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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.

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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.

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Base de datos de expertos

 
Search Results
Displaying 1371 - 1380 of 2370
CEDEM - FaSS, ULiege
Post-doctoral researcher and Assistant professor
Liège

I am an anthropologist affiliated to the Centre for Ethnic and Migration Studies at the Faculty of Social Sciences of the University of Liege, where I am working as Lecturer assistant and post-doctoral researcher. I obtained a PhD degree in Anthropology of contemporaneity – Ethnography of diversities and of cultural convergences (University of Milan-Bicocca, Italy) and in Political and Social Sciences (University of Liege, Belgium, joint doctoral supervision) with a thesis on food as means to define subjectivity in context of migration. My present research interests include the discrimination of Muslims and the public opinion on migrants, with a focus on asylum seekers, refugees and undocumented migrants. I am currently teaching the following Master courses: Anthropology of the contemporary world; Refugee and forced migration studies; Urban cultures and post-colonial minorities; Socio-anthropological approach to interculturality. The list of my publications and communications is available here:: https://orbi.uliege.be/simple-search?query=mescoli

  • CEDEM - FaSS, ULiege
    Post-doctoral researcher and Assistant professor
    Liège

I am an anthropologist affiliated to the Centre for Ethnic and Migration Studies at the Faculty of Social Sciences of the University of Liege, where I am working as Lecturer assistant and post-doctoral researcher. I obtained a PhD degree in Anthropology of contemporaneity – Ethnography of diversities and of cultural convergences (University of Milan-Bicocca, Italy) and in Political and Social Sciences (University of Liege, Belgium, joint doctoral supervision) with a thesis on food as means to define subjectivity in context of migration. My present research interests include the discrimination of Muslims and the public opinion on migrants, with a focus on asylum seekers, refugees and undocumented migrants. I am currently teaching the following Master courses: Anthropology of the contemporary world; Refugee and forced migration studies; Urban cultures and post-colonial minorities; Socio-anthropological approach to interculturality. The list of my publications and communications is available here:: https://orbi.uliege.be/simple-search?query=mescoli

University of Groningen
Associate Professor
Groningen

Marietta Messmer is Associate Professor of American Studies at the University of Groningen (The Netherlands). Her publications focus on the political and cultural relations between the U.S. and Latin America, Mexican and Central American migration to the U.S., violence in the U.S.-Mexican borderlands, as well as theoretical debates on human rights, citizenship, integration, and minority rights. She is managing editor of the peer-reviewed book series Interamericana, devoted to publications on the literatures, cultures, and societies of North, Central and South America (Peter Lang Verlag) and serves as Vice President of the International American Studies Association (IASA) (since September 2019). Her book publications include several co-edited collections on inter-American political, social, and cultural relations, including, most recently, The International Turn in American Studies (2015, with Armin Paul Frank) and America: Justice, Conflict, War (2016, with Amanda Gilroy).

Her current research project examines the U.S.’s and the European Union’s ways of outsourcing and privatizing immigration control measures and the social, economic, legal, and ethical consequences this has for migrants and refugees as well as for transit countries like Mexico, Libya, and Turkey. Her central argument is that this extraterritorialization of (legal and political) borders facilitates the circumvention of basic human rights obligations and redefines the boundaries of state control as it simultaneously expands and disperses state power by increasing the government’s legal reach over vulnerable non-citizen populations even beyond national borders while at the same time decreasing the government’s direct liability and accountability.

Moreover, Messmer is interested in the ways in which the current U.S. immigration and refugee regime violates both U.S. national legal standards as well as international human rights obligations towards under-age migrants and refugees. Child migration raises many social, legal, and political questions that differ fundamentally from those raised by adult migrants and throws into striking relief the contradictions inherent in the U.S.’s immigration and refugee regime, which is primarily geared at adults, as well as the contradictory nature of family-related immigration policies that seemingly privilege family reunification while at the same time tearing apart mixed-status families or non-immediate relatives.

  • University of Groningen
    Associate Professor
    Groningen

Marietta Messmer is Associate Professor of American Studies at the University of Groningen (The Netherlands). Her publications focus on the political and cultural relations between the U.S. and Latin America, Mexican and Central American migration to the U.S., violence in the U.S.-Mexican borderlands, as well as theoretical debates on human rights, citizenship, integration, and minority rights. She is managing editor of the peer-reviewed book series Interamericana, devoted to publications on the literatures, cultures, and societies of North, Central and South America (Peter Lang Verlag) and serves as Vice President of the International American Studies Association (IASA) (since September 2019). Her book publications include several co-edited collections on inter-American political, social, and cultural relations, including, most recently, The International Turn in American Studies (2015, with Armin Paul Frank) and America: Justice, Conflict, War (2016, with Amanda Gilroy).

Her current research project examines the U.S.’s and the European Union’s ways of outsourcing and privatizing immigration control measures and the social, economic, legal, and ethical consequences this has for migrants and refugees as well as for transit countries like Mexico, Libya, and Turkey. Her central argument is that this extraterritorialization of (legal and political) borders facilitates the circumvention of basic human rights obligations and redefines the boundaries of state control as it simultaneously expands and disperses state power by increasing the government’s legal reach over vulnerable non-citizen populations even beyond national borders while at the same time decreasing the government’s direct liability and accountability.

Moreover, Messmer is interested in the ways in which the current U.S. immigration and refugee regime violates both U.S. national legal standards as well as international human rights obligations towards under-age migrants and refugees. Child migration raises many social, legal, and political questions that differ fundamentally from those raised by adult migrants and throws into striking relief the contradictions inherent in the U.S.’s immigration and refugee regime, which is primarily geared at adults, as well as the contradictory nature of family-related immigration policies that seemingly privilege family reunification while at the same time tearing apart mixed-status families or non-immediate relatives.

University of Oradea
Full time PhD Lecturer
Oradea

PhD Lecturer at the University of Oradea, Romania,
Vice-president of Collegium Varadinum,
WP6 Group Expert EU Green Project

Edina Lilla Mészáros is a PhD Lecturer at the Faculty of History, International Relations, Political Science and Communication Sciences, at the University of Oradea, Romania. She is an expert in international relations and security studies. During her doctoral training, she received a scholarship of excellence funded by the European Union (POSDRU / 159 / 1.5 / S / 132400). As a guest professor, she had the opportunity to teach at prestigious European universities, such as the University of Aarhus in Denmark, the University of the Azores (Portugal), the Lajos Kossuth University in Debrecen (Hungary), the Moldovan Academy of Economics (Republic of Moldova), the Matej Bel University in Banska Bytrica (Slovakia), the Baltic International Academy, (Latvia), the University of Wroclaw (Poland) and the SMK University of Applied Sciences (Lithuania). She participated at several high-level international conferences, such as the annual conference organized by UACES (European Association of Contemporary Studies) (2018, Bath; 2020 Virtual Conference, Belfast; 2021 Liverpool, 2022 Lille), and her proposal was accepted for the 2021 Migration Conference in London and the 2021 World Congress of Political Science, Lisbon, Portugal organized by the International Association for Political Science (IPSA). She has published more than 40 articles in several domestic and international journals, including Web of Science, Scopus, Doaj, Erih +. She is the secretary of the Eurolimes Journal published by the Institute of Euroregional Studies under the auspices of the University of Oradea, Department of International Relations and European Studies. She is a member of the editorial board of the Review of European Affairs journal published by PECSA Poland and of the Criminal Geographical Journal of the Hungarian National University of Public Service. She is a reviewer at the Problems of Post-Communism Journal, member and expert at IMISCOE (International Migration Research Network), member of UACES (University Association for Contemporary European Studies), of IPSA (International Political Science Association) and ISER (Association for Institute of Euroregional Studies). She is the vice-president of Collegium Varadinum, a local non-governmental organization. She was the manager of a local project called (A învăța mai ușor, mai eficient-Learning easier and more efficient) financed by the Oradea City Hall 129.397/20,03,2008.
She was a Project Assistant in the Jean Monnet Multilateral Research Group entitled Initiative and Constraint in the Mapping of European Evolving Borders, Jean Monnet Programme, DG EAC 41/09, 2011-2013 http://borders.cvce.eu and in the project called Boosting Innovation through capacity building and networking of Science centers in the SEE Science Region, South-East Europe Transnational Cooperation Programme, SEE/B/0048/1.3/X, March 2013-April 2014, https://seescience.eu/
She was a project Assistant in Jean Monnet Network project entitled ENACTED (European Union and its neighbourhood. Network for enhancing EU’s actorness in the eastern borderlands), 2017-2021.
She is currently WP6 Expert in the EU Green Project, Alliance of European Universities, https://www.eugreenalliance.eu/bitacora/

  • University of Oradea
    Full time PhD Lecturer
    Oradea

PhD Lecturer at the University of Oradea, Romania,
Vice-president of Collegium Varadinum,
WP6 Group Expert EU Green Project

Edina Lilla Mészáros is a PhD Lecturer at the Faculty of History, International Relations, Political Science and Communication Sciences, at the University of Oradea, Romania. She is an expert in international relations and security studies. During her doctoral training, she received a scholarship of excellence funded by the European Union (POSDRU / 159 / 1.5 / S / 132400). As a guest professor, she had the opportunity to teach at prestigious European universities, such as the University of Aarhus in Denmark, the University of the Azores (Portugal), the Lajos Kossuth University in Debrecen (Hungary), the Moldovan Academy of Economics (Republic of Moldova), the Matej Bel University in Banska Bytrica (Slovakia), the Baltic International Academy, (Latvia), the University of Wroclaw (Poland) and the SMK University of Applied Sciences (Lithuania). She participated at several high-level international conferences, such as the annual conference organized by UACES (European Association of Contemporary Studies) (2018, Bath; 2020 Virtual Conference, Belfast; 2021 Liverpool, 2022 Lille), and her proposal was accepted for the 2021 Migration Conference in London and the 2021 World Congress of Political Science, Lisbon, Portugal organized by the International Association for Political Science (IPSA). She has published more than 40 articles in several domestic and international journals, including Web of Science, Scopus, Doaj, Erih +. She is the secretary of the Eurolimes Journal published by the Institute of Euroregional Studies under the auspices of the University of Oradea, Department of International Relations and European Studies. She is a member of the editorial board of the Review of European Affairs journal published by PECSA Poland and of the Criminal Geographical Journal of the Hungarian National University of Public Service. She is a reviewer at the Problems of Post-Communism Journal, member and expert at IMISCOE (International Migration Research Network), member of UACES (University Association for Contemporary European Studies), of IPSA (International Political Science Association) and ISER (Association for Institute of Euroregional Studies). She is the vice-president of Collegium Varadinum, a local non-governmental organization. She was the manager of a local project called (A învăța mai ușor, mai eficient-Learning easier and more efficient) financed by the Oradea City Hall 129.397/20,03,2008.
She was a Project Assistant in the Jean Monnet Multilateral Research Group entitled Initiative and Constraint in the Mapping of European Evolving Borders, Jean Monnet Programme, DG EAC 41/09, 2011-2013 http://borders.cvce.eu and in the project called Boosting Innovation through capacity building and networking of Science centers in the SEE Science Region, South-East Europe Transnational Cooperation Programme, SEE/B/0048/1.3/X, March 2013-April 2014, https://seescience.eu/
She was a project Assistant in Jean Monnet Network project entitled ENACTED (European Union and its neighbourhood. Network for enhancing EU’s actorness in the eastern borderlands), 2017-2021.
She is currently WP6 Expert in the EU Green Project, Alliance of European Universities, https://www.eugreenalliance.eu/bitacora/

University of South-Eastern Norway
Dr. Associate Professor
Drammen

Dr Gabriela Mezzanotti is Associate Professor in Social Sciences at the University of South-Eastern Norway and a Lawyer. She is the co-leader of USN’s research group “Human Rights and Diversities”. She holds a PhD in Social Sciences and a MA degree in International Law. She chaired the UNHCR Sergio Vieira de Mello Chair at Unisinos University (Brazil) for 8 years. Her research addresses critical discourse studies, critical decolonial and intersectional approaches to rights and policies related to power, human rights and migration. She is a human rights activist and has a wide range of policy and practice-based experiences within migration and minorities contexts with intergovernmental bodies and NGOs in Latin America. She is also the former coordinator of the International Relations BA Program and the Executive Graduate Program in International Relations and Diplomacy at Unisinos University in Brazil. She is a former representative member of COMIRAT (Rio Grande do Sul State Committee for Migrants, Refugees, Stateless Persons, and Human Trafficking Survivors) and COMIRAT/POA (The city of Porto Alegre Committee for Migrants, Refugees, Stateless Persons, and Human Trafficking Survivors). She is a former member of NEABI (Afro descendants and Indigenous studies centre at Unisinos University) and a former member of its United Nations International Decade for People of African Descent Internal Commission. Mezzanotti is a former Associate Editor for the Human Rights Education Review (HRER/USN). She was a visiting faculty at the Federal Judges Superior School, Brazil, and, more recently, at the Institute of Regional Studies, Visiting Professors Programme at the Jagiellonian University, Kraków, Poland, and at the Visiting Professors Program at the PhD Program in Society, Culture, and Borders, State University of West Parana, Brazil. Her most recent publications address critical and decolonial views on the racialization of Human Rights, Indigenous Peoples on the move, the criminalization of humanitarian aid, migrant detention, refugee protection in Latin America and urban violence in Brazil.

  • University of South-Eastern Norway
    Dr. Associate Professor
    Drammen
  • Universidade do Vale do Rio dos Sinos
    Associate Professor
    Sao Leopoldo
  • Universidade do Vale do Rio dos Sinos
    Associate Professor
    Sao Leopoldo

Dr Gabriela Mezzanotti is Associate Professor in Social Sciences at the University of South-Eastern Norway and a Lawyer. She is the co-leader of USN’s research group “Human Rights and Diversities”. She holds a PhD in Social Sciences and a MA degree in International Law. She chaired the UNHCR Sergio Vieira de Mello Chair at Unisinos University (Brazil) for 8 years. Her research addresses critical discourse studies, critical decolonial and intersectional approaches to rights and policies related to power, human rights and migration. She is a human rights activist and has a wide range of policy and practice-based experiences within migration and minorities contexts with intergovernmental bodies and NGOs in Latin America. She is also the former coordinator of the International Relations BA Program and the Executive Graduate Program in International Relations and Diplomacy at Unisinos University in Brazil. She is a former representative member of COMIRAT (Rio Grande do Sul State Committee for Migrants, Refugees, Stateless Persons, and Human Trafficking Survivors) and COMIRAT/POA (The city of Porto Alegre Committee for Migrants, Refugees, Stateless Persons, and Human Trafficking Survivors). She is a former member of NEABI (Afro descendants and Indigenous studies centre at Unisinos University) and a former member of its United Nations International Decade for People of African Descent Internal Commission. Mezzanotti is a former Associate Editor for the Human Rights Education Review (HRER/USN). She was a visiting faculty at the Federal Judges Superior School, Brazil, and, more recently, at the Institute of Regional Studies, Visiting Professors Programme at the Jagiellonian University, Kraków, Poland, and at the Visiting Professors Program at the PhD Program in Society, Culture, and Borders, State University of West Parana, Brazil. Her most recent publications address critical and decolonial views on the racialization of Human Rights, Indigenous Peoples on the move, the criminalization of humanitarian aid, migrant detention, refugee protection in Latin America and urban violence in Brazil.

University of Sussex
Tutor
Brighton

Having recently completed a PhD in Human Geography at the University of Sussex on the bilateral transnational visiting mobilities of migrants and non-migrants between the UK and Bangladesh, Farid is currently working as a Research Fellow on the Horizon 2020 MIRNet project on ‘Migration and Integration Research and Networking’. He also teaches Global Migration, Culture Across Space and Time, and Introductory Human Geography as a School Tutor in the School of Global Studies, University of Sussex.

  • University of Sussex
    Tutor
    Brighton

Having recently completed a PhD in Human Geography at the University of Sussex on the bilateral transnational visiting mobilities of migrants and non-migrants between the UK and Bangladesh, Farid is currently working as a Research Fellow on the Horizon 2020 MIRNet project on ‘Migration and Integration Research and Networking’. He also teaches Global Migration, Culture Across Space and Time, and Introductory Human Geography as a School Tutor in the School of Global Studies, University of Sussex.

Center for Social and Migration Studies
Director
Kastoria

Domna Michail is a Professor of Anthropology of Education, Migration and Minorities, at the Department of Communication and Digital Media of the University of Western Macedonia-Greece (UOWM). She has completed her Bachelor Studies at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Diploma of Advanced Studies and Master of Arts in Social Anthropology at the University of Manchester and PhD in Social Anthropology at the London School of Economics (LSE) in Great Britain. Currently she is the Director of the Center of Migration and Social Studies of the School of Social and Humanities Studies of the UOWM.

  • Center for Social and Migration Studies
    Director
    Kastoria

Domna Michail is a Professor of Anthropology of Education, Migration and Minorities, at the Department of Communication and Digital Media of the University of Western Macedonia-Greece (UOWM). She has completed her Bachelor Studies at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Diploma of Advanced Studies and Master of Arts in Social Anthropology at the University of Manchester and PhD in Social Anthropology at the London School of Economics (LSE) in Great Britain. Currently she is the Director of the Center of Migration and Social Studies of the School of Social and Humanities Studies of the UOWM.

Paris School of Economics
Researcher
Paris

Benjamin is an economist. He is an expert on asylum seekers and refugees. He is researcher at the Paris School of Economics and a Research Fellow at the International Migration Economics Chair and Institut Convergences Migrations (Paris).

After obtaining his PhD (2017) at PSE/Paris I, he worked for several years as an economist in French Public Institutions (French Treasury and French Development Agency), where he conducted numerous analytical works in the context of economic crisis for the offices of the President of the Republic and the Minister of Economy.

His current research focuses on the evaluation of social and economic integration mechanisms for vulnerable populations, with a particular focus on refugees and the public policies dedicated to them. He directed the most important survey ever conducted in France on refugees: the survey on the Origin and Perspective of Refugees in France (OPReF).

  • Paris School of Economics
    Researcher
    Paris

Benjamin is an economist. He is an expert on asylum seekers and refugees. He is researcher at the Paris School of Economics and a Research Fellow at the International Migration Economics Chair and Institut Convergences Migrations (Paris).

After obtaining his PhD (2017) at PSE/Paris I, he worked for several years as an economist in French Public Institutions (French Treasury and French Development Agency), where he conducted numerous analytical works in the context of economic crisis for the offices of the President of the Republic and the Minister of Economy.

His current research focuses on the evaluation of social and economic integration mechanisms for vulnerable populations, with a particular focus on refugees and the public policies dedicated to them. He directed the most important survey ever conducted in France on refugees: the survey on the Origin and Perspective of Refugees in France (OPReF).

University of Oslo
Professor
Oslo

Arnfinn H. Midtbøen is a Professor of sociology at the University of Oslo. Midtbøen's research interests center on immigration and integration, including topics such as employment discrimination, integration, citizenship, descendants of migrants in education and work, and the history of migration research. In his research, Midtbøen combines a range of methods, including field and survey experiments, qualitative interviews, document analysis and traditional surveys. Midtbøen’s research has appeared in journals such as Proceedings of the National Academy of the Sciences (PNAS), Annual Review of Sociology, British Journal of Sociology, European Sociological Review, International Migration Review, Ethnic and Racial Studies, and Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies.

  • University of Oslo
    Professor
    Oslo

Arnfinn H. Midtbøen is a Professor of sociology at the University of Oslo. Midtbøen's research interests center on immigration and integration, including topics such as employment discrimination, integration, citizenship, descendants of migrants in education and work, and the history of migration research. In his research, Midtbøen combines a range of methods, including field and survey experiments, qualitative interviews, document analysis and traditional surveys. Midtbøen’s research has appeared in journals such as Proceedings of the National Academy of the Sciences (PNAS), Annual Review of Sociology, British Journal of Sociology, European Sociological Review, International Migration Review, Ethnic and Racial Studies, and Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies.

Ukrainian Catholic Univrsity
Professor
Lviv

Is a DAAD professor at the Faculty of Social and Cultural Sciences, European University Viadrina Frankfurt (Oder), Germany. She is also professor of sociology at the Ukrainian Catholic University (Lviv). In the spring semesters of 2020 and 2022 she was visiting lecturer at the Jagiellonian University (Krakow, Poland). She has participated in more than 20 sociological research projects, in 10 of which she was a principal investigator. She researches a wide range of areas, including the historical aspects of deviant and delinquent behavior, urban studies, paramilitary motivations, forced displacement, migration and has over twenty years of research and teaching experience. In 2016 she was a visiting professor in Ukraine European Dialogue at the Institute for Human Science (Vienna), and in 2015 she was Eugene and Daymel Shklar Research Fellow Harvard University, Ukrainian Research Institute.

  • Ukrainian Catholic Univrsity
    Professor
    Lviv

Is a DAAD professor at the Faculty of Social and Cultural Sciences, European University Viadrina Frankfurt (Oder), Germany. She is also professor of sociology at the Ukrainian Catholic University (Lviv). In the spring semesters of 2020 and 2022 she was visiting lecturer at the Jagiellonian University (Krakow, Poland). She has participated in more than 20 sociological research projects, in 10 of which she was a principal investigator. She researches a wide range of areas, including the historical aspects of deviant and delinquent behavior, urban studies, paramilitary motivations, forced displacement, migration and has over twenty years of research and teaching experience. In 2016 she was a visiting professor in Ukraine European Dialogue at the Institute for Human Science (Vienna), and in 2015 she was Eugene and Daymel Shklar Research Fellow Harvard University, Ukrainian Research Institute.

About the Migration Network Hub

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