- Left out of the Levels Plan: A Call for Accessible Statistics for the Joint Assistance Sponsorship Program to Facilitate Research and Evaluation
- CARFMS2025: Canadian, Regional, and International Responses to Forced Migration
- LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE INDOCHINESE REFUGEE MOVEMENT IN CANADA IN THE 1970s AND 1980s
- 2024 Winners of CARFMS/LERRN Lived Experiences of Displacement Essay Award
- The Most Fundamental Human Right to Peace and the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) the Forcibly Displaced
Peter Grbac
Peter Grbac is a third year law student in the BCL/LLB program at McGill University. He holds a Masters with Distinction in Refugee and Forced Migration Studies from the University of Oxford and an AB Magna cum Laude in Social Studies from Harvard College. His research interests focus on social theory, the urban dynamics of forced displacement and migration, borders and citizenship, and International Human Rights and Refugee Law. His undergraduate research centered on the situation of the Roma population in France, specifically the way in which their identity was crystallized in and through French urban space. His graduate research explores the urbanity of the refugee camp space, conceiving the camp as a space in which particular rights, namely the right to the city, can be conceived and realized.