This open access book brings together storytelling and self-narrative creative writing and
narrative enquiry to explore a variety of topics in migration from an experiential lens. The
volume is hybrid and multi-genre as it contains both scholarly chapters grounded in academic
perspectives as well as personal essays and creative non-fiction. In addition to critical
reflections on key migration topics and concepts - like identity and diversity integration
and agency transnationalism and return - the scholarly chapters also propose a particular
methodology for 'workshopping' migration narratives and writing about (personal) lived
experiences through iterations of scientific reflection narrative enquiry and creative
imagination. The book explores the potential of a new conceptual paradigm and methodological
process to learn more and also `differently ' about the migration experience. Finally this
volume asks a bigger question too - how do we define the boundaries of research is it possible
to entirely separate the spatial temporal and methodological parameters in which projects are
developed and pursued and how can the specifics of these multiple contexts contribute to
shaping the knowledge being produced?