Dr Neelam Raina

Director of Research

Neelam Raina
  • School Deputy Vice-Chancellor Finance

  • Department Research Knowledge Transfer Office

  • Location London

Research activities

Research interests:

1. Post conflict reconstruction - sustainable livelihood 

2. Displaced women's enterprise

3. Cultures of migration and displacement

4. Gender inclusive crisis responses

5. Arts and humanities research to commericialisation.

6. Decolonial perspectives of ethics in research.


Current Teaching

Academic - 

Doctoral Supervision.

Critical and Contextual Studies across Undergraduate Programes in the School of Design.

Community based -

Creative design and textile craft based design training modules

Field Research Training

Business skills for women led enterprise including social media marketing for craft made textiles.


Biography

Dr. Neelam Raina is an Associate Professor of design and development at Middlesex University, London. Her research interests include conflict, security, peace building, material cultures, gender, and livelihood generation in fragile, conflict affected states. Raina’s work explores notions of healing, trauma, peace and reflection through the embodied practices of making, using material culture and tacit knowledge as the underpinning for approaching violence and peace building and for sustainable income generation. Raina is a post conflict reconstruction expert with a focus on South Asia where she has conducted extensive empirical research over the last two decades. The Women, Peace and Security agenda is key to Neelam’s and her research seeks to foreground voices of vulnerable and marginalised women. 

Dr Raina has led several large scale competitively funded research projects which examine material and social practices through which Muslim women in conflict areas reproduce themselves on a daily and generational basis and through which the social relations and material bases of capitalism are renewed. Her work allows connections to be built between, creative home-based workers who are largely seen as peripheral, to development economics, and on the fringes of formal employment and contributors to GDP; to the larger notions of peace building, countering and preventing violent extremism, poverty spirals and conflict theory through culturally significant, socially relevant practices. She connects British creative industry into solution-based impactful approaches to global challenges through research.

Raina is a strong advocate for Afghan women and is the Director of the Secretariat to the all-party parliamentary group (APPG) on Afghan women and girls in UK parliament. Her research in Afghanistan is ongoing as she brings women’s tacit knowledge to commercially viable spaces from the confines of the home. Raina has submitted oral and written evidence to UK Select committees specially about Afghanistan where she continues to work.

Raina has a PhD in Design and Development, and a master’s in design and Manufacture from De Montfort University, Leicester. From 2018-2021 she was the Challenge Leader for UKRI’s conflict and security portfolio for the Global Challenges Research Fund. Raina has been a Visiting Fellow at the London School of Economics at the Centre for Women, Peace and Security. She is the editor for the International Journal of Traditional Arts, and her new work ‘Creative Economies of Culture in South Asia – Performers and Craftspeople’ comes out in 2023. Raina's latest essay - ‘Women’s Tacit, uncoded knowledge Ownership and Value in Conflict Zones’, appears Katy Deepwell's edited book, De-/anti-/post-colonial feminisms in contemporary art and Textile Crafts in September 2023. She also writes for British newspapers. 

 

External activities

  • Doctoral Research Summer School - International Institute of Asian Studies, university of leiden , 2022
  • Sounding Board Member, The Creative and Cultural Exchange, London., 2021
  • GCRF Gender, Justice and Security Hub, London School of Economics and Political Science, 2019
  • GCRF Challenge lead, Global Challenges Research Fund, 2018
  • Publications