Tallulah Lines is the Research Associate for the project Art Rights Truth: can the arts save human rights? Prior to this, she worked as a Research Associate for the ESRC-funded project Redressing Gendered Health Inequalities of Displaced Women and Girls in Situations of Protracted Displacement in Central and South America’ (ReGHID), and for the project ‘Wellbeing of Human Rights Defenders.’ Tallulah is also a PhD candidate in the Department of Politics at the University of York. Her PhD deals with how women prefigure security through artistic practice in Oaxaca and Quintana Roo, Mexico. Before starting her PhD, Tallulah completed her Masters by Research in Women’s Studies and Masters in Social Research at the University of York. Tallulah’s research interests include feminism and gender in Latin America, critical art, social movements, and human rights. She is particularly interested in using creative and participatory methodologies in her research. Tallulah has lived and worked between the UK and Latin America since 2015, participating in activist and art projects including co-founding the feminist art collective Las Iluministas.
Riggirozzi, P., Curcio, B., Lines, T., and Cintra, N. (2023). Moving Forward / Salir Adelante: Health, care, and violence seen through the eyes of displaced Venezuelan women in Brazil / La salud, el cuidado, y la violencia vistos a través de los ojos de venezolanas desplazadas en Brasil. Rugby, UK: Practical Action Publishing and Latin America Bureau.
Lines, T. (2022). “Luchar por estas mujeres en realidad es también luchar por mi”: lo político en el acto de pintar murales de víctimas de feminicidio” in Belausteguigoitia, M. (ed.) Género: Rabia, Ritmo, Ruido, Risa y Respons-habilidad. Mexico City: CIEG-UNAM. Pp. 91-104.
Grugel, J., Barlow, M., Lines, T., Giraudo, M.E., Omukuti, J. (2022). The Gendered Face of Covid-19: The Development, Gender and Health Nexus in the Global South. Bristol: Bristol University Press
Co-director Pink Collar Gallery