WiRL’s Steering Group meets twice a year to plan the network’s strategy and activities. Steering Group members are:
Professor Deborah Anker is Clinical Professor of Law and Founder of the Harvard Law School Immigration and Refugee Clinical Program (HIRC). She has taught law students at Harvard for over 30 years. Author of a leading treatise, Law of Asylum in the United States, Professor Anker has co-drafted ground-breaking gender asylum guidelines and amicus curiae briefs.
Professor Anker is one of the most widely known asylum scholars and practitioners in the United States; she is cited frequently by international and domestic courts and tribunals, including the United States Supreme Court. Professor Deborah Anker is a pioneer in the development of clinical legal education in the immigration field, training students in direct representation of refugees and creating a foundation for clinics at law schools around the country.
Gabriella Bettiga holds an LLM from SOAS in London. She is a solicitor and a qualified lawyer in Italy. She is the Founding Director of MGBe Legal, a firm specialised in asylum and immigration, and is particular interested in complex applications and appeals.
Gabriella is a member of the Tribunal Procedure Committee and a trustee of the Immigration Law Practitioners Association. She is also the co-editor of the casenote section of the ILPA Journal of Immigration Asylum and Nationality Law. She has been Chair of the Independent Cost and Funding Adjudicators at the Legal Aid Agency for many years, and she regularly delivers training and writes articles on immigration for various publications.
Professor Heaven Crawley is Head of Equitable Development and Migration at United Nations University Centre for Policy Research (UNU-CPR) in New York, and holds a Chair in International Migration at Coventry University’s Centre for Trust, Peace and Social Relations (CTPSR). Heaven has been Director of the Migration for Development and Equality Hub (MIDEQ) since 2018. MIDEQ is a global consortium of 18 research institutions, six international organizations and numerous local and regional partners that aims to transform knowledge and understanding of the relationships between migration, inequality and development in the context of the Global South. Heaven was previously head of asylum and migration research at the UK Home Office, Associate Director at the Institute for Public Policy Research and managed an international research consultancy before returning to academia in 2006. She was a founding member of the Refugee Women’s Legal Group (RWLG) and her book Refugees and Gender: Law and Process (Polity Press, 2001) continues to be widely cited.
Laura De Somer is a Senior Policy Officer in the multi-stakeholder engagement team of the Global Compact on Refugees at UNHCR Headquarters in Geneva. She serves as the main focal point in UNHCR for the Global Academic Interdisciplinary Network initiative and the related multistakeholder pledge (Multistakeholder Pledge: Shifting Power - Advancing Localization of Research and Elevating the Voices of Host and Forcibly Displaced Communities Globally) to be brought forward at the 2023 Global Refugee Forum. She holds an LLM in International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights from the Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights.
Laura has extensive experience working in UNHCR field operations, including in Ethiopia, Tanzania, Rwanda, and Djibouti, where she focused on protection and durable solutions.
Professor Liliana Lyra Jubilut holds a PhD and a Masters degree in International Law from Universidade de São Paulo and a LLM in International Legal Studies from NYU School of Law. She is a Professor at Universidade Católica de Santos where she coordinates the UNHCR Sergio Vieira de Mello Chair and the Research Group “Direitos Humanos e Vulnerabilities”. She was a Visiting Scholar at Columbia Law School and a Visiting Fellow at the Refugee Law Initiative, has been working on refugee issues since 1999, has published extensively on the topic and gave lectures in events organized by institutions in South, Central and North America, Europe, Africa and Asia.
Liliana is a member of IOM's Migration Research Leaders’ Syndicate, and the Academic Council on the Global Compact for Migration. She is also Publishing High-Level Adviser for the IOM and the Co-Chair of the Global Academic Interdisciplinary Network from the Global Compact on Refugees.
Loraine Masiya Mponela was WiRL Co-convenor from February 2023-January 2024. Loraine is a Migrants Rights Campaigner and a Poet based in Coventry, England. She is the ex-chair for Coventry Asylum and Refugee Action Group (CARAG) 2018-2022. CARAG is a peer support group which is for and run by people seeking asylum, refugees, migrants and anyone subjected to the UK Immigration and Asylum system.
Loraine sits on the Board for Women for Refugee Women and on the Management Committee for Asylum Support Appeals Project (ASAP) among other activities. Because of her community work with CARAG, Loraine has been recognised as an ‘Everyday Hero’ for Coventry UK City of Culture 2021. She is originally from Malawi and has been recognised as a refugee. Loraine is the author of I was not born a Sad Poet and Now I Sing: 50 poems to celebrate 50 years. Loraine has a lovely son.
Dr Ronald Sebba Kalyango is a lecturer in the School of Women and Gender Studies and the Department of Social Work and Social Administration, Makerere University, Kampala Uganda. His PhD topic is Returning home: Gender and Choice among Internally Displaced Persons in Gulu district, Northern Uganda. He teaches courses on women in conflict and post-conflict situations; forced migration; refugee livelihoods and household economy; migration health, gender-based violence and children in conflict.
Currently, he is a co-coordinator on a Certificate course - Migration Health, run by the School of Social Sciences Makerere University, Center for Health and Migration - University of Vienna and supported by the IOM. He has coordinated two collaborative programs between Makerere University and the University of Oldenburg, Germany, that is Implementing Migration Studies (IMMIS) and European Masters in Migration and Inter Cultural Relations (EMMIR). He also served as Senior Education and Training Officer for the Refugee Law Project in Kampala between 2000 to 2002 where he established a training program on Human Rights and Refugee Law.
He has worked as a national consultant for several organisation such as School of Oriental and African Studies, UK; the World Bank, Uganda Bureau of Statistics, FAO, UNFPA, WHO, American Refugee Committee, Regional Centre for Quality of Health Care and Fredrich Ebert Foundation among others. Ronald is a member of several academic associations such as the International Association for the Study of Forced Migration (IASFM) and Council for the Development of Social Research in Africa (CODESRIA), Social Science Research Council among others.
Dr Sara L McKinnon is Associate Professor of Rhetoric, Politics and Culture in the Department of Communication Arts at the University of Wisconsin-Madison with affiliations in the Department of Gender and Women’s Studies, Latin Americas, Caribbean, and Iberian Studies, and the Human Rights Program. She is the author of Gendered Asylum: Race and Violence in US Law and Politics (University of Illinois Press, 2016), which charts the incorporation of gender provisions in US refugee and asylum law within the context of broader national and global politics.
Her current work examines US foreign policy rhetorics that frame Mexico as violent. Drawing on archival research and field work, this project examines how violence in Mexico is imagined, what is erased as violence, the material impacts of this discourse, and what this image of the country does for US geopolitical and economic interests.
Maggy Moyo is a selfless human rights campaigner. She is passionate about advocating for human rights including the rights of immigrants, migrants, marginalised groups (e.g. LGBT rights) and those of vulnerable women, children, the disabled and the elderly. She fights against social injustice and advocates for equality. She is a trustee at Manchester Rape Crisis. She is currently working for Right to Remain as the Organiser for Manchester for “These Walls Must Fall” (TWMF) campaign, a network of community-based campaigners who are part of a movement to end immigration detention in the UK.
Right to Remain is a registered charity which works with communities, groups and organisations across the UK providing information, resources, training and assistance to help people to establish their right to remain and challenges injustice in the immigration and asylum system. She is also an active member of Restoration of Human Rights (ROHR) Zimbabwe and is in the Executive Committee of the North Branch of their UK Chapter.
Professor Karen Musalo and Professor Kate Jastram (joint Steering Group members for the Centre for Gender & Refugee Studies):
Professor Karen Musalo is the Bank of America Foundation Chair in International Law is the founding director of the Center for Gender & Refugee Studies at UC Law, San Francisco. She is lead co-author of Refugee Law and Policy: An International and Comparative Approach (fifth edition), as well as numerous reports, book chapters and articles.
Professor Musalo has litigated major cases in gender asylum, serving as lead attorney in Matter of Kasinga, counsel in Matter of R-A-, amicus in Matter of A-R-C-G-, and co-counsel in Matter of A-B-. She has received numerous awards for her pioneering legal work, including an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters from Lehman College in 2012. Her current research focuses on gender based violence, as well as climate change and migration in the northern triangle countries.
Professor Kate Jastram is Sérgio Vieira de Mello Chair of International Refugee Law at the University of California College of the Law, San Francisco, where she also serves as director of policy at the Center for Gender & Refugee Studies. As a member of the editorial board of the International Journal of Refugee Law, she co-edited with Catherine Dauvergne a special issue on gender, forthcoming 2024. Her current work focuses on the intersection of climate change and disasters with the refugee definition. She also holds a Chris Edley, Jr. Lectureship at the University of California, Berkeley, School of Law.
Kate served as senior legal advisor for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in Geneva and as its deputy representative in Washington, D.C., and has worked for USCIS's Refugee, Asylum and International Operations Directorate in San Francisco. As a lead expert on asylum issues for the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom, she co wrote their report for Congress on expedited removal. For the latter work, she shared the 2005 Arthur C. Helton Human Rights Award from the American Immigration Lawyers Association.
Lore Roels (she/her) is a doctoral researcher in the Migration Law Research Group (Law Faculty) and the International Centre for Reproductive Health (Medicine and Health Sciences Faculty) at Ghent University, Belgium. She holds a Master of Laws degree from Ghent University and an LLM degree from LSE, specialised in asylum law, gender and human rights. Lore’s doctoral research echoes UNHCR’s concern that asylum authorities base credibility assessments on stereotypical gender perceptions. She applies the concept of ‘rape mythology’ to asylum and non-refoulement procedures of persons fleeing sexual and gender-based violence.
Professor Dr İkbal Sibel Safi is a professor of Public International Law and Refugee Law at Dokuz Eylul University, İzmir, Turkey. Currently, she is the head of the EU Law department at the Dokuz Eylul University, Faculty of Law and the director of Dokuz Eylul University Research Centre for Women's Rights, DEKAUM
She graduated from Ankara University Faculty of Law and completed her first LLM degree in European Union Law and Institutions at the University of Bucharest, Faculty of Law, and her second LLM degree in International Public Law and Refugee Law, at the University of East London, Law School. In the last year of her doctorate, which she started in the field of International Public Law at the University of Bucharest, she attended the University of East London as part of the EU integrated doctoral cooperation program and completed it with an honour degree.
Afterwards, she worked in the field of Refugee Law at the University of East London in the United Kingdom and worked on research projects as an associate member at the Centre for Migration, Refugees and Belonging (CMRB) in the UK. She did post-doctoral studies at Queen Mary University Law School UK as a visiting fellow. Her main fields of study are: particular social group criteria in Refugee Law and inconsistencies in court decisions, EU Law, Human Rights Law, Human trafficking in international law and Refugee Law, PSG on cultural relativism.
Olajumoke Yacob-Haliso is Associate Professor of African and African American Studies in the Mandel Centre for the Humanities at Brandeis University. Before that, she was Professor of Political Science at Babcock University in Nigeria. She has spent over 15 years conducting field research on protection issues affecting African refugee women on the continent at various stages of their displacement, from exile to return. Olajumoke was Global South Scholar-in-Residence at the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva, Switzerland; African Studies Association Presidential Fellow; and Visiting Professor at the Rapoport Centre for Human Rights and Justice at the University of Texas at Austin School of Law, amongst others.
Her refugee research has been supported by the Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation, the International Development Research Centre, the American Council of Learned Societies, and so on. Dr Yacob-Haliso’s most recent publication on African refugee women is a chapter is a chapter in the ground-breaking Palgrave Handbook of African Women’s Studies, while other articles are published in African Affairs, the Journal of Peacebuilding and Development, and elsewhere.
Natasha Yacoub is a refugee law practitioner and scholar. She has worked for the UN Refugee Agency for 19 years - including postings in Sudan, Egypt, Myanmar, UNHQ New York, Australia and the Pacific - and was a decision maker on the Refugee Review Tribunal of Australia. She is a PhD scholar at the Andrew & Renata Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law at the University of New South Wales, undertaking a feminist legal theory analysis of the law governing refugee return. She teaches on the MA programme in Refugee Protection and Forced Migration Studies at the University of London.