Some come from Syria, Afghanistan, Somalia or Burundi. They are refugees, migrants and other displaced populations who have relocated to Roanoke or Blacksburg.
At first, those recently resettled may seem to have little in common with those whose families located to the Appalachian region several generations ago or those indigenous to the area who were forcibly displaced. But at the heart of migration is the quest to find a place of belonging, to find a home where one can prosper and feel safe.
The study of human resettlement is a familiar one for Virginia Tech with a history of long-standing projects focused on people who have been displaced. The College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences is now bringing university researchers and the community together to focus on the topic through the new Center for Refugee, Migrant and Displacement Studies.
“Although based in the college, the center has a university-wide mandate to conduct, support, and promote humanistic and interdisciplinary research on issues of migration and displacement,” said Katrina Powell, founding director of the new center and a professor in the Department of English. “We are researching the broad issues of displacement, which includes forced relocation caused by civil unrest, government-induced development, eminent domain, climate change, natural disaster and colonialist expansion.”
Three other Virginia Tech experts join Powell as the founding members of the Center for Refugee, Migrant and Displacement Studies: Brett Shadle, professor and chair of the Department of History; Rebecca Hester, an assistant professor in the Department of Science, Technology, and Society; and Georgeta Pourchot, coordinator of the International Refugee Research Project, based in Alexandria, Va.
Shadle, the center’s associate director of outreach, has research interests involving the histories of race and of refugees. He is the education coordinator for the Blacksburg Refugee Partnership and serves as faculty advisor for a Virginia Tech student organization, Coalition for Refugee Resettlement.
“Numerous organizations across Virginia — including the Blacksburg Refugee Partnership and the Coalition for Refugee Resettlement — seek to help resettled refugees and immigrants create new homes,” Shadle said. “The center can offer them research and outreach support to better inform their work. More important, perhaps, is our focus on refugee voices in identifying the issues that the center can help to address.”
Hester is the center’s associate director of education. She focuses her research on Latin American migration and sociocultural studies of health and medicine, along with critical security and race and gender studies.
“It is currently estimated that at least 80 million people — including a significant number of unaccompanied and refugee children — are displaced,” Hester said. “Given climate change, the growth of populist governments and associated civil unrest, global poverty, and growing social inequity, we can only estimate that the number of migrants, refugees, and displaced people will grow exponentially.
“The center will provide a space for researchers, students, and community members to understand, discuss and, for those who have been displaced, relate to the complex social, political, economic, and cultural implications of this reality.”
Pourchot is the center’s associate director of international initiatives. To this new role, she brings experience in foreign policy, refugees, terrorism, democratization and international security, as well as the International Refugee Research Project, an interdisciplinary initiative she leads that examines the challenges facing refugees as they integrate into their host countries.
“The new center will put Virginia Tech on the map as a global leader developing new generations of professionals in the field of displacement,” she said.
“It will engage undergraduate and graduate students, faculty and alumni in research, education and service in a field in dire need of empathy, compassion, resources and skills to serve oftentimes forgotten populations.”
“We have already held several community-building events,” Powell said. “Through the Center for Rhetoric in Society, we collaborated with several campus units, including the Moss Arts Center, and local volunteers with the Blacksburg Refugee Partnership. Together we hosted a welcoming event for new refugee families.”
The group also hosted a workshop with Rachel Weaver, an assistant professor in the Virginia Tech School of Visual Arts and a multimedia artist. Raised in areas of rural poverty, her work explores personal and cultural memory, resilience in the face of adversity, landscapes and people in flux and ecological systems.
For the workshop, families could collage, draw and write to reflect upon the homes they had left and to share their experiences of building new homes in Southwest Virginia.
The center was approved by the Office of the Vice President for Research and Innovation in 2020 and will hold a formal launch event sometime in 2021.
Laura Belmonte, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences, was a driving force behind the creation of the new center.
“Our daily lives are punctuated with stories of people around the world who are profoundly affected by displacement and migration caused by economic dislocation, climate change, political oppression and violence,” said Belmonte. “I’m proud to support a center devoted to the study of these vulnerable populations.
“I believe this center is a perfect reflection, of our college’s dedication to bringing analytical rigor, compassion and visibility to some of the most pressing challenges of our time.”