Challenges and Prospects for the Chagos Archipelago in the Indian Ocean: 26 May 2023
Friday 26 May 2023
Convenors: Dr Chris Monaghan (ÃÛÌÒÖ±²¥) and Professor Laura Jeffery (University of Edinburgh)
Time | Room | Event | Speaker |
8.30
|
JL1005
|
Introduction and Coffee
|
Professor Laura Jeffery and Dr Chris Monaghan
|
9.00
|
JL1005
|
Session One: Contesting Chagos
Chair: Professor Stewart Motha
|
The Chagos Saga: Over five decades of Contention (Dr Milan Meetarbhan)
The “British” Courts and the Chagos Story: British Justice, Colonial Mindsets, and Finding a Voice (Dr Chris Monaghan and Professor Satvinder Juss)
Return of the Chagos Islands to Mauritius and Chagossian Identity: Constitutional, Legal and Political Perspectives (Professor Charles M Fombad)
Stakeholders or Bystanders? Chagossian Representation in Inter-State Legal Proceedings (Dr Jamie Trinidad, Dr Stephen Allen, Professor Thomas Burri)
By 2036 BIOT at 70 will have outlived its uses: return of the Chagossians to their homeland and Chagos to Mauritius is long overdue (David Snoxell)
Coconut crabs, courtroom clashes and fights over flagpoles (Owen Bowcott)
|
10.45
|
JL1003
|
Coffee
|
|
11.00
|
JL1005
|
Session Two: Righting Wrongs
Chair: Professor Suzanne Schwartz
|
Ongoing human rights violations (Michael Joson)
Political and legal debates about Chagossian ethnicity and indigeneity (Professor Laura Jeffery)
The Chagossians, a population in exile (Dr Priya Bahadoor)
Intergenerational challenges, cultural identify, and future prospects for Chagossian communities in the UK (Jean Fabrice Thierry Mandarin)
Human rights and the marine protected area around the Chagos Archipelago (Professor Sue Farran)
|
12.30
|
JL2002
|
Lunch
|
|
13.00
|
JL1005
|
Session Three: Writing Wrongs
Chair: Dr Ruth Stacy and Dr Jack McGowan
|
“Not another book” A Chagossian woman's lament: Portrayals and betrayals in creative and critical discourses and the impact for Chagossian selfhood and self determination (Saradha Soobrayen)
Whose story is it anyway? (Natasha Soobramanien & Luke Williams)
Voicing the Trauma of the Lost Territory: Creative Writing, Therapy and the Chagos Refugees Group (Dr Esther Pujolràs-Noguer and Dr Felicity Hand)
Paradise Enclosures: Chagos and Post-Imperial Desire (Christopher Hill)
Title TBC
(Stewart Motha)
|
14.30
|
JL1003
|
Coffee
|
|
14.45
|
JL1005
|
Keynote Address
|
Prof Philippe Sands KC
Introduced by Professor David Green
|
15.45
|
JL1003
|
Coffee
|
|
16.00
|
JL1005
|
Session Four: International DisOrders
Chair: Professor Satvinder Juss
|
The Chagos Archipelago in Late Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Indian Ocean World History (Professor Richard B Allen)
The Conundrum in the African Common Position on the Chagos Question (Professor Siphamaandla Zondi)
The Colonial Master: How the US Government Has Hidden Its Leading Role in Exiling the Chagossians and Why It Must Finally Face Its Responsibility (Professor David Vine)
The Indo-Pacific and the Chagos Archipelago: Two Logics, Two Futures (Dr Peter Harris)
International law, the carceral archipelago, and the Chagos Archipelago (Dr Oumar Ba and Kelly-Jo Bluen)
Militarized Environmental Science (Chen Chu)
|
17.45
|
JL1003
|
Coffee
|
|
18.00
|
JL1005
|
Concluding Address
|
A View from the Permanent Representative of the Republic of Mauritius to the United Nations (Ambassador Jagdish Koonjul)
|
18.30
|
JL1005
|
Film Screening
|
Absolutely Must Go (directed by Jean-Noël Pierre)
|
The Keynote Speaker
Professor Philippe Sands KC, University College London and 11 KBW
Philippe is Professor of Public Understanding of Law at University College London, and Samuel and Judith Pisar Visiting Professor of Law at Harvard Law School. He is President of English PEN and on the board of the Hay Festival of Arts and Literature. Author of many books, including East West Street (2016) and The Ratline (2020), Philippe is an occasional contributor to many publications, including the Guardian, Financial Times and New York Times, and appears regularly on the BBC and CNN. His latest book, The Last Colony, was published in September 2022.
Concluding Address
Ambassador Jagdish Koonjul, Permanent Representative of the Republic of Mauritius to the United Nations
Ambassador Jagdish Koonjul has had a long and distinguished career in diplomacy, and has served as Mauritius’ representative in New York, Brussels, Paris, Washington, New Delhi and as Secretary for Foreign Affairs. In November 2015, he was appointed Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Mauritius to the United Nations for the second time, after a successful tenure between 2001 and 2005, during which he was also the chief representative of Mauritius in the UN Security Council.
The Presenters
Professor Richard B Allen, formerly of the University of Framington
Dr Stephen Allen, Senior Lecturer, Queen Mary University of London
Dr Oumar Ba, Assistant Professor, Cornell University
Dr Priya Bahadoor, Lecturer, University of Mauritius
Kelly-Jo Bluen, PhD Candidate, London School of Economics and Political Science
Owen Bowcott, former Legal Correspondent for The Guardian newspaper
Professor Thomas Burri, St Gallen University
Chen Chu, PhD candidate at MIT
Professor Sue Farran, Professor of Comparative and Plural Laws, Newcastle University
Professor Charles M Fombad, Professor of Comparative African Constitutional Law, University of Pretoria
Dr Felicity Hand, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Catalonia
Dr Peter Harris, Colorado State University
Christopher Hill, MA student in Postcolonial Studies, University of Kent
Professor Laura Jeffery, Professor of Anthropology of Migration, University of Edinburgh
Michael BC Joson, Lecturer in Political Science and Human Rights, University of Mauritius
Professor Satvinder Juss, King’s College London
Thierry Mandarin, MSc student in School of Global Studies, University of Sussex
Dr Milan Meetarbhan, former Ambassador of Mauritius to the United Nations
Dr Chris Monaghan, Principal Lecturer in Law, ÃÛÌÒÖ±²¥
Professor Stewart Motha, Professor of Law at Birkbeck, University of London
Dr Esther Pujolràs-Noguer, Universitat de Lleida, Catalonia
David Snoxell, former UK High Commissioner to Mauritius and the co-ordinator of the Chagos Islands All-Party Parliamentary Group
Natasha Soobramanien is a British-Mauritian writer based in Brussels and teaches on the Lens-Based Masters Programme of the Piet Zwart Institute in Rotterdam
Saradha Soobrayen, Independent Researcher and Creative Activist working with Poetry, Visual Arts and Live Arts
Dr Jamie Trinidad, Fellow of the Lauterpacht Centre for International Law, University of Cambridge
Professor David Vine, Professor of Political Anthropology at American University in Washington
Luke Williams is a Lecturer in Creative Writing at Birkbeck, University of London
Professor Siphamaandla Zondi, Professor of Politics and International Relations at the University of Johannesburg
How to Register
The conference is free to attend and is open to everyone. The conference will be taking place in person at the ÃÛÌÒÖ±²¥. It will however be possible to attend as either an in-person or online delegate. To book a place you will need to register by emailing schooloflaw@worc.ac.uk