fellow

Romy van Baarsen

2025-2026
Discipline(s)
Information and communication sciences Political Sciences Sociology
Theme(s)
Contemporary violence & Justice Democracy, Citizenship, Governance Human Rights Migration
Fellowship dates
Biography

Romy is a journalist and photographer currently exploring the challenges faced by people on the move when migrating to Europe. She strives to bring human stories to light, delving beyond the confines of societal roles and stereotypes.

We are one

Traveling globally, Romy has discovered a shared humanity transcending cultural divides. Despite our diverse circumstances, our emotions are universally resonant. With 99.9% shared DNA, why tolerate an unequal system?

Seeking answers, Romy explores alternative societal structures, advocating a reevaluation of collective priorities.

Research Project
People and Borders

Research question: How has border violence at the European external borders become normalised, and which institutional, political, and psychological mechanisms sustain it?

Romy van Baarsen examines how violence at the European borders becomes normalised, and what happens to the rule of law when protection becomes conditional and violence bureaucratic.

From her position as a journalist and writer, she explores how institutions such as Frontex, EU member states, and policy frameworks shape a complex system in which responsibility can become diffuse. The book project combines fieldwork, interviews, and document analysis with philosophical reflection and literary narrative form.

The style moves between narrative and essayistic. Central to the work are moral questions: who is responsible, and what remains of our democratic values when principles such as non-refoulement (a fundamental principle of international law that prohibits a country from returning asylum seekers or refugees to a country where they would face serious threats to their life or freedom) come under pressure?

Van Baarsen will use her time at NIAS for in-depth exploration, interdisciplinary dialogue, and the reflective distance necessary to sharpen this project — both thematically and stylistically.

Research Interests:

Border violence normalization; European migration governance; bureaucratization of violence; institutional responsibility and accountability; erosion of asylum law