nlen

10.02.26, 19:30, Albina Fetahaj, Waarom een wereld zonder grenzen minder absurd is dan je denkt

Debates about migration often get stuck in the same dichotomy: either you are in favour of open borders, or you want to turn Europe into a fortress. But what if we refuse to be locked into that straitjacket? In this lecture, Albina Fetahaj breaks open the current frameworks of thinking. This starts with the simple, but never asked, question: ‘What is a border?’. Anyone who takes this question seriously is in for quite a journey of discovery. Because it soon becomes clear that borders are more than just dry lines on a dead map. They are mechanisms of power. By intermingling with race, class and gender, among other things, borders determine who is welcome and who is not, who is allowed to feel at home somewhere and who is excluded or expelled.

Fetahaj challenges us to break open that order and make the unthinkable, a world without borders, conceivable. Her plea goes beyond simply thinking away borders: it is an invitation to reimagine the world order itself and to search together for a more just future – for everyone.

After the lecture, Albina will talk to postdoctoral researcher Natan De Coster. Getting the Voice Out, a collective that collects stories from people in Belgium's closed centres, will share testimonies.

  • Albina Fetahaj studied Conflict and Development Studies and Gender and Diversity at Ghent University. In 2024, her debut ‘Grenskolonialisme’ was published by EPO Uitgeverij. In her work, she studies borders and migration from a decolonial perspective, with a particular focus on anti-colonial resistance. She is of Kosovar-Albanian descent.
  • Natan De Coster is a postdoctoral researcher at Ghent University, where he conducts research on race and class dynamics in South Africa. He obtained his doctorate in political science with a historical-ethnographic work on a “white” working-class neighbourhood in Cape Town where, despite apartheid politics, people lived across colour lines. He is interested in how large structures such as colonialism and apartheid are experienced by ordinary people. He is currently working on a book based on his doctoral research. Natan obtained a master's degree in philosophy from KU Leuven and an additional master's degree in Conflict and Development Studies from Ghent University.
  • Getting the Voice Out is a collective based in Brussels that collects testimonies from people in Belgium's closed centres. Belgium currently has six such centres, where people are detained for administrative reasons while awaiting deportation. There is virtually no access to information about the detention centres and what exactly happens inside them. The website gettingthevoiceout.org was set up in collaboration with the No Border network to publicise the voices of the detainees and the conditions in which they are held and deported. The collective also supports all forms of individual and collective struggle by detainees. By “struggle”, they mean any form of resistance to detention and threats of deportation. They are not advocates of non-violence on principle and support all forms of resistance against these prisons. They also believe that surviving in a closed centre is an act in itself that requires a form of resistance. Getting the Voice Out demands an end to detention centres, prisons and all other forms of incarceration.

This lecture will take place in MIRY Concert Hall. The hall is wheelchair accessible via a lift to the first floor. A sign language interpreter will be provided for this lecture. If you have any further questions about accessibility facilities, please contact the organisation: anais.vanertvelde@hogent.be. Questions can be asked on site to the student assistant at the desk.

free for students and staff of HOGENT, Howest, Ghent University, and KASK & Conservatorium

Dutch spoken
Biezekapelstraat 9
9000 Gent