Research interests
Loren Landau
Loren B Landau is Professor of Migration and Development at the University of Oxford, Research Professor at the University of the Witwatersrand’s African Centre for Migration & Society, and co-director of the Wits-Oxford Mobility Governance Lab (MGL). A political scientist by training (UC Berkeley 2002), his interdisciplinary scholarship explores mobility, multi-scale governance, and the transformation of socio-political communities across the Global South. Through the Atlas of Uncertainty and other initiatives, he his research considers questions of urbanity, xenophobia, representation, and the global political economy of knowledge. Before joining Oxford, he was a senior researcher with the African Centre for Migration & Society where he maintains an affiliation. He will be a visiting fellow at Harvard’s Radcliffe Institute for the 2026-2027 academic year where he will be writing on the meaning and mechanisms through which people make spatialized claims to the future in an era of heightened mobility, political fragmentation, environmental precarity, and existential uncertainty.
A frequent media resource on regional and global migration policy debates, he has published widely in the academic and popular press including the New York Times, Foreign Affairs, and Foreign Policy. Publications include, The Humanitarian Hangover: Displacement, Aid, and Transformation in Western Tanzania (Wits Press); Forging African Communities: Mobility, Integration, and Belonging (Palgrave); I Want to Go Home Forever: Stories of Becoming and Belonging in South Africa’s Great Metropolis (Wits Press); Contemporary Migration to South Africa (World Bank); and Exorcising the Demons Within: Xenophobia, Violence and Statecraft in Contemporary South Africa (UN University Press/Wits Press). He has consulted with the European Union, the World Bank, UNDP, UNHCR, UNECA, the Cities Alliance, and others. As chair of the Consortium for Refugees and Migrants in South Africa (2004-2012) he served on the South African Immigration Advisory Board.
Loren teaches Qualitative Methods for Migration Research and the Politics of Urban Mobility in the Global South
Research students supervised
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Journal articles and special issues( ) Mobile temporalities and political possibilities: Expanding the temporal turn in migration studies . Migration Studies 14(2)( ) Racialised Pre-crime and African Migration Management: Knowledge, Migrant Immorality and Chronoscopic Containment . Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 51(1) 2593-2610( ) Pre-criminalizing race and space: knowledge, migrant immorality, and Europe’s strategies for chronoscopic containment . Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 51(10) 2593–2610( ) Now you see them, now you don’t: performance and the politics of localizing (forced) migration governance in the Horn of Africa’s secondary cities . Environment & Urbanization 36 (2) 300-317( ) Migration and the African Timespace Trap: More Europe for the World, Less World for Europe Geopolitics 27 (3) 791-810( ) The Centre Cannot Hold: Arrival, Margins, and the Politics of Ambivalence . Migration Studies 10 (2) 97-111( ) An enclave entrepôt: The informal migration industry and Johannesburg’s socio-spatial transformation . Urban Studies 1–19( ) Measuring Municipal Capacity to Respond to Mobility . Sage Open 1-11( ) A Chronotope of Containment Development: Europe’s Migrant Crisis and Africa’s Reterritorialization . Antipode 51(1) 169-86
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Chapters( ) City-Making in Africa’s Urban Estuaries: Rescaling African Urban Policy Analysis in Era of Mobility . In David Kaufmann & Mara Sidney Global Urban Policy: A Framework for Analyzing State and Society , University of Michigan Press 163-184( ) Mobile space-times and the rescaling of political community . In Shireen Hassim and Anna C. Korteweg Handbook on Politics and Society , Edward Elgar Publishing 348-362( ) The Informalisation of Migration Governance across Africa’s Urban Archipelagos . In T. Bastia and R. Skeldon Routledge Handbook on Migration & Development , London: Routledge( ) The Times of Invisibility . In J. Bjarnesen and S. Turner Invisibility in African Displacements: From Structural Marginalization to Strategies of Avoidance , London: Zed Books 252-258( ) The Zimbabwe-South Africa Migration Corridor . In T. Bastia and R. Skeldon Routledge Handbook on Migration & Development , London: Routledge( ) Governing Displaced Cities: Calibrating Reconstruction amidst Instability . In H. Al-Harithy Urban Recovery at the Intersection of Displacement and Reconstruction , London: Routledge( ) Framing the Politics of Inclusions: Introductory Commentary . Local Inclusion of Migrants and Refugees: A Gateway to Existing Ideas, Resources and Capacities for Cities across the World , Nairobi: UN Habitat( ) Capacity, Complicity, and Subversion: Revisiting Collaborative Refugee Research in an Era of Containment . In J. Young and S. McGrath Reflections on a Decade of the Refugee Research Network , Calgary: University of Calgary Press 25-44( ) Shunning Solidarity: Durable Solutions in a Fluid Era . In M. Bradley, J. Milner, and B. Peruniak Shaping the Struggles of Their Times: Refugees, Peacebuilding and Resolving Displacement , Washington DC: Georgetown University Press 153-167
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Reports( ) Interim Evaluation of Joint Work Programme on Cities & Migration. . , Cities Alliance and the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation( ) A Drop in the Ocean: Labour Market Effects of South Africa’s Special Dispensation for Southern African Migrants . , Report for the International Labour Organisation and the South African Department of Labour( ) The Future of Mobility and Migration Within and From Sub-Saharan Africa . , Foresight Reflection Paper. Brussels: European Policy Analysis and Strategy System