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UMass Boston professor of political science named Kluge Fellow

, an assistant professor of  and affiliated faculty at the , has recently been named one of twelve Kluge Fellows at the . She will spend her five-month term continuing her work around food security, economic and social rights, and ethics.

The internationally competitive fellowship gives early career academics space and $5,000 per month in funding to research an ongoing project in the humanities or social sciences at the library, though scholars whose projects relate to contemporary issues are given special deliberation. 

Jurkovich鈥檚 project, 鈥淕ood Enough? The Politics of Constructing the Refugee Ration,鈥 addresses the fact that there are more refugees in the world now than any time since World War II, and that figuring out how to sustain these people is a serious challenge. 

鈥淓specially for encamped refugee communities with limited mobility, these rations provide the full basket of household food available,鈥 Jurkovich said. 鈥淗ousehold health and dignity are tied to the composition of these rations in complex ways, and yet contemporary rations for refugee camps are often woefully inadequate.鈥 

In 鈥淕ood Enough?鈥 Jurkovich evaluates the history of ration packages and how authorities decided what a 鈥済ood enough鈥 ration should be, as well as analyzing how stereotyping and racism, the language of science and nutrition, and the idea of an 鈥渁ppropriate鈥 diet have affected what goes into refugee rations.  

鈥淚 believe that everyone should be entitled to enough nutritious food to live a healthy and dignified life,鈥 said Jurkovich. 鈥淚t seems like a basic thing, but feeding populations is intensely political, even when we wish it were not.鈥