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Dr Sohail Jannesari

Methods Engagement & Innovation Lead

Sohail is a Research Fellow at King’s College London and an independent Research Consultant. His research focuses on migration and mental health using critical public health approaches; human trafficking and health; creative/participatory methods and ethics; and equitable knowledge production.

He’s worked around violence affected youth, maternity experiences, access to sexual health services for people with severe mental ill health, TB screenings for migrants, supporting torture survivors, migration services mapping, and designing a community-based ethics review. He’s made media appearances on the BBC and LBC News, given national and international conference keynotes. You can find out more on his website.

He has a book out on migration and mental health!

Key Research Projects

Two pairs of legs of people walking, the picture is cut off at the top so all you can see is legs and shoes on a concrete pavement.

How should researchers work with migrants, migrant communities and migrant organisations?

ESRC-funded PhD using participatory action research and ethnography

A diagram of 'finding purpose in life'

The Modern Slavery Core Outcome Set (MSCOS)

A survivor‑driven, consensus‑based framework defining a minimum set of outcomes that should be reported in research, policy, and interventions supporting adult survivors of modern slavery and human trafficking

Related resources and content

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Impact in Qualitative Research Blog

Ella Parry-Davies on co-researching outcomes for domestic workers after trafficking and exploitation

Dr Ella Parry-Davies is a lecturer at King’s College London, where she works on social justice-focussed research in collaboration with experts-by-experience, primarily in the migration and anti-trafficking sectors. Taking up performance as a co-creative research method, she has worked most extensively with migrant domestic workers in the UK and Lebanon, and her book Intimate Inequalities: Performing Migrant Domestic Work is forthcoming with Northwestern University Press in September 2025. In this blog post she discusses the findings of research on the outcomes for workers who had survived trafficking and returned to the Philippines as their country of origin.

A zoomed out image of crowded boats on the ocean
The Qualitative Open Mic Podcast

Hyab Yohannes and Tesfalem Yemane on refugee-led scholarship

Why are there limited voices from sanctuary seekers in qualitative research about migrant health? Tesfalem Yemane and Hyab Yohannes bring a vital perspective on ‘refugee-led scholarship’, dissecting the challenges and significance of broadening the scholarly space to include those who have first-hand experience seeking sanctuary. They discuss how dominant political agendas and interests influence the kind of questions we’re able to ask around migration and mental health, as well as how we might be able to ask them.