Bree Akesson

Assistant Professor, Faculty of Social Work Wilfrid Laurier University

  • Brantford ON

Assistant Professor at Wilfrid Laurier University who conducts research with children and families affected by war and global social work

Contact

Media

Biography

Dr. Akesson's program of research focuses broadly on international child protection, ranging from micro-level understandings of the experiences of children and families affected by war to macro-level studies on child protection systems strengthening. Her past research projects include an evaluation of psychosocial programs for children in Chechnya (2005) and northern Uganda (2008), a mapping of social work education in West and Central Africa (2014), a place-based study on the experiences of Palestinian children and families living in the West Bank and East Jerusalem (2014), and an eight-country baseline study to determine child protection practices and social service workforce needs in southeast Europe (2015-2016).

She is currently the principal investigator for two research projects with families displaced by the war in Syria: (1) a qualitative study exploring the childrearing experiences of Syrian families, and (2) a SSHRC-funded mixed methods study investigating Syrian families’ well-being and mobility.

Industry Expertise

Research
Social Services
Education/Learning

Areas of Expertise

Refugee and Human Rights Issues
War and Violence
Children and Families
Social Work
Social Work Education
Crisis and Emergency Mental Health Interventions
Psychosocial Aspects of Health
Refugee Resettlement
Syria
Palestine
Afghanistan
Ghana
Lebanon

Accomplishments

Distinguished Dissertation Award

2015-10-31

Awarded from the Canadian Association of Graduate Studies (CAGS) and University Microfilms International

Prix d’Excellence (Award of Excellence)

2015-09-24

Awarded from L’Association des Doyens des Études Supérieures au Québec (Association of Deans of Graduate Studies in Quebec)

Education

McGill University

PhD

Social Work

2014

Columbia University

MPH

Population and Family Health

2006

Columbia University

MSSW

Advanced Clinical Social Work Practice

2006

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Affiliations

  • Clinical Treatment Facilitator for the Child Psychiatric Epidemiology Group
  • Faculty Affiliate with the Child Protection in Crisis (CPC) Learning Network
  • Research Associate with Columbia Group for Children in Adversity
  • Research Associate with the International Migration Research Centre (IMRC)

Media Appearances

‘Out of place’: The Palestinian definition of home

Daily News Egypt  print

2014-09-01

For six months, Abo Mourad’s family made shifts every night, some of them sleep and some awake. The family slept in “outside clothes” after they received a demolition order from the Israeli government, but one day the police gave them a break to sleep and get back to their pyjamas: a ten-day notice to evacuate the house. This is how the 23-year-old Sanaa describes her family’s experience losing their home in East Jerusalem, in the study “We may go, but this is my home: Experiences of Domicide and Resistance for Palestinian Children and Families”. The recently published study by Bree Akesson, assistant professor at Lyle S. Hallman Faculty of Social Work in Wilfrid Laurier University in Ontario, Canada, explores the experiences of Palestinian families who have lost their homes.

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Social work prof receives awards for dissertation work

Lyle S. Hallman Faculty of Social Work Alma Matters Newsletter  online

2016-02-01

Assistant social work professor Bree Akesson recently received two awards for her work on her PhD dissertation: the 2015 Distinguished Dissertation Award for Fine Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences from the Canadian Association for Graduate Studies and the Award of Excellence Association of Deans of Graduate Studies of Quebec (ADESQ) from the Association francophone pour la savior (Acfas).

Non-violent resistance in Palestine

CKUT Radio  radio

2013-11-11

Bree Akesson discusses her research with Palestinian families on Caravan: Community News for Arabs and Muslims

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Articles

The right to home: Domicide as a violation of child and family rights in the context of political violence

Children and Society

2016-08-01

There is limited international recognition that domicide—or intentional destruction of home—is a violation of children’s rights. While human rights documents allude to the crime of domicide, it is, however, never explicitly referred to as a human rights violation. Through an analysis of human rights documents and with a focus on the experiences of children, families and communities, we argue that domicide should be explicitly acknowledged as a violation of human rights so that it can effectively be prosecuted as a war crime in contexts of political violence.

School as a place of violence and hope: Tensions of education for children and families in post-intifada Palestine

International Journal of Educational Development

2015-01-01

For children living in the context of political violence, school is often conceptualized as a safe physical place with education representing hope for the future. Yet school can also be a place of violence for some children, especially as they encounter the Israeli military and settlers on their journeys to and from school. Framed by Relph’s (1976) theory of place as physical setting, activity, and meaning, this paper uses examples from research with 18 Palestinian families to better understand the tensions posed by school as a place of both violence and hope. The research suggests that children and families’ understandings of the place of school are complicated by the ongoing occupation and protracted political violence.

Trees, flowers, prisons, flags: Frustration and hope shaping national identity for Palestinian families

Global Studies of Childhood

2015-01-01

The Israeli occupation has shaped the lives of Palestinian families for generations. Under occupation, Palestinian children continue to craft identities connected to place, specifically in their relationship with Palestine as a nation-state. Drawing from a qualitative research project using the concept of place as a lens through which to view children’s negotiations with their environments, this article examines how Palestinian identity is related to marginalization and dislocation from place as a result of the ongoing Israeli occupation. A total of 18 interviews were conducted with Palestinian children and their families living in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. The research used a place-based methodology including collaborative family interviews, mapmaking, and drawing. The data generally reinforced the view that a history of dislocation and marginalization from place due to the longstanding occupation contributes to emotions of frustration and hope, which in turn play a significant role in the national imaginary of families and children and ultimately shape Palestinian national identity or being Palestinian.

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