Badre is a policy development expert, based in Germany. His research seeks to analyze current norms that hamper the progress and livelihood of migrants, women, and youth as social groups; and aims at generating evidence-based recommendations that could inform national and regional policies, providing comparable data across borders on key countries in the Southern Mediterranean Neighborhood. He worked for a number of international organizations (Fulbright, EU-JRC, ERASMUS+, InterAcademy Partnership, Konrad-Adenaeur Foundation, Global Young Academy, Next Einstein Forum, African Institute for Mathematical Sciences, Institute for Cultural Diplomacy, ECSA Global, and Arab Council for Social Sciences, American Political Sciences Association, MAJALAT Consortium; Réseau Euromed France REF; and EDU4U. He has also served as visiting professor & research fellow at Alfred University in New York, Monterey Institute for International Studies in California, University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill; Aalborg University in Denmark, Institute for Cultural Diplomacy in Berlin, and Babes Bolyai University in Romania. He is the editor of Social Science Section for ELSAVIER & Scientific African Journal. His recent publications include: North-South Economic Diplomacy: EU-Morocco Free Trade Negotiation (Germany, November 2020); & Voices of Early Career Researchers in and out of the Academy: A Pan- African Perspective (Germany May 2020). Currently, he is a coordinator and author the EuroMeSCo Joint Study Group 2021: Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia: A Comparative Perspective on Maghreb Countries Migration Cooperation with their West African Neighbours.
- Mohammed V UniversityAssociate ProfessorRabat
- University of North CarolinaAssociate ResearcherNC
- Institute For Cultural DiplomacyProgram DirectorBerlin
- Aalborg UniverisityVisiting ProfessorAalborg
- Monterey Institute for Intrernational StudiesVisiting ProfessorMonterey
- American Language CenterProfessorRabat
- Alfred UniversityFulbright TAAlfred
- Université Mohammed V de RabatAssistant ProfessorRabat
Badre is a policy development expert, based in Germany. His research seeks to analyze current norms that hamper the progress and livelihood of migrants, women, and youth as social groups; and aims at generating evidence-based recommendations that could inform national and regional policies, providing comparable data across borders on key countries in the Southern Mediterranean Neighborhood. He worked for a number of international organizations (Fulbright, EU-JRC, ERASMUS+, InterAcademy Partnership, Konrad-Adenaeur Foundation, Global Young Academy, Next Einstein Forum, African Institute for Mathematical Sciences, Institute for Cultural Diplomacy, ECSA Global, and Arab Council for Social Sciences, American Political Sciences Association, MAJALAT Consortium; Réseau Euromed France REF; and EDU4U. He has also served as visiting professor & research fellow at Alfred University in New York, Monterey Institute for International Studies in California, University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill; Aalborg University in Denmark, Institute for Cultural Diplomacy in Berlin, and Babes Bolyai University in Romania. He is the editor of Social Science Section for ELSAVIER & Scientific African Journal. His recent publications include: North-South Economic Diplomacy: EU-Morocco Free Trade Negotiation (Germany, November 2020); & Voices of Early Career Researchers in and out of the Academy: A Pan- African Perspective (Germany May 2020). Currently, he is a coordinator and author the EuroMeSCo Joint Study Group 2021: Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia: A Comparative Perspective on Maghreb Countries Migration Cooperation with their West African Neighbours.
- Academy of Mobility Humanities, Konkuk UniversityHK Research ProfessorSeoul
Psychologist, PhD candidate in migration in the Comillas Pontifical University
- Universidad Pontificia ComillasPhD CandidateMadrid
Psychologist, PhD candidate in migration in the Comillas Pontifical University
Ahmed Bakry is an architect and urban planner. He got his BSc from Ain Shams University, urban planning and design department (UPD) July 2012. His accumulative ranking was the first upon his colleagues. He then joined the integrated urbanism and sustainable deign master’s program (IUSD), which is a double master’s degree between Ain Shams University and Stuttgart University between 2013 and 2015. During this time he started his work on integrating local ethnic groups in the process of regional planning and bridging the gap between government, planners (practitioners), academia and society.
Bakry began his practical work while he was studying, by participating in several urban competitions. He worked as a freelancer for some architectural, interior, and urban projects. Bakry participated in several student exchange programs related to urbanism and future developments. He attended several conferences and workshops regarding sustainable urbanism and contemporary planning in Germany, Belgium, Italy, Egypt, Canada and U.S. Between 2016 and 2019 he worked as lecturer assistant at UPD, and as researcher at IUSD Cairo in various research projects, all related to regional planning and regional governance.
Bakry started to work on his PhD at the Institute of Geography in April 2019. His research is funded by the Higher ministry of education in Cairo MHESR and the DAAD respectively. In his PhD he is trying to tackle the regional developmental inequalities in the global south for the border regions. His work is based on theories of regional planning, peripheral regions, and cross-border communities. By comparing the South Egyptian border region with EU border areas, he aims do develop an analytical framework that enables a better understanding of planning processes in cross-border regions.
- Heidelberg UniversityPhD StudentHeidelberg
Ahmed Bakry is an architect and urban planner. He got his BSc from Ain Shams University, urban planning and design department (UPD) July 2012. His accumulative ranking was the first upon his colleagues. He then joined the integrated urbanism and sustainable deign master’s program (IUSD), which is a double master’s degree between Ain Shams University and Stuttgart University between 2013 and 2015. During this time he started his work on integrating local ethnic groups in the process of regional planning and bridging the gap between government, planners (practitioners), academia and society.
Bakry began his practical work while he was studying, by participating in several urban competitions. He worked as a freelancer for some architectural, interior, and urban projects. Bakry participated in several student exchange programs related to urbanism and future developments. He attended several conferences and workshops regarding sustainable urbanism and contemporary planning in Germany, Belgium, Italy, Egypt, Canada and U.S. Between 2016 and 2019 he worked as lecturer assistant at UPD, and as researcher at IUSD Cairo in various research projects, all related to regional planning and regional governance.
Bakry started to work on his PhD at the Institute of Geography in April 2019. His research is funded by the Higher ministry of education in Cairo MHESR and the DAAD respectively. In his PhD he is trying to tackle the regional developmental inequalities in the global south for the border regions. His work is based on theories of regional planning, peripheral regions, and cross-border communities. By comparing the South Egyptian border region with EU border areas, he aims do develop an analytical framework that enables a better understanding of planning processes in cross-border regions.
Marie-Clare Balaam is a senior research associate in the Research in Childbirth and Health Unit (REACH) at UCLan. Her current research focuses on maternity care and social support for marginalised women with a particular focus on migrant women’s experiences of maternity care and childbirth in the UK and Europe.
- University of Centr4al LancashireResearch AssociatePreston
- University of Central LancashireResearch AssociatePreston
Marie-Clare Balaam is a senior research associate in the Research in Childbirth and Health Unit (REACH) at UCLan. Her current research focuses on maternity care and social support for marginalised women with a particular focus on migrant women’s experiences of maternity care and childbirth in the UK and Europe.
Jay Balagna (he/him) is a Ph.D. student in the Community-Partnered Policy and Action stream at the Pardee RAND Graduate School and an assistant policy researcher at RAND. His research interests include disaster studies, disaster risk reduction and creation, the influence of climate change on disasters, climate-related and post-disaster migration, and the social determinants of health.
Prior to joining Pardee RAND, Balagna was a wildland firefighter in Nevada and Montana, an emergency medical technician in Los Angeles, and a political journalist working in the United States and Chile. He has an M.P.H. from Emory University and a B.A. in Spanish from the University of Nevada, Reno.
- RAND CorporationAssistant Policy ResearcherSanta Monica
Jay Balagna (he/him) is a Ph.D. student in the Community-Partnered Policy and Action stream at the Pardee RAND Graduate School and an assistant policy researcher at RAND. His research interests include disaster studies, disaster risk reduction and creation, the influence of climate change on disasters, climate-related and post-disaster migration, and the social determinants of health.
Prior to joining Pardee RAND, Balagna was a wildland firefighter in Nevada and Montana, an emergency medical technician in Los Angeles, and a political journalist working in the United States and Chile. He has an M.P.H. from Emory University and a B.A. in Spanish from the University of Nevada, Reno.
Former Director, Mediterranean Migration Observatory;
External Expert/ External Researcher, Danube University, Krems;
External Expert, ICMPD;
Expert and Expert Evaluator, DG Migration and H2020, European Commission.
- Danube University KremsConsultant and External ResearcherKrems
- International Centre for Migration Policy DevelopmentExpert on legal migration, for GFMD, EcuadorWien
- European External Action ServiceExpert lecturer on migrationBrussels
- International Centre for Migration Policy DevelopmentSenior ResearcherWien
- The London School of Economics and Political ScienceExternal Senior ResearcherLondon
- International Centre for Migration Policy DevelopmentAssociate ResearcherWien
- European University InstituteVisiting Professor in International MigrationFiesole
- Queen's University BelfastResearch FellowBelfast
- University of ManchesterHonorary Research Fellow/ LecturerManchester
- Mediterranean Migration Observatory, Panteion UniversityCo-DirectorAthens
Former Director, Mediterranean Migration Observatory;
External Expert/ External Researcher, Danube University, Krems;
External Expert, ICMPD;
Expert and Expert Evaluator, DG Migration and H2020, European Commission.
Osman Balkan is Visiting Assistant Professor of Political Science at Swarthmore College and Senior Fellow at the Lauder Institute of Management and International Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. His research focuses on the politics of migration, race/ethnicity, and citizenship in Western Europe and the Middle East. His first book project, Dying Abroad: The Political Afterlives of Migration in Europe explores how minority communities manage and make sense of death and dying in countries where they face structural barriers to full citizenship.
- Lauder Institute for Management and International Studies, University of PennsylvaniaSenior FellowPhiladelphia
Osman Balkan is Visiting Assistant Professor of Political Science at Swarthmore College and Senior Fellow at the Lauder Institute of Management and International Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. His research focuses on the politics of migration, race/ethnicity, and citizenship in Western Europe and the Middle East. His first book project, Dying Abroad: The Political Afterlives of Migration in Europe explores how minority communities manage and make sense of death and dying in countries where they face structural barriers to full citizenship.
Researcher in climate change and migration law. Also working in sociolegal studies, queer theory and asylum.
- Radboud UniversityPhDNijmegen
Researcher in climate change and migration law. Also working in sociolegal studies, queer theory and asylum.
Pagination
About the Migration Network Hub
What is the Migration Network Hub?
The Hub is a virtual “meeting space” where governments, stakeholders and experts can access and share migration-related information and services. It provides curated content, analysis and information on a variety of topics.
The Hub aims to support UN Member States in the implementation, follow-up and review of the Global Compact for Migration by serving as a repository of existing evidence, practices and initiatives, and facilitating access to knowledge sharing via online discussions, an expert database and demand-driven, tailor-made solutions (launching in 2021).
Submit your content
What content is displayed in the Hub?
The Hub aims to help you find information on migration, ranging from policy briefs and journal articles, existing portals and platforms and what they offer, to infographics and videos. The different types of resources submitted by users undergo peer review by a panel of experts from within the UN and beyond, before being approved for inclusion in the Hub. To provide guidance to users based on findings of the needs assessment, the content is ordered so that more comprehensive and global resources are shown before more specific and regional ones. Know a great resource? Please submit using the links above and your suggestion will be reviewed. Please see the draft criteria for existing practices here.
Apply to join the Peer Review Roster
Content submitted to the Migration Network Hub is first peer reviewed by experts in the field from both the UN and beyond. Applications are welcomed to join the roster on an ongoing basis. Learn more here.
Contact us
We welcome your feedback and suggestions, please contact us
*References to Kosovo shall be understood to be in the context of United Nations Security Council resolution 1244 (1999).