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Thursday April 9, 2026 16:30 - 17:20 BST
This workshop examines the geographies of Palestine through a critical, decolonial and educational perspective. It considers how thematic discussion points within A level and GCSE curricula can discuss landscapes of conflict, settler colonialism, apartheid and genocide - to bridge knowledge and understanding in scholarly and school discourses. Participants will explore how borders, checkpoints and settlements influence access to land, water and mobility, and how these processes affect children’s lives, education and future opportunities. Teachers will explore how geography is never 'impartial', in terms of who makes maps, how boundaries are drawn (including historically), and how land use changes. The session will model strategies for addressing different perspectives: Palestinian, Israeli and international media responses on land, settlement and resource access to grasp broader curriculum themes of power, justice and human rights.
Speakers
IS

Iram Sammar

PhD student and Graduate Teaching Fellow, King's College London
PhD Student King's College London and Director of Salaam Geographia. Education consultant and postgraduate teacher of Social Justice and Geography. Former secondary school teacher of geography.
Thursday April 9, 2026 16:30 - 17:20 BST
T217

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