- ‘Constructing and Deconstructing the “White Working Class” – Race, Class, and Politics in 1990s Britain’, British History Today, QMUL (May 2025).
- ‘Actions of Faith: Sanctuary Spaces in Late Twentieth-Century Britain’, Voluntary Action History Society Conference, Liverpool University (July 2022).
- ‘A Strange Sanctuary in Late Twentieth-Century Britain’, Anti-racism in Britain: Histories and Trajectories Conference, University College London, (February 2021).
- ‘Lessons from Viraj Mendis’, The Institute of Historical Research, History Acts Series, ‘Homes not Borders’ Seminar (January 2021).
Dr Amy Grant

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Postdoctoral Research Associate, Nation of Refuge Project
Office
Miller G03ABuilding location
Miller buildingAreas of interest
Current research:
My current research examines Britain’s asylum landscape in the late twentieth century, tracing how refugee reception was shaped not only by national policy but also by the actions of local authorities, voluntary organisations, faith networks, and activists. I combine archival research with multi-session life-history interviews to explore how refugees and those who supported them navigated the legal, moral, and political frameworks of protection. As part of the Nation of Refuge project, I am investigating how Britain’s responses to refugee arrivals - formal and informal, national and municipal - have evolved, been contested, and been remembered.
Previous research / background:
My published and ongoing work focuses on Britain’s migration and asylum history between the 1970s and 1990s. I have experience working with a wide range of archival collections, including Home Office, Foreign Office, and Overseas Development records; voluntary sector and refugee association papers; and community-based collections such as the Ahmed Iqbal Ullah RACE Centre.
I have contributed to multiple oral history projects and have developed a methodological approach centred on shared authority and life-history interviewing. In 2022–23, I worked with the lottery funded British Ugandan Asians at 50 (BUA50) project, contributing to oral histories, exhibition materials, and helping to develop a digital legacy website. I have also been involved in local heritage exhibitions, public-facing research, and podcast production.
Research interests:
My areas of interest span the histories of social movements, religion, refugees and migration, and British leftist political groups.
- Modern British migration and asylum history
- Refugee reception, activism, and community mobilisation
- Oral history methodologies and life-history interviewing
- The discretionary workings of the state
- Public history, community archives, and digital curation
- Histories of racialisation, citizenship, and postcolonial Britain
Research projects
- Nation of Refuge (Postdoctoral Research Associate)
- UEL Living Refugee Archives and BUA50 (Former research intern)
Academic qualifications
- PhD in History, University of East Anglia, 2016
- MA in Modern History, University of East Anglia, 2017
- BA (Hons) in History, University of East Anglia, 2024
Awards and honours
- Best Teaching Staff Award, UEA Accessibility Awards (2025)
- CHASE (AHRC) PhD Studentship (2019-2023)
- UEA Excellence MA Studentship (2017-2018)
- The Larry Butler Prize for best dissertation by an MA Student (2018)
- The Medici Prize for History, for distinguished performance BA, (2016)
Professional bodies/affiliations
- Oral History Society
- Subcultures Network
- Social History Society
- Voluntary Action History Society
Selected publications
- ‘Bureaucratic violence and the Home Office in the long 1980s’, History Workshop Journal, accepted and forthcoming (2026).
- ‘Sacred Spaces, Contested Citizenship: Sanctuary Campaigns in Thatcher's Britain’, forthcoming (2026).
Other:
- ‘Surprising lessons from the 1980s: inspiration from anti-deportation campaign activism’ – History Journal.org (October 2023).
- ‘Passion, bureaucratic violence, and the language of asylum’ — Refugee History.org (September 2021).
- ‘Review: Black Handsworth: Race in 1980s Britain. By Connell, Kieran. University of California Press’, History: Journal of Historical Association, Vol. 105, Iss. 366, July 2020, pp. 513-516.