I am a third year PhD student of anthropology at Queen’s University Belfast (UK) currently writing my dissertation, following a year of field work in Belfast. My dissertation examines the movements and visibility of Muslim women in politically and culturally segregated communities of post-conflict Northern Ireland. I engage with issues of migration, gender, visibility, spaces, relationality, and the body. This research has practical and policy implications. I am Reviews Editor for the Irish Journal of Anthropology. Previously, at Portland State University (USA), I completed a master’s thesis on post-conflict transformation practices in Libya. I then spent five years working globally with disaster-affected communities, post-conflict contexts and displaced persons to gain a practical understanding of social justice issues. I also served as an adjunct professor of anthropology at George Washington University (USA) lecturing on gender, development and humanitarianism in medical anthropology.
- Queen's University BelfastResearch Assistant (Forced Migration)Belfast
- George Washington UniversityMonitoring & Evaluation AdvisorWashington D.C.
- Portland State UniversityResearch Technical Advisor (Development & Disaster Recovery)Portland
- George Washington UniversityAdjunct ProfessorWashington D.C.
I am a third year PhD student of anthropology at Queen’s University Belfast (UK) currently writing my dissertation, following a year of field work in Belfast. My dissertation examines the movements and visibility of Muslim women in politically and culturally segregated communities of post-conflict Northern Ireland. I engage with issues of migration, gender, visibility, spaces, relationality, and the body. This research has practical and policy implications. I am Reviews Editor for the Irish Journal of Anthropology. Previously, at Portland State University (USA), I completed a master’s thesis on post-conflict transformation practices in Libya. I then spent five years working globally with disaster-affected communities, post-conflict contexts and displaced persons to gain a practical understanding of social justice issues. I also served as an adjunct professor of anthropology at George Washington University (USA) lecturing on gender, development and humanitarianism in medical anthropology.
I'm a sociologist interested in highly-skilled migration and higher education studies. I have experience in a wide range of qualitative methods (IDIs, FGIs, ethnography, etc.).
- University of Information Techhnology and ManagementAssistant ProfessorRzeszow
I'm a sociologist interested in highly-skilled migration and higher education studies. I have experience in a wide range of qualitative methods (IDIs, FGIs, ethnography, etc.).
- University of KonstanzPhD StudentKonstanz
Doris is senior researcher at the State Institute for Family Research at the University of Bamberg in Germany. She currently researches on integration, diversity and social cohesion in the fields of social work, family support and youth welfare policies, with specific emphasis on refugee families.
Her methodical focus is on applied empirical research, evaluation projects and academic knowledge transfer via (organisation) consulting and teaching.
- Staatsinstitut für Familienforschung an der Universität Bamberg (ifb)Senior ResearcherBamberg
- Europäisches Forum für Migrationsstudien(Senior) ResearcherBamberg
Doris is senior researcher at the State Institute for Family Research at the University of Bamberg in Germany. She currently researches on integration, diversity and social cohesion in the fields of social work, family support and youth welfare policies, with specific emphasis on refugee families.
Her methodical focus is on applied empirical research, evaluation projects and academic knowledge transfer via (organisation) consulting and teaching.
A Ph.D. Candidate working on civic integration policies, with a specific focus on the cases of Austria and Czechia
- Charles University, Faculty of Social SciencesPh.D. CandidatePrague
A Ph.D. Candidate working on civic integration policies, with a specific focus on the cases of Austria and Czechia
Lecturer in human geography, Loughborough University, Geography and Environment (as of 2018). Before joining Loughborough, I worked as the main researcher on the EU Horizon 2020 ‘YMOBILITY’ project at the University of Sussex, researching youth mobilities across Europe (2015-2018). I as was also a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Eastern Finland where she researched migrant children and families (2016-2018), founding director of the Centre for Diaspora and Migration Research, University of Latvia. As of September 2019 I am also Adjunct Professor, docent, migration and mobility studies, University of Eastern Finland, Geography department.
- University of Latviaelected researcherRiga
Lecturer in human geography, Loughborough University, Geography and Environment (as of 2018). Before joining Loughborough, I worked as the main researcher on the EU Horizon 2020 ‘YMOBILITY’ project at the University of Sussex, researching youth mobilities across Europe (2015-2018). I as was also a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Eastern Finland where she researched migrant children and families (2016-2018), founding director of the Centre for Diaspora and Migration Research, University of Latvia. As of September 2019 I am also Adjunct Professor, docent, migration and mobility studies, University of Eastern Finland, Geography department.
I am a Postgraduate Research Student within the School of Geography and Environmental Science at the University of Southampton. My PhD topic will explore the disparate ways in which migration has impacted the lives of Filipino labour migrants in the United Kingdom, as well as their left-behind family members in the Philippines. It will focus on the extent to which the migration of a family member affects dynamics of the family household. It will investigate the issues that migrants and the members of the left-behind family face as a result of migration and the various means through which both groups are able to sustain crucial filial responsibilities and affective ties (social reproductive and emotional labour) despite the geographical distance.
- University of SouthamptonPostgraduate ResearcherSouthampton
I am a Postgraduate Research Student within the School of Geography and Environmental Science at the University of Southampton. My PhD topic will explore the disparate ways in which migration has impacted the lives of Filipino labour migrants in the United Kingdom, as well as their left-behind family members in the Philippines. It will focus on the extent to which the migration of a family member affects dynamics of the family household. It will investigate the issues that migrants and the members of the left-behind family face as a result of migration and the various means through which both groups are able to sustain crucial filial responsibilities and affective ties (social reproductive and emotional labour) despite the geographical distance.
JOSÉ CARLOS LUQUE BRAZÁN
RESUMEN
Es profesor del Colegio de Humanidades y Ciencias Sociales de la Universidad Autónoma de la Ciudad de México (UACM). Egresado del doctorado en ciencias políticas y sociales de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Maestro en Ciencias Sociales por la Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales (FLACSO), sede México, graduado con honores y Licenciado en Antropología Social por la Universidad de Chile. Es miembro del Comité científico de la revista Ánfora de la Universidad Autónoma de Manizales de Colombia y del comité científico de la revista “Huellas de la Migración” de la Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México. Asimismo es Coordinador de la Red Latinoamericana de Estudios en Derechos Sociales.
Algunos de sus artículos recientes son: El retorno de la ciudadanía social en América Latina. Vol. 29 Núm. 53 (2022); Ciudadanía social en tiempos de pandemia en América Latina (Dossier), en coautoría con Silvestre Licea Dorantes, Universidad Autónoma de Manizales, Colombia. https://doi.org/10.30854/anf.v29.n53.2022.960; Los refugiados peruanos en Chile: de la democracia tutelada a la lucha por una nueva constitución política (1990-2020). Revista Andina De Estudios Políticos, 10 (1), 8–32, en coautoría con Moisés Rojas. https://doi.org/10.35004/raep.v10i1.180; “Capitalismo de chupacabras en una era post-política y post-migratoria”, en coautoría con Alyshia Gálvez, Revista Huellas de la Migración, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México (2019). https://doi.org/10.36677/hmigracion.v4i7.11945; “Derecho y ciencia política en el pensamiento de Guillermo O’Donnell” (Dossier), en coautoría con Gabriela Ippolito O´Donnell, Revista IUS, Instituto de Ciencias Jurídicas de Puebla, México (2018); Su última publicación es:
Líneas de trabajo: Dimensión política de la migración; violencia política y nuevas configuraciones de la ciudadanía.
- Universidad Autónoma de la Ciudad de MéxicoProfesor InvestigadorBenito Juarez
JOSÉ CARLOS LUQUE BRAZÁN
RESUMEN
Es profesor del Colegio de Humanidades y Ciencias Sociales de la Universidad Autónoma de la Ciudad de México (UACM). Egresado del doctorado en ciencias políticas y sociales de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Maestro en Ciencias Sociales por la Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales (FLACSO), sede México, graduado con honores y Licenciado en Antropología Social por la Universidad de Chile. Es miembro del Comité científico de la revista Ánfora de la Universidad Autónoma de Manizales de Colombia y del comité científico de la revista “Huellas de la Migración” de la Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México. Asimismo es Coordinador de la Red Latinoamericana de Estudios en Derechos Sociales.
Algunos de sus artículos recientes son: El retorno de la ciudadanía social en América Latina. Vol. 29 Núm. 53 (2022); Ciudadanía social en tiempos de pandemia en América Latina (Dossier), en coautoría con Silvestre Licea Dorantes, Universidad Autónoma de Manizales, Colombia. https://doi.org/10.30854/anf.v29.n53.2022.960; Los refugiados peruanos en Chile: de la democracia tutelada a la lucha por una nueva constitución política (1990-2020). Revista Andina De Estudios Políticos, 10 (1), 8–32, en coautoría con Moisés Rojas. https://doi.org/10.35004/raep.v10i1.180; “Capitalismo de chupacabras en una era post-política y post-migratoria”, en coautoría con Alyshia Gálvez, Revista Huellas de la Migración, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México (2019). https://doi.org/10.36677/hmigracion.v4i7.11945; “Derecho y ciencia política en el pensamiento de Guillermo O’Donnell” (Dossier), en coautoría con Gabriela Ippolito O´Donnell, Revista IUS, Instituto de Ciencias Jurídicas de Puebla, México (2018); Su última publicación es:
Líneas de trabajo: Dimensión política de la migración; violencia política y nuevas configuraciones de la ciudadanía.
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