J, Jones D. Communicating Beyond the Academy. Royal Geographical Society 2023.
- Stephens AC, Bagelman J. Towards scholar-activism: transversal relations, dissent, and creative acts. Citizenship Studies 2023, 27(3), 329-346.
- Luckett T, Bagelman J. Body mapping: feminist-activist geographies in practice. Cultural Geographies 2023, 30(4), 621-627.
- Gill N, Riding J, Kallio KP, Bagelman J. Geographies of welcome: Engagements with 'ordinary' hospitality. Hospitality and Society 2022, 12(2), 123-143.
- Bagelman J. Zines beyond a means: crafting new research process. Fennia 2021, 199(1), 133-135.
- Bagelman J, Mwoma T, Kituku J, Gitome J, Kahumbi N, Ndegwa P, Muthoni M. Role of traditional birth attendants in providing pre and postnatal care to mothers in refugee camps: a case of Ifo Camp Dadaab Kenya. International Journal of Pregnancy & Child Birth 2021, 7(3), 58-62.
- Bagelman J, Gitome J. Reproductive geography: Reproducing whiteness?. Dialogues in Human Geography 2021, 11(3), 391-394.
- Bagelman J, Gitome J. Birthing across borders: ‘Contracting’ reproductive geographies. Dialogues in Human Geography 2021, 1(3), 352-373.
- Schmid-Scott A, Marshall E, Gill N, Bagelman J. Rural Geographies of Refugee Activism: The expanding spaces of sanctuary in the UK. Revue Européenne des Migrations Internationales 2020, 36(2&3), 137-160.
- Bagelman J, Kovalchuk S. Subterranean Detention and Sanctuary from below: Canada’s Carceral Geographies. Social Sciences 2019, 8(11), 310-324.
- Simpson M, Bagelman J. Decolonizing Urban Political Ecologies: the Production of Nature in Settler Colonial Cities. Annals of the American Association of Geographers 2018, 108(2), 558-568.
- Tedesco D, Bagelman J. The 'Missing' Politics of Whiteness and Rightful Presence in the Settler Colonial City. Millennium 2017, 45(3), 380-402.
- Bagelman J, Weibe S. Intimacies of Global Toxins: Exposure and resistance in 'Chemical Valley'. Political Geography 2017, 60, 76-85.
- Bagelman J. Cookbooks: A Tool for Engaged Research. GeoHumanities 2017, 3(2), 371-395.
- Bagelman J, Bagelman C. ZINES: Crafting change and repurposing the neoliberal university. ACME: An International Journal for Critical Geographies 2016, 15(2), 365-392.
- Bagelman J. Geo-politics of paddling: 'Turning the Tide' on extraction. Citizenship Studies 2016, 20(8), 1012-1037.
- Bagelman J, Tedesco D. Introduction. International Political Sociology 2015, 9(1), 90-91.
- Bagelman J. Blurring the Pipeline: Energizing an account of the Urban. International Political Sociology 2015, 9(1), 101-105.
- Bagelman J. Sanctuary: a politics of ease?. Alternatives: Global, Local, Political 2013, 38(1), 49-62.
- Bagelman J, Vermilyea J. The Blind-spots of Kantian Hospitality. Borderlands E-Journal 2012, 11(1), 1-15.
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Authored Book
- Bagelman J. Sanctuary City: A Suspended State. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015.
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Book Chapters
- Bagelman J. Sanctuary artivism: expanding geopolitical imaginations. In: Jonathan Darling; Harald Bauder, ed. Sanctuary Cities and Urban Struggles. Manchester Press, 2019.
- Bagelman J. Sanctuary and Unsettling "the" Refugee Crisis. In: Cecilia Menjívar, Marie Ruiz, and Immanuel Ness, ed. The Oxford Handbook of Migration Crises. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019.
- Cook I, Bagelman J. Enacting public geographies. In: Kobayashi, A, ed. International Encyclopaedia of Human Geography. Elsevier, 2019.
- Squire V, Bagelman J. Taking not waiting: space, temporality and politics in the City of Sanctuary movement. In: Peter Nyers and Kim Rygiel, ed. Citizenship, Migrant Activism and the Politics of Movement. Abingdon: Routledge, 2012, pp.146-164.
- Bagelman J. Die paradoxen Auswirkungen des kanadischen Multikulturalismus auf Diskurse über symbolische Exklusion. In: Arnd-Michael Nohl, Karin Schittenhelm, Oliver Schmidtke, Anja Weiß, ed. Kulturelles Kapital in der Migration: Hochqualifizierte Einwanderer und Einwanderinnen auf dem Arbeitsmarkt. VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften, 2010, pp.235-244.
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Digital or Visual Media
- Jessen Williamson K, Bagelman J. Working Together to Elevate Inuit Youth Voices. WWF, 2023.
- Bagelman J, Bagelman C. What can essay mills teach us about artificial intelligence?. BERA: British Educational Research Association, 2023.
- Bagelman J. Displacement and Forced Migration. Massolit, 2023.
- Wiebe S, Monk D, O'Connor C, Bagelman J. Turning the Tide: a People’s Paddle for the Salish Sea. 2015.
- Tully J, Bagelman J, Wiebe S. Reflecting on Public Philosophy with Jim Tully. 2015.
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Online Publications
- Bagelman J, Leshem N. Trying to make criminals out of people who care. Toronto Star, 2024. Available at: https://www.thestar.com/opinion/contributors/trying-to-make-criminals-out-of-people-who-care/article_be357cdc-c453-11ee-b863-7338c7c1b9a2.html.
- Bagelman J. The Home Office: from Border to Climate Control?. London: The Independent, 2022. Available at: https://www.independent.co.uk/climate-change/opinion/climate-control-home-office-fires-heatwaves-b2153436.html.
- Bagelman J, Cinnamon J. Home Office rules mean non-British academics can be denied right to strike. The Conversation, 2018. Available at: https://theconversation.com/home-office-rules-mean-non-british-academics-can-be-denied-right-to-strike-93156.
- Bagelman J, Cinnamon J. Border enforcement & the university: a conversation. 2018. Available at: https://societyandspace.org/2018/05/29/border-enforcement-the-university-a-conversation/.
- Bagelman J. Wristband IDs mark refugees as less than human. 2016. Available at: https://ricochet.media/en/914/wristband-ids-mark-refugees-as-less-than-human.
- Bagelman J. Foucault & the 'Current' Refugee Crisis. OpenDemocracy, 2015. Available at: https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/can-europe-make-it/foucault-and-current-refugee-crisis/.
- Bagelman J, Wiebe S. Preventing a Pipeline from Bisecting Canada. New York Times Company, 2014. Available at: https://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2014/07/03/where-do-borders-need-to-be-redrawn/preventing-a-pipeline-from-bisecting-canada.
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Performance
- Squire V, Closs Stephens A, Yuval-Davis D, Bagelman J. Dead Reckoning / Crossing the Med: Thinking and Feeling Migration Differently. 2017.
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Report
- Bagelman J. Statistics Canada. Human Impact & The Environment - Teacher's Kit. 2014.
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Reviews
- Bagelman J. Who hosts a politics of welcome? – commentary to Gill. Fennia 2018, 196(1), 108-110.
- Bagelman J. Violent Borders: Refugees and the Right to Move [Book review]. The AAG Review of Books 2018, 6(3), 169-170.