Weronika Kloc-Nowak, PhD, is a sociologist employed at the Centre of Migration Research, Warsaw. She researches migrant families, with a particular focus on care, kinship and migrants' reproductive behaviours. Recent projects include "Grandparenting at a distance" a mixed-methods study of older Poles with geographically dispersed kin networks, and MIGFERT: "International mobility and disruptions in fertility patterns – towards new insights from a low fertility context". Weronika has extensive experience in qualitative methods, especially the biographic narrative interpretative method. She obtained her PhD from European University Institute, Florence, in 2015.
- University of Warsawresearcher, chair of CMR's Research Ethics CommitteeWarsaw
Weronika Kloc-Nowak, PhD, is a sociologist employed at the Centre of Migration Research, Warsaw. She researches migrant families, with a particular focus on care, kinship and migrants' reproductive behaviours. Recent projects include "Grandparenting at a distance" a mixed-methods study of older Poles with geographically dispersed kin networks, and MIGFERT: "International mobility and disruptions in fertility patterns – towards new insights from a low fertility context". Weronika has extensive experience in qualitative methods, especially the biographic narrative interpretative method. She obtained her PhD from European University Institute, Florence, in 2015.
Lucas Kluge is a Doctoral researcher in the group "Impacts of climate change on human population dynamics" at the Potsdam institute for climate impact research. His PhD project is titled "Heterogeneity and scale interactions in human migration and displacement" and supervised by Prof. Levermann and Dr. Jacob Schewe
Prior to his position at PIK he worked on complex networks, quantum networks and the numerical simulation of quantum dot lasers. Besides his studies at the Technical University Berlin, he was a visiting scholar at Duke University and University of Crete.
- Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact ResearchPhD researcherPotsdam
Lucas Kluge is a Doctoral researcher in the group "Impacts of climate change on human population dynamics" at the Potsdam institute for climate impact research. His PhD project is titled "Heterogeneity and scale interactions in human migration and displacement" and supervised by Prof. Levermann and Dr. Jacob Schewe
Prior to his position at PIK he worked on complex networks, quantum networks and the numerical simulation of quantum dot lasers. Besides his studies at the Technical University Berlin, he was a visiting scholar at Duke University and University of Crete.
- Masaryk University, Faculty of Social Studies: Brno, CZResearcherBrno
- Mendel University BrnoAssistant ProfessorBrno
- University of LuxembourgAssociate ProfessorEsch
I started my professional career at the age of 22 as a German teacher in Macedonia. After 20 years in teaching and training people, deep in my heart, I am firmly convinced that only passionate learners can make the world a better place.
I speak the most Slavic languages from the Balkan peninsula, German and English as second language and learn Italian. I have a different love relationship to each language I speak and I don't master anyone faultless, not even my mother tongue; o) Healthy mistake management is of great importance in the life long learning. Beside that, the world outside is merciless with multilingual people.
Further in Biography I studied Intercultural Communication, EU Policy and International Organizational Studies. Today I work as Cultural Sensitivity Trainer. But only in the role mother of two multilingual children, I got the idea to found the association, so I can actively support the intercultural coexistence in my new city Darmstadt. Above all, it was important for me to help multilingual children to master and enjoy daily routine with many languages.
- Xcultural FusionBusiness ownerDarmstadt
I started my professional career at the age of 22 as a German teacher in Macedonia. After 20 years in teaching and training people, deep in my heart, I am firmly convinced that only passionate learners can make the world a better place.
I speak the most Slavic languages from the Balkan peninsula, German and English as second language and learn Italian. I have a different love relationship to each language I speak and I don't master anyone faultless, not even my mother tongue; o) Healthy mistake management is of great importance in the life long learning. Beside that, the world outside is merciless with multilingual people.
Further in Biography I studied Intercultural Communication, EU Policy and International Organizational Studies. Today I work as Cultural Sensitivity Trainer. But only in the role mother of two multilingual children, I got the idea to found the association, so I can actively support the intercultural coexistence in my new city Darmstadt. Above all, it was important for me to help multilingual children to master and enjoy daily routine with many languages.
- VU AmsterdamPhDAmsterdam
Anna Knoll, leads ECDPM’s (www.ecdpm.org) portfolio on migration as Head of the Migration Programme. Anna’s interests and expertise lie in the field of migration in international cooperation between Africa and Europe.
With an academic background in Philosophy and Economics (BA, University of Bayreuth) and in International Political Economy (MSc, London School of Economics) her current research focuses on the interaction between migration, displacement and development processes, the external and development dimension of the EU’s migration and asylum policies, migration in European development policies as well as African narratives, policies and processes on migration.
Anna has carried out policy relevant research for ECDPM including field research in a number of African countries. She has experience in research design and implementation. Next to her role at ECDPM, she is currently pursuing a part-time PhD at the Maastricht School of Governance.
Prior to joining ECDPM, Anna has worked as German Fellow at the UN World Food Programme and as Stagiaire at the European Commission.
- European Center for Development Policy Management (ECDPM)Head of Migration and MobilityMaastricht
Anna Knoll, leads ECDPM’s (www.ecdpm.org) portfolio on migration as Head of the Migration Programme. Anna’s interests and expertise lie in the field of migration in international cooperation between Africa and Europe.
With an academic background in Philosophy and Economics (BA, University of Bayreuth) and in International Political Economy (MSc, London School of Economics) her current research focuses on the interaction between migration, displacement and development processes, the external and development dimension of the EU’s migration and asylum policies, migration in European development policies as well as African narratives, policies and processes on migration.
Anna has carried out policy relevant research for ECDPM including field research in a number of African countries. She has experience in research design and implementation. Next to her role at ECDPM, she is currently pursuing a part-time PhD at the Maastricht School of Governance.
Prior to joining ECDPM, Anna has worked as German Fellow at the UN World Food Programme and as Stagiaire at the European Commission.
Originally from the south of Germany, I got to study political science in Mannheim, Barcelona, and Konstanz (2007-2012), and then to do a PhD in political science in Lund, Sweden (2012-2017). After two subsequent stints as a postdoctoral researcher in Bremen and Lausanne, I moved to Stavanger, Norway in early 2021 to start my current position as an associate professor (førsteamanuensis) of political science.
- University of StavangerAssociate ProfessorStavanger
- University of LausannePostdoctoral ResearcherLausanne
- Universität BremenPostdoctoral FellowBremen
- Lunds UniversitetDoctoral researcherLund
- OECD Directorate for Employment Labour and Social AffairsConsultantParis
Originally from the south of Germany, I got to study political science in Mannheim, Barcelona, and Konstanz (2007-2012), and then to do a PhD in political science in Lund, Sweden (2012-2017). After two subsequent stints as a postdoctoral researcher in Bremen and Lausanne, I moved to Stavanger, Norway in early 2021 to start my current position as an associate professor (førsteamanuensis) of political science.
- National Archives, Faroe IslandsArchivist and researcherTórshavn
- Middlesex UniversityCo-Director Social Policy Research CentreLondon
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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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