Shia-Catholic Coexistence and Cross-Religious Engagement Among Youth in Southern Lebanon

Presenter: Raimy Khalife-Hamdan − Global Studies

Faculty Mentor(s): Stephen Wooten

Session: Virtual) Oral Panel—Health and Social Science

This ethnographic research project on Shia-Catholic coexistence in Southern Lebanon centers on young adults’ voices and actions. Traveling between a militia-filled Muslim village and a Christian village to conduct over thirty-three qualitative interviews over three months, I examine the interreligious relationship in which young adults engage. I advance an understanding that ordinary youth of different social identities have the ability to enact and bolster long-term peacekeeping. In the case of Ghazieh and Maghdouché, the vast majority of young adults re-conceptualize identity and religion to detach from sectarian master narratives, and they instead articulate a narrative underscoring shared fraternal connection with religious neighbors. In the process, many young adults treat temporalities and spaces as inclusive, surpassing the sectarian to become neutral or religiously sublime. I determine a general “common life” or “single life” (‘aysh mushtarak or ‘aysh wahid) marked by friendships, shared spaces, and mutual reliance. Lebanon’s history of sectarian conflict does not impel the youth I interview to reproduce sectarian narratives. This postwar generation—which rejects divisive war-era master narratives that enemize the religious other—craves an alternative Lebanon, one that disintegrates the sectarian sociopolitical structures. Yet considering the crises plaguing Lebanon and the desperation of young adults to flee, I dare to theorize the country’s demise.

Picture This: The Role of Digital Storytelling in Motivating Action for Refugee Relief

Presenter(s): Mitra Lebuhn Lebuhn − International Studies

Faculty Mentor(s): Melissa Graboyes, Stephen Wooten

Oral Session 1C

Research Area: Humanitarian Communication, International Studies, Psychology, Social Science

Funding: Presidential Scholarship, Summit Scholarship, SIT study abroad scholarship

It is often assumed that powerful photographs and film footage have the ability to move viewers in the developed population to action. Frank Fournier, the photographer who captured the face of 13-year-old Omayra Sanchez in her last hours of life, said, “I believe the photo helped raise money from around the world in aid and helped highlight the irresponsibility and lack of courage of the country’s leaders (BBC, 2005).” His statement encompasses the common perspective that imagery can motivate action, but there is a lack in data regarding this transition from emotion to action. This study is concerned with the effectiveness of various digital storytelling appeals (shock effect, positive images, and post-humanitarian communication) in encouraging agency in refugee relief efforts. Refugees are perhaps more distant from the donor population than any other victimized group, and have struggled through periods of severe anti-refugee sentiments that have made the collection of aid and process of reintegration challenging. The extreme discourse between populations and the ever-growing number of displaced persons makes refugees the ideal population to study. This study asks what in a digital story, particularly the imagery, motivates developed populations to not only react emotionally towards refugee issues but also make contributive action for refugee relief efforts? Through literature and interviews regarding image-evoked empathy, identity, and group influenced responding, and the analysis of photographs and digital storytelling platforms that unpack various imagery appeals, it is evident that image use for humanitarian campaigns has evolved to it’s most effective form yet. This study explores how advancements in technology have brought forth digital storytelling, which combined with the implementation of the post- humanitarian communication appeal generates evocative and accessible campaigns that fit the framework necessary to motivate action for refugees relief more effectively and ethically than has been done in the past.