refugees in towns

About our Project

The Refugees in Towns project (RIT) promotes understanding of the migrant/refugee experience by drawing on the knowledge and perspectives of refugees themselves as well as local hosts. The project was conceived and is led by Karen Jacobsen. 

  • For refugees, migrants, and hosts, RIT offers an opportunity to develop and promote authentic narratives through participatory, reflexive, and local research. They author a range of case studies and reports in collaboration with students to identify the factors that enable and obstruct integration, and the different ways in which migrants and hosts co-exist, adapt, and struggle with integration. 

  • For academics, RIT analyzes the global differences and similarities in the factors that enable or obstruct integration. Researchers further explore thematic areas of interest, for example the impact of COVID-19 or racism on integration.  

  • For policymakers and practitioners, RIT seeks to develop an understanding of potential solutions to the barriers refugees, migrants, and hosts face in integration through collaborative research and policy briefs informed by case studies. 

Meet the Team

advisory group

The RIT advisory group provides technical and methodological advice on case studies, facilitates contacts in case site communities, and assist in engaging with policymakers.

case researchers

RIT benefits from a diverse range of case study researchers (who conduct academic research on a city) and case report writers (who provide writing on their own personal experiences with integration) in cities and towns around the world. Each of RIT's cases rely on at least one localized individual with a personal history, social presence, and deep contextual knowledge of the community they are describing. These individuals provide both data for the project, and relevance for its findings by connecting RIT to practitioners, refugee and host community leaders, civil society actors, and municipal government representatives.

We would like to acknowledge and thank our many localized refugee contributors around the world who are not listed here to protect their identities.

READ OUR MOST RECENT REPORTS

  • Boston, Massachusetts 2024

    This case report delves into the diverse lived experiences of East African and Afghan migrants and refugees in Boston, specifically those supported by the Somali Development Center (SDC). We examine the social barriers they experience during their resettlement, especially the lack of transitional housing. The paper also draws on the experience of community leaders, social service representatives, and local government officials. 

  • Tibet 3 2023

    At the time of the interview, Amchi Rinchen had recently moved to New Delhi after a year working as a medical physician to an exclusively Indian population in the city of Chandigarh, the experience described in this report. Unfortunately, bureaucratic and administrative issues forced Amchi Rinchen to shut down his practice in Chandigarh. Still, his experiences in Chandigarh tell the fascinating story of a refugee founding the first Tibetan medical clinic within this major Indian city.

  • Tibet 2 2023

    Khenpo Ju Tenkyong, a Tibetan refugee based in Dharamsala, India, works as a researcher, historian, and scholar on a number of important projects for the preservation and revitalization of Tibetan culture, language and Tibetan Buddhist literature. Unlike other refugees interviewed for this project, he preferred to use his own name rather than a pseudonym. Khenpo Ju Tenkyong is one of the leading Tibetan scholars in the diaspora, and his environment reflects this. For our Zoom interviews, he sat in a room with thousands of books arranged on floor-to-ceiling bookshelves and stacked on tables beside him. Despite his potentially intimidating erudition, he was extremely humble and down-to-earth throughout the course of our conversations.

  • Tibet 1 2023

    This report tells the story of a Tibetan refugee living in Sarnath, India (pseudonym Thubten Dawa), who works for the Sarnath International Nyingma Institute (SINI). Later, in summer 2022, the author traveled to India to work at SINI, where he developed a closer relationship with Thubten Dawa. On numerous occasions, Thubten Dawa expressed his aspiration that by reading this story, “others will understand the importance of pure motivation and necessity to prioritize the welfare of others rather than one’s self.”  

Contact Us

Refugees in Towns

The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy
Tufts University
160 Packard Ave.
Medford, MA 02155 USA

karen.jacobsen@tufts.edu