About Us

Mina Ibrahim

Title ِAnthropologist and Archivist

About

Bio

Mina Ibrahim is an anthropologist and archivist whose work focuses on the intersections of archives, memory, migration, and justice across the Middle East and Europe. He is the founding director of Sard for History and Social Research (Shubra’s Archive), Egypt’s first community archive, and a postdoctoral researcher at the Center for Conflict Studies at the University of Marburg in Germany. He received his PhD in Cultural Studies from the University of Giessen in Germany in 2022, and he also held a visiting professorship at Ghent University in Belgium in 2025.
For over a decade, his work has spanned academic research and public engagement in Egypt, Lebanon, and Europe, focusing on how migrants, displaced people, and survivors of war and violence narrate their histories, own their memories, and build their archives. Relatedly, has previously taught at the universities of Marburg and Giessen, University of Saint Joseph in Beirut, and the University of Kent in the United Kingdom.

Workshops

Research Methods

This workshop opens with the question “Where are you?”—not to locate the self, but to unsettle it. It approaches research as a practice of dwelling within uncertainty, where questions are not merely tools, but thresholds. Participants are invited to craft critical inquiries that move across disciplines, and to engage methodologies not as fixed frameworks, but as shifting grounds. Through encounters with religious, academic, and literary texts, alongside artistic and cultural works, the workshop traces how place is not only inhabited, but imagined, narrated, and contested—always in relation to power, memory, and the fragile work of meaning-making.