- Federal Institute for Population ResearchWiesbaden
- Peace and Development CentreResearcherAddis Ababa
Dr Claire Dorrity is a lecturer in social policy at the School of Applied Social Studies, University College Cork (UCC). Her main research interests include Migration Policy; Border Securitisation and Externalisation; Refugee Displacement; Critical Multiculturalism and Superdiversity; Migrant Solidarities
Her most recent research projects include: EMBRACE: Exploring Mobility: Borders, Refugees & Challenging Exclusion (Irish Research Council New Foundations Program) focused on the frontiers of border militarisation, using two case studies - the EU Mediterranean border and the US/Mexican border (Sept 2020 -July 2022).
https://www.ucc.ie/en/iss21/researchprojects/researchprojects/earlieris…
Her current research project Migrant Education: Challenges and Exclusion (MiEd) is funded through the UNIC Research Seed Funding and is focused on participatory action based research addressing barriers to education for migrants in a local and transnational context. Research partners include University of Liege, Koç University, Turkey, University College Cork and community partners and migrants across university partners.
Claire is a research associate with the Institute of Social Science in the 21st Century, UCC (ISS21) and committee member of the Migration and Integration Research Cluster, (ISS21,UCC). https://www.ucc.ie/en/iss21/clusters/migration/
Claire is a member of the UCC Team of UNIC Consortium https://www.unic.eu/en made up of 10 university partners, focusing on; Diversity and inclusion, Impact and mobility, and Engaged and transdisciplinary research. Claire is the UCC academic lead for the UNIC Joint MA in Superdiversity in Education, Organisations and Society.
Claire is a member of the Task Force on Responsible Internationalisation & Global Engagement (RIGE) promoting Academic Freedom and Academic Responsibility in Internationalisation in Higher Education and Research across European University Networks. https://utrecht-network.org/task-forces/rige/
She is joint editor of Migration: Global Processes Caught in National Answers (Nova 2014) and co-editor of Social Professional Activity: The Search for a Minimum Common Denominator in Difference (Wiener Verlag 2009).
Claire is a member of the University of Sanctuary Executive Committee and a member of the University of Sanctuary Working Group. She is also a member of the Schools of Sanctuary, Ireland Monitoring Team.
She is a member of the Latin American Regional Working Group (LARWG), UCC.
She is the School Applied Social Studies Internationalisation Representative, UCC.
- University College CorkLecturerCork
Dr Claire Dorrity is a lecturer in social policy at the School of Applied Social Studies, University College Cork (UCC). Her main research interests include Migration Policy; Border Securitisation and Externalisation; Refugee Displacement; Critical Multiculturalism and Superdiversity; Migrant Solidarities
Her most recent research projects include: EMBRACE: Exploring Mobility: Borders, Refugees & Challenging Exclusion (Irish Research Council New Foundations Program) focused on the frontiers of border militarisation, using two case studies - the EU Mediterranean border and the US/Mexican border (Sept 2020 -July 2022).
https://www.ucc.ie/en/iss21/researchprojects/researchprojects/earlieris…
Her current research project Migrant Education: Challenges and Exclusion (MiEd) is funded through the UNIC Research Seed Funding and is focused on participatory action based research addressing barriers to education for migrants in a local and transnational context. Research partners include University of Liege, Koç University, Turkey, University College Cork and community partners and migrants across university partners.
Claire is a research associate with the Institute of Social Science in the 21st Century, UCC (ISS21) and committee member of the Migration and Integration Research Cluster, (ISS21,UCC). https://www.ucc.ie/en/iss21/clusters/migration/
Claire is a member of the UCC Team of UNIC Consortium https://www.unic.eu/en made up of 10 university partners, focusing on; Diversity and inclusion, Impact and mobility, and Engaged and transdisciplinary research. Claire is the UCC academic lead for the UNIC Joint MA in Superdiversity in Education, Organisations and Society.
Claire is a member of the Task Force on Responsible Internationalisation & Global Engagement (RIGE) promoting Academic Freedom and Academic Responsibility in Internationalisation in Higher Education and Research across European University Networks. https://utrecht-network.org/task-forces/rige/
She is joint editor of Migration: Global Processes Caught in National Answers (Nova 2014) and co-editor of Social Professional Activity: The Search for a Minimum Common Denominator in Difference (Wiener Verlag 2009).
Claire is a member of the University of Sanctuary Executive Committee and a member of the University of Sanctuary Working Group. She is also a member of the Schools of Sanctuary, Ireland Monitoring Team.
She is a member of the Latin American Regional Working Group (LARWG), UCC.
She is the School Applied Social Studies Internationalisation Representative, UCC.
9 years of experience as a civil servant at the Brazilian Federal Government. I am especially interested in research on migration governance, international cooperation, social policy, and human rights. I hold a Master's in International Social and Public Policy from the London School of Economics and Political Science - LSE. I also hold a Bachelor's in International Relations from the Universidade de São Paulo - USP, and Postgraduate Diploma in Public Administration from Fundação Getúlio Vargas -FGV.
- Ministry of Human RightsSocial Policy AnalystBrasília
9 years of experience as a civil servant at the Brazilian Federal Government. I am especially interested in research on migration governance, international cooperation, social policy, and human rights. I hold a Master's in International Social and Public Policy from the London School of Economics and Political Science - LSE. I also hold a Bachelor's in International Relations from the Universidade de São Paulo - USP, and Postgraduate Diploma in Public Administration from Fundação Getúlio Vargas -FGV.
- MINISTRY OF ECONOMY, ATHENSACADEMIC, INDEPENDENT LEGAL EXPERT, HONORARY HEAD OF LEGAL DEPARTMENTAthens
- European University InstituteEx- Jean Monnet Fellow, Legal Studies, E.U.I .-
2011-2016 Ph.D. Researcher Münster University (Germany),
2010 Research Stay Universidad Guadalajara (Mexico),
2011/12 Research Stay Princeton University (USA),
2013 Research Stay UCLA (USA),
2016-2018 Postdoc Researcher FoKoS Siegen University (Germany),
2017 Guest Researcher Universidad Javeriana (Colombia),
2018 Guest Researcher Kumasi University (Ghana),
2018-2019 Lecturer Fulda University of Applied Sciences (Germany),
since 2019 Research Associate Giessen University (Germany)
- Giessen UniversityResearch AssociateGiessen
2011-2016 Ph.D. Researcher Münster University (Germany),
2010 Research Stay Universidad Guadalajara (Mexico),
2011/12 Research Stay Princeton University (USA),
2013 Research Stay UCLA (USA),
2016-2018 Postdoc Researcher FoKoS Siegen University (Germany),
2017 Guest Researcher Universidad Javeriana (Colombia),
2018 Guest Researcher Kumasi University (Ghana),
2018-2019 Lecturer Fulda University of Applied Sciences (Germany),
since 2019 Research Associate Giessen University (Germany)
- OsloMetResearch ProfessorOslo
I am a Postdoctoral researcher at the European University Institute´s Migration Policy Centre (MPC), where I work on the Observatory of Public Attitudes to Migration (OPAM) project. Before joining the EUI, I was a post-doctoral researcher with the Excellence Initiative at the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. I received my PhD (Summa Cum Laude) in Political Science from Humboldt-Universität’s Berlin Graduate School of Social Sciences in 2016. I hold a Master of Arts in Political Science from Central European University in Hungary (2010) and a BA in Political Science from Charles University in Czech Republic (2008). My research interests lie in the fields of political behavior, comparative politics and political sociology. I am particularly interested in the factors that contribute to the formation of public opinion and attitudes (particularly attitudes to migration, ethnocentrism, nationalism, xenophobia etc.), using quantitative methods.
- European University InstitutePostdoctoral ResearcherFlorence
I am a Postdoctoral researcher at the European University Institute´s Migration Policy Centre (MPC), where I work on the Observatory of Public Attitudes to Migration (OPAM) project. Before joining the EUI, I was a post-doctoral researcher with the Excellence Initiative at the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. I received my PhD (Summa Cum Laude) in Political Science from Humboldt-Universität’s Berlin Graduate School of Social Sciences in 2016. I hold a Master of Arts in Political Science from Central European University in Hungary (2010) and a BA in Political Science from Charles University in Czech Republic (2008). My research interests lie in the fields of political behavior, comparative politics and political sociology. I am particularly interested in the factors that contribute to the formation of public opinion and attitudes (particularly attitudes to migration, ethnocentrism, nationalism, xenophobia etc.), using quantitative methods.
- Charles University , PragueProfessorPrague
Nick Dreher is a PhD candidate in policy studies and migration at Toronto Metropolitan University. He is also a researcher with Bridging Divides, CERC Migration and Integration, and the Soli*City partnership. His dissertation research focuses on how international and local actors collaborate to support the needs of precarious migrants and refugees. Other research interests include transnational migration governance, digital nomads and the future of work, qualitative methodologies, and decolonial approaches to migration studies.
Prior to his PhD, Nick worked in non-profit and higher education settings in a variety of roles including program coordination, teaching, and research. This included roles with community organizations supporting migrants and refugees in South Africa, Uganda, and several cities in the United States. Nick has also led and participated in strategic planning initiatives and justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion programmes at various institutions. He currently serves on the steering committee for the Global (De)Centre, a network dedicated to rethinking and decolonizing the ways we produce and share knowledge on migration, teaching, the arts, and more.
- Toronto Metropolitan UniversityPhD CandidateToronto
Nick Dreher is a PhD candidate in policy studies and migration at Toronto Metropolitan University. He is also a researcher with Bridging Divides, CERC Migration and Integration, and the Soli*City partnership. His dissertation research focuses on how international and local actors collaborate to support the needs of precarious migrants and refugees. Other research interests include transnational migration governance, digital nomads and the future of work, qualitative methodologies, and decolonial approaches to migration studies.
Prior to his PhD, Nick worked in non-profit and higher education settings in a variety of roles including program coordination, teaching, and research. This included roles with community organizations supporting migrants and refugees in South Africa, Uganda, and several cities in the United States. Nick has also led and participated in strategic planning initiatives and justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion programmes at various institutions. He currently serves on the steering committee for the Global (De)Centre, a network dedicated to rethinking and decolonizing the ways we produce and share knowledge on migration, teaching, the arts, and more.
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).
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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.
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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.
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*References to Kosovo shall be understood to be in the context of United Nations Security Council resolution 1244 (1999).