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Entangled Histories: Slavery and Its Legacies in the Indian Ocean, Mediterranean, and Middle Eastern Worlds

CONFERENCE / CALL FOR PAPERS

Organizers:

  • Dr. Behnaz Mirzai, Professor of Middle Eastern History at Brock University, Canada
  • Dr. Eckart Woertz, Director of the GIGA Institute for Middle East Studies, Germany, and Professor (…)

    CONFERENCE / CALL FOR PAPERS

    Organizers:

    • Dr. Behnaz Mirzai, Professor of Middle Eastern History at Brock University, Canada
    • Dr. Eckart Woertz, Director of the GIGA Institute for Middle East Studies, Germany, and Professor of Contemporary History and Politics of the Middle East at the University of Hamburg

    Keynote Speaker:

    • Dr. Bonny Ibhawoh, McMaster University, Canada, Expert-Rapporteur, United Nations Expert Mechanism on the Right to Development, UN-OHCHR Project Director, Participedia

    Guest Speaker:

    • Myriam Cottias, (History and Memory for Dialogue Section, UNESCO Headquarter, Paris) President of the International Scientific Committee of the UNESCO Slave Route Project; The director of the International Center for Research on Slavery and Post-Slavery - CIRESC

      Research director at the CNRS; coordinator of the National Research Agency's program "Reparations, Compensation and Indemnities for Slavery (Europe-Americas-Africa) (19th-21st centuries)"

    A two-day multidisciplinary conference titled “Entangled Histories: Slavery and Its Legacies in the Indian Ocean, Mediterranean, and Middle Eastern Worlds” will be held on July 16–17, 2026 at the German Institute for Global and Area Studies (GIGA) and the University of Hamburg in collaboration with Brock University, Canada. It will explore the complex economic, political, and cultural relations of communities in the Indian Ocean, Mediterranean, and Middle East regions against the backdrop of the slave routes that once led through their territories. Methodologically, it aligns with the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization’s (UNESCO) Slave Route Project that explores the impact of the forced migration of enslaved people throughout the modern world and its lasting significance today. The conference will bring together scholars and policymakers to address various topics related to comparative slavery in these regions.

    Nineteenth-century colonial policies not only changed international boundaries but also patterns of settlement and identity, namely by modifying existing economic, social, cultural, and ideological systems throughout the examined regions. The slave trade led to the establishment of diasporic communities in the Indian Ocean, the Mediterranean, and Middle East; this caused numerous incidents of political and economic instability, leaving a legacy of social stratification, cultural stereotypes, and discriminatory practices. The conference aims to foster a deeper understanding of the social, religious, economic, and historical dimensions of the trade in regions where military, female, and domestic slavery were dominant, as compared to the transatlantic slave trade’s more prevalent orientation toward the plantation. Other topics dealt with will include the “Islamic factor” in the slave trade, revealing its complexity in the modern era. Among key aspects here is the phenomenon of Muslims featuring alongside other enslaved communities, which should interest policymakers and scholars well beyond Islamic Studies, Area Studies, and disciplinary fields of study. This unique forum will offer an opportunity for scholars and policymakers to discuss commonalities and differences between the trans-Saharan, Indian Ocean, and Middle Eastern slave trades.

    The dispersal of enslaved people’s descendants globally and the perpetuation of stereotypes and social practices related to slavery highlight the importance of comparative approaches to the study of it. Promoting recognition, justice, development, and the human rights of descendants and appreciating their cultural contributions and economic exploitation will strengthen efforts to achieve greater equality and democracy at a universal level. The need to recognize the ethnic diversity to be found in the examined regions has drawn the attention of political and social scientists, historians, as well as anthropologists. Interdisciplinary in nature, the conference will go beyond regional studies of ethnicity and identity by including Africa, the Indian Ocean, and the Middle East, offering a comparative approach to systems of slavery and proffering new research methodologies hereon.

    Papers on the following general themes will be considered:

    • Slavery memorialization and commemoration
    • Slavery, abolition, and liberation
    • Islamic law and slavery
    • Colonialism, slavery, and legacy
    • Slavery, racism, and discrimination
    • Slavery, justice, and human rights
    • Slavery, culture, and arts
    • Slavery and economics
    • Post-emancipation and integration/assimilation
    • Master-slave relations

    Presented papers will be published in a special issue of an academic journal or edited volume. Proposals will be reviewed by the committee and, if accepted, the travel costs (air ticket and accommodation) of each participant covered. Please submit a proposal (350 words) and a brief CV with relevant publications to Dr. Behnaz Mirzai: bmirzai@brocku.ca. The deadline for submissions is September 30, 2025.

     


Slavery, Liberation and Islamic Law in the Middle East and beyond

October 5, 2018 Brock University St Catharines, Ontario, Canada Download the abstracts and program:

This one day multi-disciplinary symposium “Slavery, Liberation and Islamic Law in the Middle East and beyond” will be held on October 5, 2018, at Brock University in St Catharines, Canada. It will bring together scholars and students to address various topics related to slavery and liberation. The symposium also proffers new research approaches and methodologies. The dispersal of descendants of enslaved people globally itself highlights the importance of such a study. Promoting recognition, justice, development and the human rights of descendants of enslaved people and appreciating their cultural contributions, moreover, will strengthen efforts to achieve greater equality and democracy at a universal level. Papers on the following general themes are currently being accepted:
  • Slavery, abolition, liberation
  • Islamic law and slavery
  • Colonialism and its legacy
  • Racism and discrimination
  • Justice and human rights
  • Education
  • Culture and arts
  • Economic empowerment
Please send your abstract (maximum 300 words), including a title, together with a brief CV and biography to Professor Behnaz Mirzai at bmirzai@brocku.ca. About Brock University and the Niagara Region: Located in St Catharines, Brock University is named after British general Sir Isaac Brock, who died at the Battle of Queenston Heights during the War of 1812. It is Canada’s only university to be located in a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve, atop the Niagara Escarpment. The Garden City is also the gateway to the Niagara Region (http://www.tourismniagara.com/discover-niagara.html), offering an abundance of sights and activities from its award winning vineyards and to the wonders of Niagara Falls. The region has great significance to the history of Underground Railroad movement in that its most important conductor – Harriet Tubman – was a resident of St Catharines from 1851 to 1858.  

“People of African Descent: Recognition, Empowerment and Equity” Conference

Behnaz Mirzai Associate Professor of History organized a conference entitled “People of African Descent: Recognition, Empowerment and Equity” September 22–23, 2014. It provided an opportunity to bring together leading scholars, UNESCO delegates, policy makers, and students to explore the related subjects of the global ethnocultural and identity formation of enslaved Africans and the complex intercultural relations of the African diaspora communities. Jack Lightstone (President and Vice-Chancellor), Douglas Kneale (Dean, Faculty of Humanities) and Mark Spencer (Chair, Department of History) opened the conference with welcome greetings to the participants. Brian McMullan (The Mayor of St. Catharines) addressed the opening remarks. It was followed up by Edward Alpers’s keynote presentation entitled “From Bilal to Barack: What are the implications for recognition, empowerment and equity in the African diaspora?.” This conference continued by a session on Africans in the Middle East and the Indian Ocean, comprising Ehud Toledano (Tel Aviv University) and John Thabiti Willis (Carleton College). A plenary round-table session led by Ali Moussa-Iye(History and Memory for Dialogue Section, UNESCO Headquarter, Paris) and Professor Sir Hilary Beckles (Pro-Vice Chancellor and Principal of the University of West Indies, Cave Hill Campus, Barbados; and Vice President of the UNESCO Slave Route Project) outlined strategies for Promoting recognition, justice, development and the human rights of people of African descent. The third session, on Colonialism and Nationalism, included contributions from Bonny Ibhawoh and Arua Oko Omaka (McMaster University) and Dolana Mogadime (Brock University). The second day began with a session on Justice and Literature consisting of presentations by Carrie Walker (University of Nevada), Fouad Mami(University of Adrar, Algeria), and Awet Tewelde Weldemichael (Queen’s University). This was followed by Challenge for Change, in which Dana Elizabeth Weiner (Wilfrid Laurier University), Karlee Sapoznik (York University) and David Wilkins (University of Hull) presented their research. The conference was sponsored by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, McMaster University and Brock University.

Photos:

 

Commemorating the 100th Anniversary of Harriet Tubman

A lecture by Professor Sir Hilary Beckles “Enslaved women and the politics of freedom in the Caribbean” September 24, 2013 4 to 6 p.m. Charles A. Sankey Chamber Professor Sir Hilary Beckles is Pro-Vice Chancellor and Principal of the University of West Indies. He is a member of the International Task Force for the UNESCO Slave Route Project and is principal consultant for resource material in the schools programme.  He is also Consultant for the UNESCO Cities for Peace Global Programme, and an advisor to the UN World Culture Report. In 2007, Sir Beckles was made a Knight of St. Andrew, the highest national honour in Barbados, for his contribution to “Higher Education, the Arts, and Sports”.  Sir Hilary has received numerous awards including an Honorary Doctor of Letters from the University of Glasgow and from the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Ghana, in recognition of his major contribution to academic research into the transatlantic slave trade and plantation slavery. Sir Hilary Beckles has authored, co-authored and edited more than thirty books, and written over seventy academic articles. His work has covered a variety of areas within the broader topic of Afro-Caribbean history, with works covering early slave rebellions in Barbados, the role of women in the slave trade, and the greater effects of colonialism on present Barbadian society.