Aller au contenu principal

Base de données d’experts

Apprenez des autres qui mettent en oeuvre le Pacte modial sur les migrations et soumettez votre propre pratique.

En partenariat avec le Migration Research Hub (pôle de recherche sur la migration) du réseau IMISCOE, cette base de données donne accès à un large éventail de spécialistes de la migration du monde entier. Les universitaires et les chercheurs membres du réseau IMISCOE contribuent, par leurs publications et leur expertise, à faire avancer l’innovation dans le champ des études sur les migrations, et apportent des connaissances sur diverses questions en lien avec le Pacte mondial sur les migrations. Des liens vers leurs travaux sont indiqués dans leurs profils. Explorez la base de données par spécialité et par lieu pour trouver un expert et consulter ses travaux les plus récents. Connectez-vous pour contacter directement un expert.

Avertissement : la mise en contact avec les experts est assurée par l’intermédiaire du MRH. La présence dans cette base de données n’implique aucun aval de la part du Réseau des Nations Unies sur les migrations ou de ses membres.

Demander votre inscription

Fichier des pairs évaluateurs

Les contenus soumis au Pôle du Réseau sur les migrations sont dans un premier temps examinés par des spécialistes des Nations Unies et d’ailleurs. Les demandes d’inscription au fichier sont en tout temps bienvenues. Informez-vous ici sur les critères d’évaluation.

Postulez pour rejoindre le groupe d'experts

Base de données d'experts

 
Résultats de la recherche
551 - 560 résultats sur 572
University of Sydney
ARC DECRA Research Fellow
Sydney

Leah Williams Veazey is ARC DECRA Research Fellow in the Sydney Centre for Healthy Societies in the School of Social and Political Sciences at The University of Sydney. She is the author of the award-winning book Migrant Mothers in the Digital Age (2021, Routledge) and has published widely in the areas of migration, parenthood, digital cultures, and experiences of health and healthcare. Her research uses qualitative methods, most commonly in-depth interviews, to explore contemporary social experiences, with a focus on the intersections of health, mobility and relational sociology.

Leah's current research, funded by an Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (DECRA) entitled "Future-proofing Australia's Care Economy", explores the intersections of work, migration and care in the lives of healthcare workers and healthcare students. Specifically, the project explores how healthcare workers’ family relationships and informal care responsibilities shape their migration decisions, experiences in the workplace and plans for the future.

Leah co-convenes The Australian Sociological Association’s Migration, Ethnicity and Multiculturalism Thematic Group, and co-leads the Migration, Im/mobility and Belonging Research Theme at the Sydney Centre for Healthy Societies. She is Associate Editor at the Australian Journal of Social Issues, and an Associate Investigator at the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for the Digital Child.

Leah completed her PhD in Sociology at the University of Sydney, a qualitative study of migrant mothers and their online communities in Australia, supervised by Associate Professor Catriona Elder and Professor Susan Goodwin. Since then, she has taught across the Discipline of Sociology & Criminology and the School for Public Health, and has worked on a number of research projects, including an ARC-funded project on the history of sociology, led by Associate Professor Fran Collyer, and an NHRMC-funded project on the experiences of healthcare workers during the COVID-19 pandemic, led by Professors Lyn Gilbert and Alex Broom. Her recent projects include experiences of contemporary cancer care, the social life of death, and the social dimensions of antimicrobial resistance.

  • University of Sydney
    ARC DECRA Research Fellow
    Sydney
  • The University of Sydney
    Postdoctoral Research Associate
    Sydney
  • The University of Sydney
    Research Officer
    Sydney
  • University of Sydney
    Research assistant
    Sydney
  • University of Sydney School of Public Health
    Tutor
    Sydney

Leah Williams Veazey is ARC DECRA Research Fellow in the Sydney Centre for Healthy Societies in the School of Social and Political Sciences at The University of Sydney. She is the author of the award-winning book Migrant Mothers in the Digital Age (2021, Routledge) and has published widely in the areas of migration, parenthood, digital cultures, and experiences of health and healthcare. Her research uses qualitative methods, most commonly in-depth interviews, to explore contemporary social experiences, with a focus on the intersections of health, mobility and relational sociology.

Leah's current research, funded by an Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (DECRA) entitled "Future-proofing Australia's Care Economy", explores the intersections of work, migration and care in the lives of healthcare workers and healthcare students. Specifically, the project explores how healthcare workers’ family relationships and informal care responsibilities shape their migration decisions, experiences in the workplace and plans for the future.

Leah co-convenes The Australian Sociological Association’s Migration, Ethnicity and Multiculturalism Thematic Group, and co-leads the Migration, Im/mobility and Belonging Research Theme at the Sydney Centre for Healthy Societies. She is Associate Editor at the Australian Journal of Social Issues, and an Associate Investigator at the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for the Digital Child.

Leah completed her PhD in Sociology at the University of Sydney, a qualitative study of migrant mothers and their online communities in Australia, supervised by Associate Professor Catriona Elder and Professor Susan Goodwin. Since then, she has taught across the Discipline of Sociology & Criminology and the School for Public Health, and has worked on a number of research projects, including an ARC-funded project on the history of sociology, led by Associate Professor Fran Collyer, and an NHRMC-funded project on the experiences of healthcare workers during the COVID-19 pandemic, led by Professors Lyn Gilbert and Alex Broom. Her recent projects include experiences of contemporary cancer care, the social life of death, and the social dimensions of antimicrobial resistance.

Complutense University of Madrid
Ph.D. Student
Madrid

Zetong Xiao is a Ph.D. Student in History of Latin America at Complutense University of Madrid. His research project focuses on Chinese immigration to Costa Rica between 1900-2010, with an emphasis on the transformation of transnational connections and the construction of migrant networks. He is also expanding his interest to food studies, particularly the cultural politics of food and foodscapes of Chinese Latin American cuisine.

  • Complutense University of Madrid
    Ph.D. Student
    Madrid

Zetong Xiao is a Ph.D. Student in History of Latin America at Complutense University of Madrid. His research project focuses on Chinese immigration to Costa Rica between 1900-2010, with an emphasis on the transformation of transnational connections and the construction of migrant networks. He is also expanding his interest to food studies, particularly the cultural politics of food and foodscapes of Chinese Latin American cuisine.

Università Ca' Foscari
Marie Skłodowska Curie Fellow
Venezia

My interdisciplinary research connects the theoretical and conceptual borders of political science, sociology, and political psychology. Specifically, I work on migrant organisations in host countries (diaspora organizations) and recipient countries (civic networks and organizations that advocate refugee /migrant rights). In my current project, I investigate alternative communicative narratives that such organisations can adopt to reach out to the wider public. These communicative narratives reframe migrants and refugees as 'deserving' and 'rights-bearing agents' and seek to generate cross-partisan public deliberation and positive attitudes. In my current project, I combine fieldwork, network analysis, surveys and online randomized experiments to predict how social change for more inclusive societies can be initiated. This research aims to offer policy-relevant alternatives to change racialized attitudes of various ideological, socio-economic, and psychographic groups as well as non-citizens (migrants and refugees).

  • Università Ca' Foscari
    Marie Skłodowska Curie Fellow
    Venezia
  • Northwestern University
    Researcher
    Chicago

My interdisciplinary research connects the theoretical and conceptual borders of political science, sociology, and political psychology. Specifically, I work on migrant organisations in host countries (diaspora organizations) and recipient countries (civic networks and organizations that advocate refugee /migrant rights). In my current project, I investigate alternative communicative narratives that such organisations can adopt to reach out to the wider public. These communicative narratives reframe migrants and refugees as 'deserving' and 'rights-bearing agents' and seek to generate cross-partisan public deliberation and positive attitudes. In my current project, I combine fieldwork, network analysis, surveys and online randomized experiments to predict how social change for more inclusive societies can be initiated. This research aims to offer policy-relevant alternatives to change racialized attitudes of various ideological, socio-economic, and psychographic groups as well as non-citizens (migrants and refugees).

GRITIM-UPF
Senior Researcher
Barcelona

Evren Yalaz is a postdoctoral researcher at GRITIM-UPF (Interdisciplinary Research Group on Migration-Universitat Pompeu Fabra). Her areas of interest include qualitative research in migration studies, research ethics, migrant politics, transnationalism, and social movements.

  • GRITIM-UPF
    Senior Researcher
    Barcelona

Evren Yalaz is a postdoctoral researcher at GRITIM-UPF (Interdisciplinary Research Group on Migration-Universitat Pompeu Fabra). Her areas of interest include qualitative research in migration studies, research ethics, migrant politics, transnationalism, and social movements.

Academy of International Affairs North Rhine-Westphalia
Research Fellow
Bonn

Dr. Inci Öykü Yener-Roderburg is a full-time researcher at the Academy of International Affairs NRW and a lecturer at the Cologne Center for Comparative Politics, University of Cologne.
Until recently, Dr. Yener-Roderburg was a postdoc/research associate at the Institute for Turkish Studies, University of Duisburg-Essen, acted as an external collaborator for the ERC-funded project “Migration, transnationalism and social protection in (post-) crisis Europe”, CEDEM, University of Liège, Belgium, and contributed as a country expert for Germany in the NSW Government funded project “Building Democratic Resilience”, the Centre for Deliberative Democracy and Global Governance (CDDGG), University of Canberra, Australia.
Dr Yener-Roderburg holds a PhD in Political Science (Cotutelle) from the University of Strasbourg and the University of Duisburg-Essen, and an MA from the Australian National University. Her research interests include external voting, transnational political engagement of migrants, citizenship and qualitative research methods. Dr Yener-Roderburg has published in high-impact academic journals and is frequently featured in the European media in particular.

  • Academy of International Affairs North Rhine-Westphalia
    Research Fellow
    Bonn
  • University of Cologne - Cologne Center for Comparative Politics (CCCP)
    Lecturer
    Cologne

Dr. Inci Öykü Yener-Roderburg is a full-time researcher at the Academy of International Affairs NRW and a lecturer at the Cologne Center for Comparative Politics, University of Cologne.
Until recently, Dr. Yener-Roderburg was a postdoc/research associate at the Institute for Turkish Studies, University of Duisburg-Essen, acted as an external collaborator for the ERC-funded project “Migration, transnationalism and social protection in (post-) crisis Europe”, CEDEM, University of Liège, Belgium, and contributed as a country expert for Germany in the NSW Government funded project “Building Democratic Resilience”, the Centre for Deliberative Democracy and Global Governance (CDDGG), University of Canberra, Australia.
Dr Yener-Roderburg holds a PhD in Political Science (Cotutelle) from the University of Strasbourg and the University of Duisburg-Essen, and an MA from the Australian National University. Her research interests include external voting, transnational political engagement of migrants, citizenship and qualitative research methods. Dr Yener-Roderburg has published in high-impact academic journals and is frequently featured in the European media in particular.

Rutgers University

Lior Yohanani is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Sociology at Rutgers University. He holds an MA in Sociology from Tel Aviv University and from Rutgers. His work focuses on questions of migration, nationalism, identity, and collective action. In his dissertation project, Lior focuses on diaspora soldiers in the Israeli military. He examines what makes those soldiers come to Israel and join the military, the service period's impact on their views and migration intentions, and the role of state initiatives and diaspora organizations in advancing recruitment. Lior’s work has been published in Nations and Nationalism and in Sociological Forum.

  • Rutgers University

Lior Yohanani is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Sociology at Rutgers University. He holds an MA in Sociology from Tel Aviv University and from Rutgers. His work focuses on questions of migration, nationalism, identity, and collective action. In his dissertation project, Lior focuses on diaspora soldiers in the Israeli military. He examines what makes those soldiers come to Israel and join the military, the service period's impact on their views and migration intentions, and the role of state initiatives and diaspora organizations in advancing recruitment. Lior’s work has been published in Nations and Nationalism and in Sociological Forum.

Dalarna University
Professor of English
Falun

Carmen Zamorano Llena, PhD, is Professor of English at Dalarna University, Sweden. She is also the Literary Editor of the peer-reviewed journal Nordic Irish Studies, and Series Co-editor of Peter Lang’s Cultural Identity Studies series. She has published widely on contemporary Irish and British fiction and poetry. Her most recent publication is Fictions of Migration in Britain and Ireland (Palgrave Macmillan 2020), and she is also co-editor of several collections of essays, including Urban and Rural Landscapes: Language, Literature and Culture in Modern Ireland (Peter Lang, 2011), and Transculturality and Literature: Redefinitions of Identity in Contemporary Literature (Rodopi, 2013). In 2010 she was awarded a three-year research grant (2011-2013) by the Swedish Research Council (Vetenskapsrådet) to develop her research project entitled “Globalisation, Migration and Communal Narratives of Belonging: Changing National Narratives in Contemporary Irish and British Fiction.” Over the last decade her research has mainly focused on literature and globalization and literatures of migration in Britain and Ireland, and she has published extensively in these fields of specialization in peer-reviewed publications. She is a participant researcher in the funded NOS-HS workshop series “Temporalities and Subjectivities of Crossing: Contemporary Public Migration Narratives in Europe” (2019-2020). She is also the leader of a research group on literatures of migration in Europe at Dalarna University, whose most recent focus is on media and literary constructs of Muslim identity in Europe, past and present.

  • Dalarna University
    Professor of English
    Falun

Carmen Zamorano Llena, PhD, is Professor of English at Dalarna University, Sweden. She is also the Literary Editor of the peer-reviewed journal Nordic Irish Studies, and Series Co-editor of Peter Lang’s Cultural Identity Studies series. She has published widely on contemporary Irish and British fiction and poetry. Her most recent publication is Fictions of Migration in Britain and Ireland (Palgrave Macmillan 2020), and she is also co-editor of several collections of essays, including Urban and Rural Landscapes: Language, Literature and Culture in Modern Ireland (Peter Lang, 2011), and Transculturality and Literature: Redefinitions of Identity in Contemporary Literature (Rodopi, 2013). In 2010 she was awarded a three-year research grant (2011-2013) by the Swedish Research Council (Vetenskapsrådet) to develop her research project entitled “Globalisation, Migration and Communal Narratives of Belonging: Changing National Narratives in Contemporary Irish and British Fiction.” Over the last decade her research has mainly focused on literature and globalization and literatures of migration in Britain and Ireland, and she has published extensively in these fields of specialization in peer-reviewed publications. She is a participant researcher in the funded NOS-HS workshop series “Temporalities and Subjectivities of Crossing: Contemporary Public Migration Narratives in Europe” (2019-2020). She is also the leader of a research group on literatures of migration in Europe at Dalarna University, whose most recent focus is on media and literary constructs of Muslim identity in Europe, past and present.

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

*Toutes les références au Kosovo doivent être comprises dans le contexte de la résolution 1244 (1999) du Conseil de sécurité des Nations Unies.