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Owasim Akram

Department of Political Science, Örebro University


Owasim Akram

With a tertiary level of education in the discipline of International Relations along with post graduate diploma in International Development Studies Dr. Akram is currently working as a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Department of Political Science, Örebro University, Sweden. Prior to this, he completed his PhD in Political Science at the same University. His doctoral research was supported by the Marie Skłodowska Curie Action of the European Commission and explored the lived experience of ageing in extreme poverty in Bangladesh. Mr. Akram has a broad-based research, evaluation, policy and program management exposure in the field of development with expertise in extreme poverty, socio-economic resilience, social protection, food and livelihoods insecurity. Prior to working for the University, he had an enriching career as a development practitioner with exposure to work for organisation like European Union, Oxfam GB, ADD International, Plan International, BRAC and so on holding different strategic positions from mid to senior level.

He was awarded the ‘Emerging Scholar Award’ by the Aging and Social Change Network at the Aging & Social Change: Eleventh Interdisciplinary Conference held in Vancouver, Canada; 23-24 September 2021. He has also served as a Visiting Researcher at the Oxford Institute of Population Ageing at the University of Oxford and at the Department of Social and Policy Sciences at the University of Bath in the UK. He is affiliated with the Swedish National Graduate School for Competitive Science on Ageing and Health (SWEAH), an initiative of Lund University and funded by the Swedish Research Council.

Dr. Akram is currently leading a study supported by the Expert Group for Aid Studies (EBA), Sweden which aims to increase the understanding of the drivers behind and experiences of extreme poverty and marginalisation among ethnic and religious minorities in Bangladesh in collaboration with senior academics and researchers from the University of Bath and Lund University.

Dr. Akram has also been awarded a three-year international development postdoc grant by the Swedish Research Council (VR). With a decolonial lens, he is critically looking at how development (both at the level of knowledge and practice), produces ‘epistemic injustice’ by neglecting the voices of the severe poor. As part of his postdoc, he will also be based at the University of Bath, UK and the Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies (BIDS).

Dr. Akram has published a range of book chapters and articles in different international journals like Development Policy Review, European Journal of Development Research, International Journal of Qualitative Methods and so on. He is also an Editorial College Member of the Journal of Global Ageing (A New Journal of the British Society of Gerontology and Policy Press).

FURTHER INFORMATION

Countries Bangladesh;
Topics Care in rural and other non-urban settings; Care needs poverty and deprivation; Ethics and care; Research gaps and priorities in LTC; Rights and people’s voices in LTC systems;
Methods Case studies; Creative research methods; Ethnography; Knowledge-exchange; Policy analysis; Qualitative studies; Research ethics; Theory and frameworks;
Role Research;
Websitehttps://www.oru.se/english/employee/owasim_akram
ORC.ID0000-0001-6601-6222
GOOGLE SCHOLARhttps://scholar.google.co.uk/citations?user=p2hpwZcAAAAJ&hl=en
LinkedInhttp://www.linkedin.com/in/owasim-akram
Research interests

• International Development
• Development Management and Governance of Social Protection
• Extreme Poverty
• Social Policy
• Welfare/Wellbeing
• Global Justice
• Social Citizenship
• Ageing/Social Gerontology
• Postcolonial Theory
• Research Ethics
• Qualitative Methods

Key publications

Akram, O. (2022). Living Longer, Living Harder: Ageing in Extreme Poverty in Bangladesh (PhD dissertation, Örebro University). Available at: http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:oru:diva-102119

Akram, O., Maitrot, M. (2022), Family’s Roles as a Welfare Pillar: The Case of Older Persons Living in Extreme Poverty in Bangladesh. Development Policy Review. 41(3), 1-18. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/dpr.12679

Akram O. (2021). Getting Extreme Poverty Narrated: Methodological Challenges of Interviewing Older Persons. International Journal of Qualitative Methods. 20, 1-11: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/16094069211016716

Akram, O., Maitrot, M., & Denk, T. (2020). Generational Bargain, Transfer of Disadvantages and Extreme Poverty: A Qualitative Enquiry from Bangladesh. The European Journal of Development Research, 32(4), 1173-1194. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41287-020-00261-4

Akram, O. (2018); Food Insecurity and Resilience among Extreme Poor Female Headed Households in Coastal Bangladesh, In: Geoffrey D. Wood, Dr. Zulfiqar Ali, Mathilde Maitrot & Dr. Joe Devine (eds) Aiding Resilience among the Extreme Poor in Bangladesh; The University Press Limited (UPL). http://www.uplbooks.com/book/aiding-resilience-among-extreme-poor-bangladesh-0