Contact details
- Name:
- Dr Juanita Cox
- Institute:
- Institute of Commonwealth Studies
- Email address:
- Juanita.Cox@sas.ac.uk
Research Summary and Profile
- Research interests:
- Colonies & Colonization, emigration & immigration
- Regions:
- Caribbean
- Languages:
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Spoken Written French Good - Other Good -
- Research Projects & Supervisions
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Research projects:
Details The Windrush Scandal in a Transnational and Commonwealth Context This three-year research project seeks, for the first time, to produce a scholarly examination of the so-called ‘Windrush Scandal’ within a fully transnational framework, one that properly considers the agency of a wide variety of official and non-official actors from both sides of the Atlantic and the role of the post-colonial and Commonwealth contexts of international relations. Those people from Commonwealth Caribbean states who arrived in the UK, before the 1962 Commonwealth Immigrants Act came into force, generally had the right to enter and remain in Britain by virtue of being Citizens of the UK and Colonies (CUKC). The project’s key objective is to develop a unique digital research resource of extended interviews on the national and diplomatic activism around the Windrush scandal, supported by digitized government documents from the British archives and Caribbean government records. Oral and archival research methodologies will be combined to explore the links between the apparently distinct spheres of international diplomacy and community activism, providing insights into, on the one hand, unconventional methods of public diplomacy by Commonwealth representatives, and on the other the ways in which this international support enhanced and amplified the community-based campaigning and investigative reporting. Exploring these links will provide the central, overarching focus of this project.
The key outputs will be 60 oral history interviews which will be available electronically and a searchable database of existing oral history resources on the ‘Windrush generation’. 30 of the interviews will focus on the response of Caribbean governments and their representatives in London to the legal restrictions imposed on immigration to the UK from the Caribbean from the early 1960s, and the plight of those members of the diaspora community, whose right to remain in the UK was challenged by the British state. The other 30 interviews will focus on members of the diaspora community, those who found themselves under threat of deportation or actually deported, and their supporters and legal and political representatives. The interviews will explore the extent to which the complexities and ambiguities of the law governing nationality exacerbated confusion around competing notions of Caribbean and British identity and belonging. They will seek to identify the extent to which members of the diaspora community were aware of changes to their rights and obligations brought about by successive acts of parliament from 1962, and the stages by which it became clear that significant numbers of people were having their right to remain in the UK challenged. This oral history research will be supplemented by archival research in collections in the UK and the Caribbean. Selected documents will be digitized and made available on the project website alongside the recordings of the interviews and supporting explanatory materials including a series of podcasts produced by the project team.
In partnership with the Black Cultural Archives(Opens in new window) in Brixton, the team will seek to ensure the broadest possible dissemination, with a special seminar at the BCA for community activists on the project’s findings. We will also stage a project ‘roadshow’ which will visit cities in the UK with significant Caribbean communities. We will also provide separate seminars aimed at the staff of the FCO, the Home Office and the Caribbean High Commissions in London. We expect the research resources we produce to be widely used by academics and students producing undergraduate and postgraduate dissertations, and our podcasts will be aimed at those outside the academy, with one podcast specifically aimed at pupils taking the OCR History GCSE module ‘Migration to Britain, 1000-2010’. Our articles for the British Library’s ‘Windrush Stories’ website(Opens in new window) will enable us to demonstrate the relevance of our project materials to a range of researchers and educators.
The project’s team members are:
- Professor Philip Murphy, Principal Investigator, University of London(Opens in new window)
- Dr Rob Waters, Co-Investigator, Queen Mary University of London(Opens in new window)
- Dr Juanita Cox, Research Fellow, University of London(Opens in new window)
- Dr Eve Hayes de Kalaf, Research Fellow, University of London
- Professional Affiliations
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Professional affiliations:
Name Activity Oral History Society Advising on Diversity, Strategy and Migration - Relevant Events
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Related events:
Date Details 09-Jul-2022 Annual Conference 'When Home is an Hostile Environment: Voices of the Windrush Generation and Their Descendants.' This 45 minute paper was delivered at the Annual Oral HIstory Conference for this year's theme of 'Home'.
To listen to the recording via the attached link you will need to input the code: OHSHomeReplay68
25-Feb-2022 2021 Highland Book Prize Long List Series Conversation: David Alston in Conversation with Juanita Cox Conversation with David Alston about his book Slaves and Highlanders.
06-Dec-2021 Drive Time: Voice of Islam - Interview Invited by Nabeela Shah to talk about citizenship: privelege or right? for Drive Time: Voice of Islam
04-Nov-2021 Silenced Histories: Scotland and the Caribbean In this recorded National Library of Scotland event, David Alston discusses his new book, 'Slaves and Highlanders', with Juanita Cox of Guyana SPEAKS and the ICwS.
28-Oct-2021 Ain't I a Woman: Black Women in an Historical and Contemporary Context (Day 2) This online conference spotlighted academic research and publications which enhance our understanding and provide fresh insight into the lives of phenomenal Black Women through the ages. Celebrated inspirational keynote and headline speakers enriched this event. The Black woman have too often been ignored and rendered invisible from public discourse even when issues directly impact their lives. This event, rganised by three Black female historians: Dr Angelina Osborne, Dr Juanita Cox, Dr Elizabeth Williams, shone a light, acknowledged, critically assessed, and elevated the varied contributions of Black women to the lived experience of humanity.
Keynote speakers were: Prof Olivette Otele Professor of the History of Slavery-Bristol University, Colleen Amos OBE, CEO-Amos Bursary, Stella Dadzie, Feminist and Intellectual
Headline interviews offered by: Margaret Busby OBE (Editor, Writer, Broadcaster, Publisher), Sisonke Msimang (Author, Intellectual ‘The Resurrection of Winnie Mandela’ 2018), Pascale Lamche (Producer, Director, Film ‘Winnie’ 2017)
27-Oct-2021 Ain't I a Woman: Black Women in an Historical and Contemporary Context (Day 1) This online conference spotlighted academic research and publications which enhance our understanding and provide fresh insight into the lives of phenomenal Black Women through the ages. Celebrated inspirational keynote and headline speakers enriched this event. The Black woman have too often been ignored and rendered invisible from public discourse even when issues directly impact their lives. This event, rganised by three Black female historians: Dr Angelina Osborne, Dr Juanita Cox, Dr Elizabeth Williams, shone a light, acknowledged, critically assessed, and elevated the varied contributions of Black women to the lived experience of humanity.
Keynote speakers were: Prof Olivette Otele Professor of the History of Slavery-Bristol University, Colleen Amos OBE, CEO-Amos Bursary, Stella Dadzie, Feminist and Intellectual
Headline interviews offered by: Margaret Busby OBE (Editor, Writer, Broadcaster, Publisher), Sisonke Msimang (Author, Intellectual ‘The Resurrection of Winnie Mandela’ 2018), Pascale Lamche (Producer, Director, Film ‘Winnie’ 2017)
21-Oct-2021 The Legacies of the 1962-1971 Immigration Acts: Historians and Lawyers in Conversation Participants: Nadine El-Nany, Colin Yeo, Ian Patel, Niamh Quille, Rachel Okello, Philip Murphy, Rob Waters & Juanita Cox
Windrush Scandal: Failures and Ethics of Leadership Workshop at the Black Cultural Archives with Callum Watts and Ayshah Johnston