Ayesha Hussain is a PhD candidate in Social and Cultural Anthropology and a Research Associate at Bonn Centre for Dependency and Slavery Studies at University of Bonn. Her research project is entitled "Asymmetrical dependencies among Pakistani migrants in Italy's informal labour sector: The role of Social Capital". She analyses the dependencies within the social networks, at the micro and meso level structures of migration including families, ethnic networks and diasporas focusing on the mobilisation of social capital of networks particularly within the informal labour sector in Italy.
- Bonn Centre for Dependency and Slavery studiesBonn
Ayesha Hussain is a PhD candidate in Social and Cultural Anthropology and a Research Associate at Bonn Centre for Dependency and Slavery Studies at University of Bonn. Her research project is entitled "Asymmetrical dependencies among Pakistani migrants in Italy's informal labour sector: The role of Social Capital". She analyses the dependencies within the social networks, at the micro and meso level structures of migration including families, ethnic networks and diasporas focusing on the mobilisation of social capital of networks particularly within the informal labour sector in Italy.
- University of LiègePhD CandidateLiège
Marita Ibañez Sandoval is a researcher and lecturer on Visual Studies. Born and raised in Lima, Peru, and based in Ibaraki, Japan. Currently pursuing doctoral studies in Photomedia at the Doctoral Program in Art at the University of Tsukuba. She received a bachelor's degree in Fine Arts from Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Peru, and a master's in science degree in Kansei Design from the University of Tsukuba in Japan. Ibañez is a Monbukagakusho Scholar of the Japanese Government, researching landscape, migration, and Latin American communities in Japan. Lecturer with more than a decade of experience at Universities in Peru and Japan. Her work has been presented in different cities in Latin America, Europe, the USA, Korea, and Japan. Ibañez is part of the Time Lab/McLeod Lab research group.
- University of TsukubaTsukuba
Marita Ibañez Sandoval is a researcher and lecturer on Visual Studies. Born and raised in Lima, Peru, and based in Ibaraki, Japan. Currently pursuing doctoral studies in Photomedia at the Doctoral Program in Art at the University of Tsukuba. She received a bachelor's degree in Fine Arts from Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Peru, and a master's in science degree in Kansei Design from the University of Tsukuba in Japan. Ibañez is a Monbukagakusho Scholar of the Japanese Government, researching landscape, migration, and Latin American communities in Japan. Lecturer with more than a decade of experience at Universities in Peru and Japan. Her work has been presented in different cities in Latin America, Europe, the USA, Korea, and Japan. Ibañez is part of the Time Lab/McLeod Lab research group.
Dr. Aida Ibričević is an independent migration scholar and research consultant based in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, affiliated as a Global Fellow with the Migration Center at the Peace Research Institute (PRIO) in Oslo, Norway and as a Research Fellow with the Center for Diaspora Studies, Sarajevo School of Science and Technology. She contributes to the Bonn International Center for Conversion (BICC) in Bonn, Germany project Trajectories of reintegration: The impacts of forced displacement, migration and return on social change as a Senior Research Associate and delivers consulting services for IOM’s Labor Migration Project and UNDP’s Diaspora for Development project in Bosnia and Herzegovina. She also provides review services for a number of peer-reviewed, international academic journals. Her recent research interests include: external voting, drivers of highly skilled emigration, return migration and reintegration, with a particular focus on how emotions relate to politics and the connections between citizenship, home, and belonging. Aida Ibričević has an Economics B.A. from Middlebury College, United States, and an Economics M.A. from Central European University (CEU), Hungary. Her doctoral degree is in Political Science from Istanbul Bilgi University, Turkey, which she completed with a dissertation entitled Searching for Home and Belonging: A Qualitative Study to Understand the “Emotional Citizenship" of Diaspora Returning to Bosnia and Herzegovina.
- Sarajevo School of Science and Technology (SSST) - Research Fellow/Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO) - Global FellowResearch Fellow/Global FellowSarajevo
Dr. Aida Ibričević is an independent migration scholar and research consultant based in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, affiliated as a Global Fellow with the Migration Center at the Peace Research Institute (PRIO) in Oslo, Norway and as a Research Fellow with the Center for Diaspora Studies, Sarajevo School of Science and Technology. She contributes to the Bonn International Center for Conversion (BICC) in Bonn, Germany project Trajectories of reintegration: The impacts of forced displacement, migration and return on social change as a Senior Research Associate and delivers consulting services for IOM’s Labor Migration Project and UNDP’s Diaspora for Development project in Bosnia and Herzegovina. She also provides review services for a number of peer-reviewed, international academic journals. Her recent research interests include: external voting, drivers of highly skilled emigration, return migration and reintegration, with a particular focus on how emotions relate to politics and the connections between citizenship, home, and belonging. Aida Ibričević has an Economics B.A. from Middlebury College, United States, and an Economics M.A. from Central European University (CEU), Hungary. Her doctoral degree is in Political Science from Istanbul Bilgi University, Turkey, which she completed with a dissertation entitled Searching for Home and Belonging: A Qualitative Study to Understand the “Emotional Citizenship" of Diaspora Returning to Bosnia and Herzegovina.
My research on the intersection of visual culture, design and cultural history during the Cold War has recently focused on the visual and material qualities of illustrated magazines and their role in negotiating (inter)national belongings amongst emigre populations. I am particularly interested in the ways that what I call 'conscious graphic design', the juxtaposition of image and text and their entanglement amongst cultural producers and participants can encourage aesthetic and political shifts that intervene in the sociopolitical sphere.
- Leeds School of Arts, Leeds Beckett UniversitySenior LecturerLeeds
- University of Central LancashireLecturer/DrPreston
My research on the intersection of visual culture, design and cultural history during the Cold War has recently focused on the visual and material qualities of illustrated magazines and their role in negotiating (inter)national belongings amongst emigre populations. I am particularly interested in the ways that what I call 'conscious graphic design', the juxtaposition of image and text and their entanglement amongst cultural producers and participants can encourage aesthetic and political shifts that intervene in the sociopolitical sphere.
- École des Hautes Études en Sciences SocialesPhD CandidateParis
- Université de GenèvePhD CandidateGenève
- University of California, BerkeleyVisiting Student ResearcherBerkeley
I am a sociologist and I hold a Ph.D. degree in Political and Social Sciences from Université Catholique de Louvain (UCLouvain, Belgium). I have several years of teaching and research experience, through which I developed expertise in migration studies (South-South migration, return migration, migration and development), particularly in South America, drawing on fieldwork experiences in Ecuador, Peru, and Brazil.
- Université Catholique de LouvainLouvain-la-Neuve
I am a sociologist and I hold a Ph.D. degree in Political and Social Sciences from Université Catholique de Louvain (UCLouvain, Belgium). I have several years of teaching and research experience, through which I developed expertise in migration studies (South-South migration, return migration, migration and development), particularly in South America, drawing on fieldwork experiences in Ecuador, Peru, and Brazil.
PhD Scholar at Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India
#Rural-Urban Migration Governance #South Asia migration #International Migration Governance
PhD Scholar at Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India
#Rural-Urban Migration Governance #South Asia migration #International Migration Governance
Dirk Jacobs (°1971) is full professor at Université Libre de Bruxelles. He is affiliated to the Group for Research on Ethnic Relations, Migration and Equality (GERME) at the Institut de Sociologie. His main research topics are sociology of education and migration and integration policies.
He is the former director of GERME and currently director of EBxl, the research network for Brussels Studies at ULB.
Jacobs studied sociology at Ghent University and obtained his PhD in social sciences at Utrecht University in 1998. He is affiliated to ULB since 2004 and was appointed full professor in 2012. He has been an invited professor at Amsterdam University (UvA), Leibniz Universität Hannover, Facultés Universitaires Saint-Louis, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven et Vesalius College (VUB).
In 2011 he received an ERC Grant for the project “Equal opportunities for migrant youth in educational systems with high levels of social and ethnic segregation – assessing the impact of school team resources”.
He was one of the founding members of the G1000. He is a board member of asbl Pouvoir Organisateur Pluriel (les écoles plurielles) and of Foyer in Molenbeek.
- Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB)Full ProfessorBrussels
- EBxl, Le réseau des études bruxelloises de l’ULBDirectorBrussels
Dirk Jacobs (°1971) is full professor at Université Libre de Bruxelles. He is affiliated to the Group for Research on Ethnic Relations, Migration and Equality (GERME) at the Institut de Sociologie. His main research topics are sociology of education and migration and integration policies.
He is the former director of GERME and currently director of EBxl, the research network for Brussels Studies at ULB.
Jacobs studied sociology at Ghent University and obtained his PhD in social sciences at Utrecht University in 1998. He is affiliated to ULB since 2004 and was appointed full professor in 2012. He has been an invited professor at Amsterdam University (UvA), Leibniz Universität Hannover, Facultés Universitaires Saint-Louis, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven et Vesalius College (VUB).
In 2011 he received an ERC Grant for the project “Equal opportunities for migrant youth in educational systems with high levels of social and ethnic segregation – assessing the impact of school team resources”.
He was one of the founding members of the G1000. He is a board member of asbl Pouvoir Organisateur Pluriel (les écoles plurielles) and of Foyer in Molenbeek.
- EHESSPhD CandidateParis
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*References to Kosovo shall be understood to be in the context of United Nations Security Council resolution 1244 (1999).