Skip to main content

Experts Database

Learn about recent practices from governments, civil society, international organizations, and other stakeholders to gain insight into their experiences implementing the Global Compact’s objectives and guiding principles – get ready to be inspired!

Elaborada en colaboración con el Centro de Investigación sobre Migración de IMISCOE, esta base de datos permite acceder a un conjunto de expertos en migración de todo el mundo. Los académicos e investigadores inscritos en IMISCOE contribuyen con sus publicaciones y conocimientos especializados a fomentar la innovación en materia de migración, aportando sus bagajes sobre una serie de temas relacionados con el Pacto Mundial para la Migración. En sus perfiles se ofrecen enlaces a sus investigaciones. Realice búsquedas por especialidad y ubicación en la base de datos que figura a continuación para encontrar a un experto y consultar sus últimos trabajos. Inicie sesión para contactar con un experto de manera directa.

Descargo de responsabilidad: El contacto con los expertos se facilita a través del Centro de Investigación sobre Migración; la inclusión en esta base de datos no implica ningún tipo de aval por la Red de las Naciones Unidas sobre la Migración o sus miembros.

Solicite su inclusión en la base de datos

Lista de revisión entre homólogos

Todo material que se envía al Centro de la Red sobre Migración se somete primero a una revisión por expertos del sector tanto de las Naciones Unidas como de otros ámbitos. Los interesados en integrar la lista pueden solicitar su inclusión en cualquier momento. Conozca más sobre los criterios de revisión aquí.

Solicite su inclusión en la lista

Base de datos de expertos

 
Search Results
Displaying 301 - 310 of 493
Centre for Judicial Cooperation (EUI) and Masaryk University
Post-doctoral researcher
Vienna

Dr. Madalina Moraru is a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Law Faculty of the Masaryk University, Brno where she has obtained a research grant for the project on Reforming European Administrative Governance in times of crisis: Common or disjunctive sector regulatory models (EUADMIN-GOV). She is also a Research Fellow at the European University Institute (EUI), Centre for Judicial Cooperation (CJC), in Florence, Italy, where she is coordinating the legal training on asylum and migration, and on the interpretation and application of the EU Charter in various EU law fields. She is the editor of Distinguished Lecture Series Papers, of the European University Institute, Centre for Judicial Cooperation.
She obtained her Doctoral Degree in Law from the European University Institute with a thesis entitled Protecting (unrepresented) EU citizens in third countries: the intertwining roles of the EU and its Member States). She has a magna cum laude LL.M. in European Law from Durham University (2008), as well as from the EUI (2010), and a LL.B. from the Faculty of Law, Bucharest (2007). Her research interests include the law and policies of EU external relations, consular and diplomatic law, fundamental rights, judicial dialogue, asylum and migration, and EU citizenship law.
She has been regularly invited to speak as expert on EU law issues by EU Institutions and international and non-governmental organisations. She has been the advisor for a Member of the European Parliament. She is also the founder of the non-governmental organisation, European Centre for Legal Expertise, which is actively participating in policy analysis and drafting in the field of human rights. She has won several EU-funded grants on fundamental rights, EU policy implementation and legal training (ACTIONES, e-Nact) She has extensive expertise in coordinating European wide projects involving research and consultancy in the field of asylum and migration and fundamental rights.
She has published extensively on the topic of the EU citizenship rights, fundament

  • Centre for Judicial Cooperation (EUI) and Masaryk University
    Post-doctoral researcher
    Vienna

Dr. Madalina Moraru is a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Law Faculty of the Masaryk University, Brno where she has obtained a research grant for the project on Reforming European Administrative Governance in times of crisis: Common or disjunctive sector regulatory models (EUADMIN-GOV). She is also a Research Fellow at the European University Institute (EUI), Centre for Judicial Cooperation (CJC), in Florence, Italy, where she is coordinating the legal training on asylum and migration, and on the interpretation and application of the EU Charter in various EU law fields. She is the editor of Distinguished Lecture Series Papers, of the European University Institute, Centre for Judicial Cooperation.
She obtained her Doctoral Degree in Law from the European University Institute with a thesis entitled Protecting (unrepresented) EU citizens in third countries: the intertwining roles of the EU and its Member States). She has a magna cum laude LL.M. in European Law from Durham University (2008), as well as from the EUI (2010), and a LL.B. from the Faculty of Law, Bucharest (2007). Her research interests include the law and policies of EU external relations, consular and diplomatic law, fundamental rights, judicial dialogue, asylum and migration, and EU citizenship law.
She has been regularly invited to speak as expert on EU law issues by EU Institutions and international and non-governmental organisations. She has been the advisor for a Member of the European Parliament. She is also the founder of the non-governmental organisation, European Centre for Legal Expertise, which is actively participating in policy analysis and drafting in the field of human rights. She has won several EU-funded grants on fundamental rights, EU policy implementation and legal training (ACTIONES, e-Nact) She has extensive expertise in coordinating European wide projects involving research and consultancy in the field of asylum and migration and fundamental rights.
She has published extensively on the topic of the EU citizenship rights, fundament

Kulturwissenschaftliche Institut Essen (KWI)/ Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities
Research Fellow
Essen

Sayed Mahdi Mosawi is a research fellow at Kulturwissenschaftliche Institut Essen (KWI) / Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities. His work draws on forced migration, refugees, and gender issues. In his current project, Mosawi deals with the notions of masculinities among male immigrants living in Germany.

  • Kulturwissenschaftliche Institut Essen (KWI)/ Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities
    Research Fellow
    Essen

Sayed Mahdi Mosawi is a research fellow at Kulturwissenschaftliche Institut Essen (KWI) / Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities. His work draws on forced migration, refugees, and gender issues. In his current project, Mosawi deals with the notions of masculinities among male immigrants living in Germany.

Mahgol Motalebi
PhD Candidate
Berlin

Mahgol Motalebi is a doctorate student holding DAAD scholarship within the study program IPP-EU at the Institute for European Urban Studies.

Born in 1991, she studied Bachelor of Architecture in Iran; following the Cum Laude graduation in 2016 from the “Architecture and Sustainability” program at Katholieke University (KU) Leuven, Belgium. During the master studies, she joined “Media Architecture” program at Bauhaus University Weimar as a guest student where she had worked with Refugees in Weimar on art and research projects that also shaped her Master thesis and future research direction, with the focus on the social and spatial dimension of urban segregation and its influence on the integration of immigrants and refugees. SS

Since 2018, She is working on the doctorate project under the title “Immigrant’s home in the making through spatial practice: The case of Iranian immigrants in Berlin” In this research, she attempts to illustrate the current integration processes and challenges of Iranian immigrants based on their spatial practices to make Berlin their new home.

  • Mahgol Motalebi
    PhD Candidate
    Berlin

Mahgol Motalebi is a doctorate student holding DAAD scholarship within the study program IPP-EU at the Institute for European Urban Studies.

Born in 1991, she studied Bachelor of Architecture in Iran; following the Cum Laude graduation in 2016 from the “Architecture and Sustainability” program at Katholieke University (KU) Leuven, Belgium. During the master studies, she joined “Media Architecture” program at Bauhaus University Weimar as a guest student where she had worked with Refugees in Weimar on art and research projects that also shaped her Master thesis and future research direction, with the focus on the social and spatial dimension of urban segregation and its influence on the integration of immigrants and refugees. SS

Since 2018, She is working on the doctorate project under the title “Immigrant’s home in the making through spatial practice: The case of Iranian immigrants in Berlin” In this research, she attempts to illustrate the current integration processes and challenges of Iranian immigrants based on their spatial practices to make Berlin their new home.

ALICE MPOFU-COLES
Alice is currently writing her thesis as PhD candidate and Research Assistant Human Geography at the University of Reading in the School of Archaeology, Geography and Environmental Science. Alice is also working on a Professional Specialist Role on Equality, Diversity and Inclusion at the university to address race equality. Her research is on Identity and Transnational activities Among Young Zimbabwean Diaspora in the UK.
For over 15 years she volunteered at the Reading Refugee Support Group (RRSG) both as vice-chair and chair including being involved in the Gruntivig Women’s Project – Women Refugees Learning together in Europe. She is currently a trustee of the Reading City of Sanctuary and Alliance for Cohesion and Racial Equality (ACRE) and a specialist Ambassador for Global Female Wave of Change. She is also involved in Universities of Sanctuaries in the UK – leading Universities to give scholarships to refugees and be a safe space for sanctuary seekers. She also advocates and portrays a more positive image of refugees, black people, women, young people by participating in numerous projects. She has done BBC television documentary and interviews on refugees' plight, poverty, women and speaks at events and conferences. She furthers her activism by writing, actively involved with different human rights organisations, democracy, education and poverty.
Alice was given the most inspirational refugee women Driver award in 2020. She nominated the Reading Refugee Support Group for the Queen’s Award for Voluntary Service, and this was awarded in 2019 receiving it from the Queen’s representative, Sheriff of Berkshire. She was given an Honorary Masters of Universities by the Open University in 2013 at Poole's ceremony for her services to refugees, communities, education, and civil services. She was presented with an award by the then President Chissano of Mozambique in 1996 for her writing on working with culturally diverse communities. This was achieved while working as a diplomat in Mozambique and preceded a posting to the former Yugoslavia, Belgrade. She worked in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Zimbabwe, was posted to Belgrade and then Maputo. She also worked in the office of the Vice President of Zimbabwe.
She has a BA in Social Work, MA in International Relations and Forced Migration Summer School course at Oxford University. In the UK, she started working in a sandwich factory, army barracks, care homes and then decided to train as a social worker. She worked in the local authority social care from 2004 until 2017 when she decided to do her PhD.
Despite her adversity of losing seven family members in 13 years, Alice wrote a book DEAR GOD FROM YOUR POACHED EGG BREAST about her breast cancer experience in 2007, chemotherapy and mastectomy while studying. She continues to advocate for breast cancer awareness in women with interviews on BBC and grassroots community group. She is standing as a Councillor Candidate in Reading in the UK May 2021 elections.
“You can lose everything, but nobody can take your education away.” part of the speech of Alice speaking to OU graduates when she was receiving the Masters Honorary Award from Open University https://youtu.be/9TsHg2dVGHY

ALICE MPOFU-COLES
Alice is currently writing her thesis as PhD candidate and Research Assistant Human Geography at the University of Reading in the School of Archaeology, Geography and Environmental Science. Alice is also working on a Professional Specialist Role on Equality, Diversity and Inclusion at the university to address race equality. Her research is on Identity and Transnational activities Among Young Zimbabwean Diaspora in the UK.
For over 15 years she volunteered at the Reading Refugee Support Group (RRSG) both as vice-chair and chair including being involved in the Gruntivig Women’s Project – Women Refugees Learning together in Europe. She is currently a trustee of the Reading City of Sanctuary and Alliance for Cohesion and Racial Equality (ACRE) and a specialist Ambassador for Global Female Wave of Change. She is also involved in Universities of Sanctuaries in the UK – leading Universities to give scholarships to refugees and be a safe space for sanctuary seekers. She also advocates and portrays a more positive image of refugees, black people, women, young people by participating in numerous projects. She has done BBC television documentary and interviews on refugees' plight, poverty, women and speaks at events and conferences. She furthers her activism by writing, actively involved with different human rights organisations, democracy, education and poverty.
Alice was given the most inspirational refugee women Driver award in 2020. She nominated the Reading Refugee Support Group for the Queen’s Award for Voluntary Service, and this was awarded in 2019 receiving it from the Queen’s representative, Sheriff of Berkshire. She was given an Honorary Masters of Universities by the Open University in 2013 at Poole's ceremony for her services to refugees, communities, education, and civil services. She was presented with an award by the then President Chissano of Mozambique in 1996 for her writing on working with culturally diverse communities. This was achieved while working as a diplomat in Mozambique and preceded a posting to the former Yugoslavia, Belgrade. She worked in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Zimbabwe, was posted to Belgrade and then Maputo. She also worked in the office of the Vice President of Zimbabwe.
She has a BA in Social Work, MA in International Relations and Forced Migration Summer School course at Oxford University. In the UK, she started working in a sandwich factory, army barracks, care homes and then decided to train as a social worker. She worked in the local authority social care from 2004 until 2017 when she decided to do her PhD.
Despite her adversity of losing seven family members in 13 years, Alice wrote a book DEAR GOD FROM YOUR POACHED EGG BREAST about her breast cancer experience in 2007, chemotherapy and mastectomy while studying. She continues to advocate for breast cancer awareness in women with interviews on BBC and grassroots community group. She is standing as a Councillor Candidate in Reading in the UK May 2021 elections.
“You can lose everything, but nobody can take your education away.” part of the speech of Alice speaking to OU graduates when she was receiving the Masters Honorary Award from Open University https://youtu.be/9TsHg2dVGHY

Maastricht University
PhD Fellow
Maastricht

Charlotte Mueller is a Ph.D. Researcher in the Migration and Development Research Group at the Maastricht Graduate School of Governance/ UNU-MERIT. Her main research interests focus on return migration, reintegration, diasporas, and knowledge transfer. For her PhD-Research, Charlotte explores the conditions for knowledge transfer and organisational change in the context of a temporary return programme. A German national, she has lived, worked and studied in Germany, Ecuador, and the Netherlands. Charlotte is experienced in qualitative data collection in countries such as Afghanistan, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guatemala, Mexico, Sierra Leone and Somalia.

  • Maastricht University
    PhD Fellow
    Maastricht

Charlotte Mueller is a Ph.D. Researcher in the Migration and Development Research Group at the Maastricht Graduate School of Governance/ UNU-MERIT. Her main research interests focus on return migration, reintegration, diasporas, and knowledge transfer. For her PhD-Research, Charlotte explores the conditions for knowledge transfer and organisational change in the context of a temporary return programme. A German national, she has lived, worked and studied in Germany, Ecuador, and the Netherlands. Charlotte is experienced in qualitative data collection in countries such as Afghanistan, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guatemala, Mexico, Sierra Leone and Somalia.

Macquarie University
Senior Lecturer
Sydney

Dr Muhidin is a Senior Lecturer at Macquarie University in Australia. He is a demographer by training from the University of Groningen, the Netherlands. He has actively been working on the study of migration/population mobility issues and its consequences in different settings such as Asia (Indonesia and Bangladesh), West Africa (Burkina Faso and Ghana) and Australia. In addition, he has also involved in researches related with health and population dynamics. Dr Muhidin was one of the contributors to the background research papers for the 2009 Human Development Reports, UNDP.

Dr Muhidin is also the Executive Board member of the Indonesian Diaspora Network (IDN) Global, which facilitates and empowers the voice of Indonesian diaspora communities through its current 60 national and local chapters and the number is progressively expanding.

  • Macquarie University
    Senior Lecturer
    Sydney

Dr Muhidin is a Senior Lecturer at Macquarie University in Australia. He is a demographer by training from the University of Groningen, the Netherlands. He has actively been working on the study of migration/population mobility issues and its consequences in different settings such as Asia (Indonesia and Bangladesh), West Africa (Burkina Faso and Ghana) and Australia. In addition, he has also involved in researches related with health and population dynamics. Dr Muhidin was one of the contributors to the background research papers for the 2009 Human Development Reports, UNDP.

Dr Muhidin is also the Executive Board member of the Indonesian Diaspora Network (IDN) Global, which facilitates and empowers the voice of Indonesian diaspora communities through its current 60 national and local chapters and the number is progressively expanding.

Institute for Migration Research and Intercultural Studies
Researcher
Osnabrück

I am a senior researcher at the University of Osnabrück, Germany. My research focusses on international migration and urban developments and, more broadly, on the interrelation of materiality and sociality in late modern societies. I habilitated at the Department of Geography, University of Bremen, Germany, in 2019 (venia legendi “Humangeographie”) and obtained my PhD at Bielefeld University, Germany, in 2013. In 2017, I was a Visiting Academic at the Department of Geography at Durham University, UK. My most recent book is on the nexus of migration, materility and identity ("Migration, Materialität und Identität. Verortungen zwischen Hier und Dort", published in German in 2020, Steiner Verlag).

  • Institute for Migration Research and Intercultural Studies
    Researcher
    Osnabrück

I am a senior researcher at the University of Osnabrück, Germany. My research focusses on international migration and urban developments and, more broadly, on the interrelation of materiality and sociality in late modern societies. I habilitated at the Department of Geography, University of Bremen, Germany, in 2019 (venia legendi “Humangeographie”) and obtained my PhD at Bielefeld University, Germany, in 2013. In 2017, I was a Visiting Academic at the Department of Geography at Durham University, UK. My most recent book is on the nexus of migration, materility and identity ("Migration, Materialität und Identität. Verortungen zwischen Hier und Dort", published in German in 2020, Steiner Verlag).

German Institute of Global and Area Studies
Research Fellow
Hamburg

Lea Müller-Funk is currently a Research Fellow at the German Institute of Global and Area Studies, where her research focuses on migration aspirations and drivers in (forced) migration, migration and refugee governance, and diaspora politics with a geographical focus on the Middle East, North Africa and Europe. Previously, she was a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Individual Research Fellow at the Department of Sociology at the University of Amsterdam and a postdoctoral fellow at the Department of Politics and International Relations at the University of Oxford. She earned a joint PhD in Comparative Politics and Arabic Studies (summa cum laude) from the Centre des Recherches Internationales (CERI) at Sciences Po Paris and the Department for Near Eastern Studies at Vienna University in 2016. Methodologically, she applies different approaches including in-depth and life history interviews, survey research, mixed methods, content analysis, and online ethnography.

Before her PhD, she was a trainee at the Department of the European Council and the Council of the European Union at the Austrian Foreign Ministry (2010-2011). She attended Vienna University (BA in Political Science, 2009; Magister in Arabic and Islamic Studies, 2010), the Institut National des Langues et Cultures Orientales in Paris (2007/2008), and Sciences Po Paris (MA in Comparative Politics / Middle East and Muslim World, 2010). Lea has held research affiliations to the Institut français du Proche-Orient Beirut (2018), the Migration Reseach Center at Koç University (2018), Nuffield College (2017), the Netherlands-Flemish Institute in Cairo (2012) and the American University Beirut (2009).

  • German Institute of Global and Area Studies
    Research Fellow
    Hamburg

Lea Müller-Funk is currently a Research Fellow at the German Institute of Global and Area Studies, where her research focuses on migration aspirations and drivers in (forced) migration, migration and refugee governance, and diaspora politics with a geographical focus on the Middle East, North Africa and Europe. Previously, she was a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Individual Research Fellow at the Department of Sociology at the University of Amsterdam and a postdoctoral fellow at the Department of Politics and International Relations at the University of Oxford. She earned a joint PhD in Comparative Politics and Arabic Studies (summa cum laude) from the Centre des Recherches Internationales (CERI) at Sciences Po Paris and the Department for Near Eastern Studies at Vienna University in 2016. Methodologically, she applies different approaches including in-depth and life history interviews, survey research, mixed methods, content analysis, and online ethnography.

Before her PhD, she was a trainee at the Department of the European Council and the Council of the European Union at the Austrian Foreign Ministry (2010-2011). She attended Vienna University (BA in Political Science, 2009; Magister in Arabic and Islamic Studies, 2010), the Institut National des Langues et Cultures Orientales in Paris (2007/2008), and Sciences Po Paris (MA in Comparative Politics / Middle East and Muslim World, 2010). Lea has held research affiliations to the Institut français du Proche-Orient Beirut (2018), the Migration Reseach Center at Koç University (2018), Nuffield College (2017), the Netherlands-Flemish Institute in Cairo (2012) and the American University Beirut (2009).

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).

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.

Apply Now

Contact us

We welcome your feedback and suggestions, please contact us

*Todas las referencias a Kosovo deben entenderse en el contexto de la Resolución 1244 [1999] del Consejo de Seguridad de las Naciones Unidas.