Dr. Zaheera Jinnah

Dr. Zaheera Jinnah
Position
Assistant Professor
School of Social Work
Contact
Office: HSD B330
Area of expertise

Islamophobia, Migration, and Southern African studies


Professional Information & Research Interests

  • Islamophobia
  • Migration
  • Southern African studies

Zaheera's interdisciplinary scholarship is informed by decolonial, global south and intersectional theories and practice. Over the last decade she has taught at the African Centre for Migration and Society, Wits University (South Africa) where she remains a research associate, the University of Alberta, and in the European Masters in Migration and Intercultural Relations program at the University of Oldenburg (Germany).

Her scholarship is centred on migration studies, especially in, from and around Africa, an emerging area of work is in Islamophobia.

She is currently accepting students for supervision.

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Recent Teaching

  • MSW 516 Research for Social Change
  • Social Work 356, Human Development and the Social Environment within a Global Context
  • MA module on labour migration at REMESO, Linkoping University, Sweden
  • Informal Economy at the annual ILO Labour Migration Academy, United Nations
  • Joint coordinator BA in Migration and Human Rights in conjunction with the International Human Rights Exchange program (IHRE) and Bard College (NY)

Education

  • PhD (Anthropology) University of KwaZulu Natal, South Africa. Unfinished journeys: an exploration of agency in Somali women's lives and livelihoods in Johannesburg, 2014
  • MA (Development Studies) University of KwaZulu Natal, South Africa, 2007
  • BA (Social Work) University of South Africa, 2004

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Selected Publications

Books and book chapters

  • Jinnah, Z. (2022) Informal Livelihoods and Governance in South Africa: The Hustle. Palgrave.
  • Hiralal, K and Jinnah, Z (2018) Borders, Bodies, and Boundaries: Gender and migration in Africa. Palgrave.
  • Jinnah, Z., & Rugunanan, P. (2017). Remaking Religion, Rethinking Space: How South Asian and Somali Migrants Are Transforming Ethnically Bound Notions of Hinduism and Islam in South African cities. In Routes and Rites to the City (pp. 137-161). Palgrave Macmillan UK.
  • Jinnah, Z. (2015). Chapter 4. Rational routes? Understanding Somali migration to South Africa 43-54. In Mobility and Migration Choices. Edited by Martin van der Velde and Ton van Naerssen, Ashgate.
  • Polzer- Ngwato, T., and Jinnah Z. (2013). Migrants and mobilisation around socio-economic rights, in Migrants Rights. Symbols or Substance? The Role and Impact of Socio-Economic Rights Strategies in South Africa,” Ed Langford, M., Cousins, B., Dugard, J., and Madlingozi,T. Cambridge University Press. Chapter 14.
  • Jinnah, Z. (2010). Migrant mobilisation: structures and strategies of claiming rights in Johannesburg and Nairobi, in Handmaker, J and Berkhout, R “Mobilising Social Justice” pp 137-178. Pretoria University Law Press.

Peer reviewed journal articles

  • Jinnah, Z., Vanyoro, K.P. & Wee, K. (2020) Repoliticizing international migration narratives? Critical reflections on the Civil Society Days of the Global Forum on Migration and Development. Migration, Civil Society and Global Governance (17), 65-78.
  • Jinnah, Z. (2020) Negotiated precarity in the global south: A case study of migration and domestic work in South Africa. Studies in Social Justice 2020(14), 210-227.
  • Jinnah, Z., Rutherford, B. & Stasiulis, D. (2020). Migration, Intersectionality and Social Justice. Studies in Sosical Justice, 14(1), 1-21.  https://doi.org/10.26522/ssj.v2020i14.2445
  • Jinnah, Z., Vanyoro, K. P. & Wee, K. (2018). Repoliticizing international migration narratives? Critical reflections on the Civil Society Days of the Global Forum on Migration and Development, Globalizations. DOI: 10.1080/14747731.2018.1446600
  • Shaffer, M., Ferrato, G., & Jinnah, Z. (2017). Routes, locations, and social imaginary: a comparative study of the on-going production of geographies in Somali forced migration. African Geographical Review, 1-13.
  • Jinnah, Z. (2017). Silence and Invisibility: Exploring Labour Strategies of Zimbabwean Farmworkers in Musina, South Africa. South African Review of Sociology, 48(3), 46-63.
  • Jinnah, Z. (2016). In the Shadow of a State: Self-Settlement Strategies and Informal Governance Amongst Somalis in Johannesburg. Journal of International Migration and Integration, 1-15.
  • Jinnah, Z (2016). Cultural Causations and Expressions of Distress: a Case Study of Buufis Amongst Somalis in Johannesburg. In Urban Forum (pp. 1-13). Springer Netherlands.
    • Jinnah, Z. (2016). L’Afrique du Sud face aux migrations économiques. Politique étrangère, (1), 53-63.
  • Jinnah, Z., & Lowe, L. (2015). Circumcising Circumcision: Renegotiating Beliefs and Practices among Somali Women in Johannesburg and Nairobi. Medical anthropology, 34(4), 371-388.
  • Jinnah, Z. (2013). New Households, new rules? Examining the impact of migration on Somali family life in Johannesburg, QScience 2013, Family, Migration & Dignity Special Issue, Volume 7 DOI.
  • Jinnah, Z. (2010). Making Home in a Hostile Land: Understanding Somali Identity, Integration, Livelihood and Risks in Johannesburg, in Journal of Sociology and Social Anthropology, 1 (1-2) 91-99.

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Selected Grants and Awards

  • Mitacs Canada Science Policy Fellow (2019-20)
  • Volkswagen Stiftung fellow in the Humanities : Principle Investigator: ‘Shifting families, migration and violence‘ project (2016-19)
  • National Research Foundation South Africa: Thuthuka postdoctoral award (2016-18)
  • Wellcome Trust fellow on Investigator Award (Prof Jo Vearey): ‘Wellbeing, informality and health in Southern Africa’ (2015-19)
  • Security at the Margins Co-PI, ESRC (Edinburgh and Wits) (2015-18)
  • European Union: Co-PI Migrating for Work Research Consortium (MiWORC) (2012-4)

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