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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.

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Base de données d'experts

 
Résultats de la recherche
91 - 100 résultats sur 572
University of the Philippines
Associate Professor
Quezon City

Jocelyn O. Celero is currently Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Japan Studies Program at the Asian Center, University of the Philippines Diliman. She teaches courses on Japanese society, culture, politics and economy. She obtained her PhD in International Studies at Waseda University, Japan in 2016. She has published on migration and transnationality of Filipino migrants and Japanese-Filipinos. Since 2019, she has served as Research Fellow/Focal Person for UP-CIFAL Philippines.

  • University of the Philippines
    Associate Professor
    Quezon City
  • UP CIFAL Philippines
    Consultant/Research Fellow/Focal Person
    Quezon City

Jocelyn O. Celero is currently Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Japan Studies Program at the Asian Center, University of the Philippines Diliman. She teaches courses on Japanese society, culture, politics and economy. She obtained her PhD in International Studies at Waseda University, Japan in 2016. She has published on migration and transnationality of Filipino migrants and Japanese-Filipinos. Since 2019, she has served as Research Fellow/Focal Person for UP-CIFAL Philippines.

Dublin City University
Senior research fellow
Dublin

I am a researcher whose work lies at the cross section of gender,
migration and diasporic studies from a postcolonial feminist perspective. I am Principle
Investigator of a five-year Irish Research Council project on migrant South Asian women’s
experience of accessing support services in Ireland. I am specifically interested in looking at
how ideas around gender, masculinities, and caste migrate transnationally and how it effects
migrant women of colour in Europe. I have actively sought to collaborate with civil society
partners outside academia, narrowly defined, in the co-production of knowledge and the
communication of research findings for societal impact My work has been published and
accepted for publication in leading international peer-reviewed publications including
International Feminist Journal of Politics, Economic and Political Weekly, Religion and
Gender, Routledge, and Cambridge University Press. Since finishing my PhD in 2019, I have
led three research projects worth more than €500,000 funded by the Irish Research Council,
and Ireland India Institute, and collaborated on international research projects with colleagues
at Goldsmiths, University of London, Tampere University, Lucerne University, ActionAid
Ireland, ActionAid Nepal. As a Postdoctoral Fellow in Dublin City University’s School of Law
and Government, I have created and taught modules on postcolonial politics, gender studies
and masculinity studies to DCU’s undergraduate and postgraduate students. In my former role
as an Editor, I have been in charge of the production of 13 top rated academic journals from
Sage Publications.

  • Dublin City University
    Senior research fellow
    Dublin

I am a researcher whose work lies at the cross section of gender,
migration and diasporic studies from a postcolonial feminist perspective. I am Principle
Investigator of a five-year Irish Research Council project on migrant South Asian women’s
experience of accessing support services in Ireland. I am specifically interested in looking at
how ideas around gender, masculinities, and caste migrate transnationally and how it effects
migrant women of colour in Europe. I have actively sought to collaborate with civil society
partners outside academia, narrowly defined, in the co-production of knowledge and the
communication of research findings for societal impact My work has been published and
accepted for publication in leading international peer-reviewed publications including
International Feminist Journal of Politics, Economic and Political Weekly, Religion and
Gender, Routledge, and Cambridge University Press. Since finishing my PhD in 2019, I have
led three research projects worth more than €500,000 funded by the Irish Research Council,
and Ireland India Institute, and collaborated on international research projects with colleagues
at Goldsmiths, University of London, Tampere University, Lucerne University, ActionAid
Ireland, ActionAid Nepal. As a Postdoctoral Fellow in Dublin City University’s School of Law
and Government, I have created and taught modules on postcolonial politics, gender studies
and masculinity studies to DCU’s undergraduate and postgraduate students. In my former role
as an Editor, I have been in charge of the production of 13 top rated academic journals from
Sage Publications.

National Chengchi University
Associate Professor
Taipei

Ching-An Chang is an associate professor from the Department of Arabic Language and Culture at the National Chengchi University in Taiwan (R.O.C.). His research interests include 1) Middle East studies (with a special focus on the Levant), 2) refugee, migration, and diaspora in the Middle East, and 3) transnationalism. His work has appeared in International Migration, Journal of Immigrant and Refugee Studies, Social Inclusion, and Insight Turkey.

  • National Chengchi University
    Associate Professor
    Taipei
  • National Chengchi University
    Assistant Professor
    Taipei

Ching-An Chang is an associate professor from the Department of Arabic Language and Culture at the National Chengchi University in Taiwan (R.O.C.). His research interests include 1) Middle East studies (with a special focus on the Levant), 2) refugee, migration, and diaspora in the Middle East, and 3) transnationalism. His work has appeared in International Migration, Journal of Immigrant and Refugee Studies, Social Inclusion, and Insight Turkey.

Faculty of Socilogy and Anthropology, Thammasat
Assistant Professor,
Bangkok

Chantanee Charoensri is a sociologist of migration. She is currently the dean of the faculty of Sociology and Anthropology at Thammasat University, Bangkok, Thailand. Her research includes: Thai Daughters, English Wives: A Critical Ethnography of Transnational Lives; Virtual Mobility among Highly Skilled Migrants in Thailand: Mobility movement and virtual mobility; From Migration Studies to Mobility Paradigm: An Evaluation of Frameworks Suitable for a Study of Highly Skilled Migration. She is a project leader for Thai-Norwegian couples in Thailand. Impact of transnational welfare and migration policy on return migration, which is a part of ThaiMig Project funded by Vid Specialized University's excellence in research. She is also a member of a research group : Transnational Intimacy and Migration Process (find out about the cluster here: https://transnationalintim.wixsite.com/website-3/team). Previously, she was a co-researcher for the Thai Entrepreneurs in the UK (Newton Fund).

  • Faculty of Socilogy and Anthropology, Thammasat
    Assistant Professor,
    Bangkok

Chantanee Charoensri is a sociologist of migration. She is currently the dean of the faculty of Sociology and Anthropology at Thammasat University, Bangkok, Thailand. Her research includes: Thai Daughters, English Wives: A Critical Ethnography of Transnational Lives; Virtual Mobility among Highly Skilled Migrants in Thailand: Mobility movement and virtual mobility; From Migration Studies to Mobility Paradigm: An Evaluation of Frameworks Suitable for a Study of Highly Skilled Migration. She is a project leader for Thai-Norwegian couples in Thailand. Impact of transnational welfare and migration policy on return migration, which is a part of ThaiMig Project funded by Vid Specialized University's excellence in research. She is also a member of a research group : Transnational Intimacy and Migration Process (find out about the cluster here: https://transnationalintim.wixsite.com/website-3/team). Previously, she was a co-researcher for the Thai Entrepreneurs in the UK (Newton Fund).

Rutgers University-New Brunswick
Assistant Professor of Sociology
New Brunswick

My scholarship interrogates the significance of social categories as they mediate myriad opportunities and constraints in the everyday lives of immigrants and ethnoracial minorities. I utilize diverse methodologies, data sources, and theoretical perspectives to investigate how ascriptive social categories (race, ethnicity, nationality, religion, etc.) and their corresponding symbolic boundaries are activated, reinforced, and contested within organizations, politics, and popular culture, among others. My current research program consists of three streams: 1) immigrant organizations, 2) immigrant politics and civic participation, and 3) the sociology of music.

  • Rutgers University-New Brunswick
    Assistant Professor of Sociology
    New Brunswick
  • International Migration Institute
    Research Fellow
    Amsterdam
  • American Sociological Association: Section on Int'l Migration
    Secretary and Treasurer
    Washington D.C.

My scholarship interrogates the significance of social categories as they mediate myriad opportunities and constraints in the everyday lives of immigrants and ethnoracial minorities. I utilize diverse methodologies, data sources, and theoretical perspectives to investigate how ascriptive social categories (race, ethnicity, nationality, religion, etc.) and their corresponding symbolic boundaries are activated, reinforced, and contested within organizations, politics, and popular culture, among others. My current research program consists of three streams: 1) immigrant organizations, 2) immigrant politics and civic participation, and 3) the sociology of music.

  • FLAME University
    Associate Professor & Chair (Sociology)
    Pune
  • FLAME University
    Associate Professor of Sociology and Digital Humanities
    Pune
  • Indian Institute of Technology Jodhpur
    Assistant Professor of Sociology
    Jodhpur

I am a doctoral researcher in Politics at the Department of Politics and International Relations at the University of Oxford. Broadly, I am interested in the politics of migration in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC). More specifically, I am interested in understanding how national governments across LAC manage different forms of migration (immigration, in-transit migration, forced migration, and return migration), what factors shape their management strategies, what explains variation across national governments in the region, and how such management strategies shape the lives of migrant communities. I address such questions by employing qualitative methods.

I am a doctoral researcher in Politics at the Department of Politics and International Relations at the University of Oxford. Broadly, I am interested in the politics of migration in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC). More specifically, I am interested in understanding how national governments across LAC manage different forms of migration (immigration, in-transit migration, forced migration, and return migration), what factors shape their management strategies, what explains variation across national governments in the region, and how such management strategies shape the lives of migrant communities. I address such questions by employing qualitative methods.

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
PhD Candidate
Brussels

Lin Chen is a PhD candidate in Social Sciences at KU Leuven, Department of Political Science, at the research group of Leuven International and European Studies, and jointly in Sociology at Vrije Universiteit Brussel, at the research group of Interface Demography. She holds previous degrees as Master of Arts in Sociology at Columbia University, Masters of Arts in Economics in Boston University, and Master of Arts at Scoical Sciences in Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Her doctoral research topic is research project focuses on the South-to-South student mobility from Africa to China, which aims to investigate “How Do Migration Networks Facilitate African Student Mobility and Integration In China? - A Social Network Perspective on South-to-South Migration”.

  • Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
    PhD Candidate
    Brussels

Lin Chen is a PhD candidate in Social Sciences at KU Leuven, Department of Political Science, at the research group of Leuven International and European Studies, and jointly in Sociology at Vrije Universiteit Brussel, at the research group of Interface Demography. She holds previous degrees as Master of Arts in Sociology at Columbia University, Masters of Arts in Economics in Boston University, and Master of Arts at Scoical Sciences in Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Her doctoral research topic is research project focuses on the South-to-South student mobility from Africa to China, which aims to investigate “How Do Migration Networks Facilitate African Student Mobility and Integration In China? - A Social Network Perspective on South-to-South Migration”.

Université Libre de Bruxelles
PhD researcher
Brussels

I am a PhD researcher at the Laboratory of Anthropology of Contemporary Worlds (LAMC), Institute of Sociology, Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB), Brussels, Belgium. I am researching ethnoracial power dynamixs in postcolonial DR Coongo through the case of Sino-Congolese intimate relationships. My previous work focused on Chinese gay student migration in France.

  • Université Libre de Bruxelles
    PhD researcher
    Brussels

I am a PhD researcher at the Laboratory of Anthropology of Contemporary Worlds (LAMC), Institute of Sociology, Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB), Brussels, Belgium. I am researching ethnoracial power dynamixs in postcolonial DR Coongo through the case of Sino-Congolese intimate relationships. My previous work focused on Chinese gay student migration in France.

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