Migration Sounds
What does migration sound like? Migration Sounds features 120 sounds of migration across 51 countries from Argentina to Australia, with personal stories from diaspora communities and people who have migrated all over the world.
Note: The sound at…
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Versión 1.0 - publicado en 23 Jul 2025
Licencia Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 4.0
Forked from: Migration Sounds v 1.0
Descripción
What does migration sound like? Migration Sounds features 120 sounds of migration across 51 countries from Argentina to Australia, with personal stories from diaspora communities and people who have migrated all over the world.
Note: The sound at the beginning may seem like static, but it's intentional - don’t adjust your headphones!
In this special episode of The Migration Oxford Podcast marking the end of our 2024 series, we turn the microphone to Migration Sounds. A partnership between global sound project Cities and Memory and the Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS), University of Oxford, Migration Sounds is the world’s first collection of the sounds of human migration.
Migration Sounds features 120 sounds and stories of migration across 51 countries from Argentina to Australia, with personal stories from diaspora communities and people who have migrated all over the world. Every recording within the project’s digital library tells a story about the experience of migration - but Migration Sounds didn’t stop there. Each sound has been reimagined by an artist to create a brand-new composition that responds creatively to the original, offering a different perspective to each compelling story. How did the project begin? Where has it taken us?
We welcome Stuart Fowkes, a sound artist and field recordist from Oxford and the founder of Cities and Memory and Rob McNeil, Deputy Director of The Migration Observatory based at the Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS). Hosted by Delphine Boagey, Communications Officer (COMPAS), the trio team discuss the efforts of curating this audio-based project in anticipation of the project’s 3-day pop-up installation amplified in the Pitt Rivers Museum and the roundtable panel event held during the installation.
We consider the project situated in wider research, teaching and communications of the University and city of Oxford, and invite listeners to question what migration sounds mean to them.
https://podcasts.ox.ac.uk/migration-sounds
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