Home » Activities » 2025 – 2026: Change, hope and activism » Public lecture: Border forensics – (Counter) Archiving Border violence

Public lecture: Border forensics – (Counter) Archiving Border violence

2 February 2026

4:00 pm

6:30 pm

Campus UFO

Having co-led the research of the Forensic Oceanography project (2011-2021) and of the Border Forensics agency (since 2021), prof. Heller has contributed to more than 10 investigations over 15 years, which remain publicly accessible online. Each one of them offers a probe into the evolution of Europe’s borders and the forms of harm they inflict onto the lives of migrants who dare transgress them. Together they have come to constitute entries of an archive of sorts – an archive of border violence. In this presentation, prof. Heller will seek to consider the trajectory of investigations he has led through the prism of the archive, and explore some of the directions it conjures.
In particular, he wants to ask the following questions: ⁠

  • How does our critical and oppositional investigative practice draw on and contest state archives?
  • While the rich body of critical thought concerning archives has highlighted the simultaneous process of inclusion and exclusion they operate, does our own investigative practice not also involve a form of boundary work, which is shaped by difficult ethical and political choices and power relations?
  • Finally, if through our investigations we seek to intervene in the present with in the aim of contesting ongoing forms of border violence, what other temporalities of effects might the perspective of the archive help us be attuned to?

He will argue that thinking of our investigative practice as an archive opens a broader temporality that is particularly important to consider in relation to a form of violence – that of borders – which, just as slavery or colonialism, is enduring and its end illusive. The lecture will conclude with a debate.