
Aminath Nisha Zadhy-Cepoglu completed her doctoral research at Bilkent University, Turkey. Her research contributes to a deeper understanding of humanitarianism by analysing it as interpersonal and intersubjective interactions at the micro-level between aid agents, state officials, civic volunteers, locals and refugees. Ongoing research seeks to explore how themes such as vulnerability and resilience are understood and reformulated by displaced people, how boundary-blurring is carried out in the operational field of humanitarianism and how complexities and contradictions emerge from invoking faith as a response to humanitarian crises. She has academic outputs in the Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space, and Migration Studies.


