 Research that we do in the research stream on justice, borders and rights is like all the research in the research stream on citizenship and governance, multidisciplinary. And that's really important for the challenges that we're facing currently. In the 21st century, what we're experiencing is a hardening of boundaries and borders between nation states. And that is something that we're in particular experiencing between the global north and between the global south, and it has a big effect on the movements of migration and refugees. We are also, however, experiencing a shifting of borders and boundaries. So one example of that is the process that was started with the Brexit referendum, where we're experiencing a shift away, a move away from European citizenship and the mobility rights that that entailed. So these inequalities really make a difference to who can move from one place to another, who can cross borders, national borders, which passports give us access to mobility and which passports make it much more difficult to travel, to live, work and settle in another country. However, we also know that it's not only passports and national identity that make a difference to how borders and boundaries are constructed. These are also very much racialized processes. Gender plays an important role, and researchers also look at the role that class plays in enabling people to deal with, to cross or challenge borders and boundaries. Another important aspect of the work that we do in this research stream is to look at how people challenge these borders and boundaries, both through their own movements, through space, but also through social and political movements, through arts. And of course, another important aspect is the social imagination. How do people make claims for rights? And how do people and how can research contribute to understanding and thinking about new conceptions of what social justice is and what it should be?