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Marsha Linnartz

Marsha Linnartz is a postgraduate student in peace and conflict studies here in Uppsala. Her personal interests lie in Eastern Africa, reconciliation, identity politics and migration, women’s and children’s rights amongst others. Outside of university, you will find her in a modern art museum, drinking spiced coffee while reading a poem by Rupi Kaur or doing some kickboxing for her work-life balance.

Environment/Intersectionality

Environmental migration: gendered realities

By Marsha Linnartz Climate change. Migration crisis. #metoo and a new wave of feminism. Over the past decade, these buzzwords have labelled global headlines. Today, debates

Intersectionality/Politics

Ethiopia’s political future is female – a short comment on Sahle-Work Zewde

By Marsha Linnartz It is nothing new, politics depict an image that is male-dominated. In this vein, a UN General Assembly resolution on women’s participation (2011)

© UF Uppsala 2025

  • Home
  • Contribute!
  • About
    • The Editorial Team
    • What is Uttryck?
  • Topics
    • Activism
    • Culture
    • Economics
    • Environment
    • Intersectionality
    • Philosophy
    • Politics
    • Science & Technology
    • Security & War
    • The Internet
  • World
    • Africa
    • Arctic & Antarctica
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Latin America
    • Middle East
    • North America
    • Oceania
  • Content Forms
    • Essays
    • Opinion Pieces
    • Poetry
    • Portraits and Interviews
    • Reviews
    • Short Stories
    • Radio UF
    • Lectures
    • UF Travel
    • Web Exclusive
  • Magazine Issues
    • 2016
      • Drugs 2016
    • 2017
      • Borders 2017
      • Justice 2017
      • Money 2017
    • 2018
      • Fear 2018
      • Power 2018
      • Women 2018
    • 2019
      • Choice 2019
      • Human 2019
      • Nature 2019
    • 2020
      • Citizen 2020
      • Sex 2020
      • Work 2020
    • 2021
      • Food 2021
      • Information 2021
      • Utopia 2021
    • 2022
      • Democracy 2022
      • Ocean 2022
    • 2023
      • The To Win a War Issue 2023
      • History Has Its Eyes On You 2023
      • One World Under The Sun 2023
    • 2024
      • Postmodern Perspectives 2024
      • One for All, All for One 2024
      • The Issue of Indecision 2024
    • 2025
      • The Issue of Technology 2025