Four years in, SYRASP has established itself as an innovative and collaborative space for the study of prison narrative, along with other forms of cultural and musical expression. Its ethical structures and practices are well-established, with ongoing engagement from both academic advisors and members of the Syrian prison field. SYRASP’s scientific progress and outputs are in a very good state. As hoped, the PI has become a trusted researcher for many individuals and organizations in the Syrian diasporic prison community, notably in Germany and France. The PI has taken numerous opportunities to develop relationships with a variety of interlocutors, from established activists to emerging writers.
Her collaboration with the Syrian artist Khaled Barakeh as co-curator of the 2022
exhibition “Design of Necessity,” in Copenhagen, Denmark, led to her co-writing an article and theatrical play with the artist. Most recently, Barakeh invited the PI to conceptualize, co-write, and edit a community-written publication on siege, prison, and survival practices in Syria. Also titled Design of Necessity, the book will be published open-access by coculture, with support from Impunity Watch, in late 2024.
The PI has been invited to collaborate with leading diasporic Syrian organizations that
are committed to knowledge production and activism on incarceration and forced
disappearance. The most significant of these is The Lab for the Study of Violence in Syria, which has invited her to co-design its ethical design and methodology for the gathering and storage of digital data on incarceration and other forms of violence. In this role, the PI promotes the sharing of current best practices in academia with rising and established Syrian activists. The PI has also been invited to join the consultative boards of organizations in the field like the MENA Prison Forum (Beirut), the Syrian artistic collective coculture (Berlin), and the Association for the Missing and Disappeared of Sednaya Prison (Gaziantep, Turkey).
These achievements stand alongside SYRASP’s scientific network-building and publications. In the former category, the PI built an international academic network through the two-year SYRASP working group, conducted monthly online on the topics of prison studies and the MENA and its diasporas after 2011. This working group brought together approximately 15 academics, students, and activists based in Europe, North America, and the MENA. In scientific publications, SYRASP’s PI has authored two peer-reviewed articles, a book review, and two public-facing, online essays; co-written an article with a Syrian artist that appeared in English, Arabic, and German; and co-edited a special journal issue on prison literature. The postdoctoral fellow Dr. Eylaf Bader Eddin, a Syrian academic researcher, has authored two articles (one in English, one in Arabic). As hoped in SYRASP’s ethical design, Dr. Bader Eddin’s time with the grant proved highly supportive for his career. After he ended his contract in July 2024, he began a tenure-track professorship in the United States.