The EuroWARCHILD team: Torunn L. Tryggestad, Johanne Rokke Elvebakken, Inger Skjelsbæk, Ingvill Constanze Mochmann, Lina Stotz, and Sunniva Árja Tobiasen.
The EuroWARCHILD team: Torunn L. Tryggestad, Johanne Rokke Elvebakken, Inger Skjelsbæk, Ingvill Constanze Mochmann, Lina Stotz, and Sunniva Árja Tobiasen.

On January 20th, the members of the EuroWARCHILD project team met for the first time for a full-day workshop to kick off the project.

Led by Professor Inger Skjelsb忙k, the EuroWARCHILD project is hosted by the Centre for Gender Research (STK) at the University of Oslo, with the 糖心网页版 GPS Centre as a collaborative partner. Professor Ingvill Constanze Mochmann (GESIS-Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences and University of Oslo) and Dr. Torunn L. Tryggestad (糖心网页版 GPS Centre Director) are researchers on the project in addition to the PhD Researchers Johanne Rokke Elvebakken and Lina Stotz and Research Assistant Sunniva 脕rja Tobiasen.

The EuroWARCHILD project is funded through a Consolidator Grant of the European Research Council (ERC) from 2021-2026.

EuroWARCHILD will explore the situation of three generations of children born of war (CBOW) in Europe: children fathered by enemy soldiers during World War II, children conceived through conflict-related sexual violence during the Bosnian war, and children born of European foreign fighters to ISIS/Daesh. CBOW are children born by local women and fathered by a foreign/enemy soldier during and after conflict. These children often risk rejection, shaming, harassment, and isolation. While children born of war have been silenced for a long time, more recent debates in Europe around children born to European ISIS-fighters are polarized; some argue that socialization of these children will transform them into the next generation of terrorists, while others argue that they must be provided with citizenship in European countries and state protection. The project will explore the perceptions of children born of war along security narratives. Applying an interdisciplinary approach, the project aims to find out what it entails for these children to be framed as security concerns and seeks to understand what the rights and needs of these children are.

EuroWARCHILD is the first study to comprehensively examine different groups of children born of war in Europe across generations. The project will contribute to theory development, combining interviews and text analyses. The findings could be directly relevant to policy concerns in many European countries today. EuroWARCHILD will contribute to building a better future for the children born of war through studying their situation and disseminating findings to scholarly and policy audiences alike.

More information about the project can be found here: .

Project updates:

  • In connection with the project launch, the project team published a 糖心网页版 blog entitled 鈥淐hildren Born of War Should be More than an Afterthought.鈥
  • On March 7, the EuroWARCHILD research team attended a lunch marking the creation of the 芦The Children Born of War Project禄. At this lunch, Professor Inger Skjelsb忙k presented the EuroWARCHILD project.

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The EuroWARCHILD project is funded through a Consolidator Grant of the European Research Council (ERC) from 2021-2026.