- Copenhagen Business SchoolAssistant ProfessorCopenhagen
Elżbieta M. Goździak is a Visiting Professor at the Center for Migration Studies, Adam Mickiewicz University and Adjunct Lecturer in the School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University. Her research agenda focuses on migrant mobility and integration, migration and trafficking, medicalization of human suffering, and migrancy and childhoods. From 2002 to 2018, she was Research Professor at the Institute for the Study of International Migration (ISIM) at Georgetown. She also served as an editor-in-chief of International Migration, a peer-reviewed interdisciplinary journal on migration policy and research. In 2016, she was the George Soros Chair of Public Policy at the Central European University (CEU) in Budapest, Hungary.
Elżbieta is a recipient of several Fulbright grants as well as a residential fellowship at the Rockefeller Center in Bellagio, Italy. Her recent books include: Human Trafficking as a New (In)Security Threat (Palgrave 2020) and Europe and the Refugee Response A Crisis of Values? (Routledge 2020) (editor with Izabella Main and Brigitte Suter).
Elżbieta received her doctorate from the Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, Poland in 1984.
- Georgetown UniversityResearch ProfessorWashington
- Adam Mickiewicz UniversityVisiting ProfessorPoznań
Elżbieta M. Goździak is a Visiting Professor at the Center for Migration Studies, Adam Mickiewicz University and Adjunct Lecturer in the School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University. Her research agenda focuses on migrant mobility and integration, migration and trafficking, medicalization of human suffering, and migrancy and childhoods. From 2002 to 2018, she was Research Professor at the Institute for the Study of International Migration (ISIM) at Georgetown. She also served as an editor-in-chief of International Migration, a peer-reviewed interdisciplinary journal on migration policy and research. In 2016, she was the George Soros Chair of Public Policy at the Central European University (CEU) in Budapest, Hungary.
Elżbieta is a recipient of several Fulbright grants as well as a residential fellowship at the Rockefeller Center in Bellagio, Italy. Her recent books include: Human Trafficking as a New (In)Security Threat (Palgrave 2020) and Europe and the Refugee Response A Crisis of Values? (Routledge 2020) (editor with Izabella Main and Brigitte Suter).
Elżbieta received her doctorate from the Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, Poland in 1984.
Els de Graauw (she/her/hers) is Professor of Political Science at Baruch College, CUNY, and Deputy Director of the International Migration Studies MA Program at the CUNY Graduate Center. She is an affiliate faculty of Black and Latino Studies and the Austin W. Marxe School of Public and International Affairs at Baruch College, as well as of the International Migration Studies MA Program and the Political Science MA and PhD Program at the CUNY Graduate Center. Els is interested in immigration, civil society organizations, urban politics, government bureaucracies, and public policy, with a focus on understanding how governmental and nongovernmental organizations build institutional capacity for immigrant integration and representation.
Els de Graauw (she/her/hers) is Professor of Political Science at Baruch College, CUNY, and Deputy Director of the International Migration Studies MA Program at the CUNY Graduate Center. She is an affiliate faculty of Black and Latino Studies and the Austin W. Marxe School of Public and International Affairs at Baruch College, as well as of the International Migration Studies MA Program and the Political Science MA and PhD Program at the CUNY Graduate Center. Els is interested in immigration, civil society organizations, urban politics, government bureaucracies, and public policy, with a focus on understanding how governmental and nongovernmental organizations build institutional capacity for immigrant integration and representation.
Prof. Dr. Izabela Grabowska is Full Professor of Social Sciences; sociologist and economist; from the 1st of September 2021 a Professor at Kozminski University, leads CRASH Center for Research on Social Change and Human Mobility; 2014-2021 a Professor at SWPS University of Social Sciences and Humanities in Warsaw (SWPS University; worked there since 2005); 2016-2021 elected Director of the Interdisciplinary Doctoral School (300 PhD students, 4 disciplines, 4 doctoral paths) of SWPS University; leader of Mobility Research Group with an onward activity; established and headed Youth Research Center of SWPS University (2015-2019); 2002-2019 Research Fellow at the Centre of Migration Research; since 2020 member of Scientific Board of Center of Migration Research at university of Warsaw; 2008-2019 member of IMISCOE Executive Board and Board of Directors; on behalf of CMR; former national expert of the European Commission in ESCO (Classification of European Skills, Competences, Qualifications and Occupations) and European Mobility Partnership; publishes in highly impact factor journals, e.g.: Work, Employment and Society, Journal of Ethnic Studies, Europe-Asia Studies, Journal of Youth Studies, International Migration; co-author of the research monograph Migration and the Transfer of Informal Human Capital: Insights from Central Europe and Mexico (with Jastrzebowska, Routledge 2022); author of Movers and Stayers: Migration, Mobility and Skills (Lang 2016), co-author of research monograph: The Impact of Migration on Poland: EU Mobility and Social Change (with White, Kaczmarczyk and Slany, UCL Press 2018) and Migrants as Agents of Change (with Garapich, Jazwinska and Radziwinowiczowna, Palgrave Macmillan 2017); co-editor of Mobility in Transition. Migration Patterns After EU Enlargement (Amsterdam University Press 2013). She has led research projects on: migrants’ careers, social remittances, peer-groups & migration, life courses of young migrants & Brexit (in progress till 2021), migrant liquid integration (H2020 MIMY, in progress). She is active in building international research consortia in EU Framework Programs and bilateral schemes
- Kozminski University, Central EuropeDirector of CRASH Center for Research on Social Change and Human MobilityWarsaw
Prof. Dr. Izabela Grabowska is Full Professor of Social Sciences; sociologist and economist; from the 1st of September 2021 a Professor at Kozminski University, leads CRASH Center for Research on Social Change and Human Mobility; 2014-2021 a Professor at SWPS University of Social Sciences and Humanities in Warsaw (SWPS University; worked there since 2005); 2016-2021 elected Director of the Interdisciplinary Doctoral School (300 PhD students, 4 disciplines, 4 doctoral paths) of SWPS University; leader of Mobility Research Group with an onward activity; established and headed Youth Research Center of SWPS University (2015-2019); 2002-2019 Research Fellow at the Centre of Migration Research; since 2020 member of Scientific Board of Center of Migration Research at university of Warsaw; 2008-2019 member of IMISCOE Executive Board and Board of Directors; on behalf of CMR; former national expert of the European Commission in ESCO (Classification of European Skills, Competences, Qualifications and Occupations) and European Mobility Partnership; publishes in highly impact factor journals, e.g.: Work, Employment and Society, Journal of Ethnic Studies, Europe-Asia Studies, Journal of Youth Studies, International Migration; co-author of the research monograph Migration and the Transfer of Informal Human Capital: Insights from Central Europe and Mexico (with Jastrzebowska, Routledge 2022); author of Movers and Stayers: Migration, Mobility and Skills (Lang 2016), co-author of research monograph: The Impact of Migration on Poland: EU Mobility and Social Change (with White, Kaczmarczyk and Slany, UCL Press 2018) and Migrants as Agents of Change (with Garapich, Jazwinska and Radziwinowiczowna, Palgrave Macmillan 2017); co-editor of Mobility in Transition. Migration Patterns After EU Enlargement (Amsterdam University Press 2013). She has led research projects on: migrants’ careers, social remittances, peer-groups & migration, life courses of young migrants & Brexit (in progress till 2021), migrant liquid integration (H2020 MIMY, in progress). She is active in building international research consortia in EU Framework Programs and bilateral schemes
Daniel Granada est Docteur en Ethnologie de l’Université de Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense et PhD en Histoire de l’University of Essex. Diplômé en Sciences Sociales et Mestre en Sociologie et Anthropologie de l’Université Fédérale de Rio de Janeiro (IFCS/PPGAS), master recherche en Étude des Sociétés Latino Américaines par l'IHEAL (Institut des Hautes Études de l'Amérique Latine, Université de Paris III Sorbonne Nouvelle. Est professeur adjoint à l'Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina (Brésil) où il dispense des cours en anthropologie, sociologie, anthropologie et sociologie de la santé et de la maladie et débats contemporains.
Il étudie actuellement la relation entre la santé et la migration, les effets de Covid 19 sur les populations migrantes au Brésil et les impacts chez les professionnels de la santé.
- Universidade Federal de Santa CatarinaProfessor AdjuntoFlorianopolis
- Instituto Nacional de Ciência e Tecnologia Brasil PluralReseacherFlorianopolis
Daniel Granada est Docteur en Ethnologie de l’Université de Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense et PhD en Histoire de l’University of Essex. Diplômé en Sciences Sociales et Mestre en Sociologie et Anthropologie de l’Université Fédérale de Rio de Janeiro (IFCS/PPGAS), master recherche en Étude des Sociétés Latino Américaines par l'IHEAL (Institut des Hautes Études de l'Amérique Latine, Université de Paris III Sorbonne Nouvelle. Est professeur adjoint à l'Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina (Brésil) où il dispense des cours en anthropologie, sociologie, anthropologie et sociologie de la santé et de la maladie et débats contemporains.
Il étudie actuellement la relation entre la santé et la migration, les effets de Covid 19 sur les populations migrantes au Brésil et les impacts chez les professionnels de la santé.
Lauren Grant is Founding Director at the International School on Climate Migration and Director of Field Research at Earth Refuge, the planet's first legal think tank dedicated to climate migrants. She is also a Research Associate at the Global Centre for Climate Mobility. Her background is in gender, critical race and ethnic studies and human rights law, with a focus on the socio-economic rights of Indigenous communities, coloniality, genocide and (gender-based) violence. Lauren's current research explores violence, conflict, (under)development and climate change as multi-causal drivers of forced displacement in East and the Horn of Africa, South Asia and Latin America, as well as their consequences for livelihoods, development, socio-economic rights, justice and sustainable peace. Her current projects examine the legal gaps in protection for cross-border and internally-displaced climate migrants, and the taxonomies, temporalities and drivers of displacement as they affect agriculturally-dependent communities, families and individuals. Her research also investigate the value of sustainable agricultural development as a mitigation and adaptation strategy with capacity to slow, halt or deter displacement related to slow and rapid on-set climate change impacts.
- Earth RefugeDirector of Field Research
- SOAS University of London
Lauren Grant is Founding Director at the International School on Climate Migration and Director of Field Research at Earth Refuge, the planet's first legal think tank dedicated to climate migrants. She is also a Research Associate at the Global Centre for Climate Mobility. Her background is in gender, critical race and ethnic studies and human rights law, with a focus on the socio-economic rights of Indigenous communities, coloniality, genocide and (gender-based) violence. Lauren's current research explores violence, conflict, (under)development and climate change as multi-causal drivers of forced displacement in East and the Horn of Africa, South Asia and Latin America, as well as their consequences for livelihoods, development, socio-economic rights, justice and sustainable peace. Her current projects examine the legal gaps in protection for cross-border and internally-displaced climate migrants, and the taxonomies, temporalities and drivers of displacement as they affect agriculturally-dependent communities, families and individuals. Her research also investigate the value of sustainable agricultural development as a mitigation and adaptation strategy with capacity to slow, halt or deter displacement related to slow and rapid on-set climate change impacts.
- Università del SalentoAssociate ProfessorLecce
- German Development Institute / Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik (DIE)Senior ResearcherBonn
- Stanford UniversityStanford
Snježana Gregurović is a Senior Research Associate at the Institute for Migration and Ethnic Studies in Zagreb since 2000. She graduated sociology at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences of Zagreb University where she earned her Master's Degree in the field of the sociology of ethnicity and her PhD in the field of the sociology of the international migrations. She has participated in several research projects and published more than 30 scientific and professional papers and expertise. She is the main author of the IMIN's position paper on Integration of Migrant in the European Union with Reference to Croatia. Her research interests pertain to the fields of international migration, migrant integration, migration policies, multiculturalism and sociology of ethnic relations.
- Institut za migracije i narodnostiSenior Research AssociateZagreb
Snježana Gregurović is a Senior Research Associate at the Institute for Migration and Ethnic Studies in Zagreb since 2000. She graduated sociology at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences of Zagreb University where she earned her Master's Degree in the field of the sociology of ethnicity and her PhD in the field of the sociology of the international migrations. She has participated in several research projects and published more than 30 scientific and professional papers and expertise. She is the main author of the IMIN's position paper on Integration of Migrant in the European Union with Reference to Croatia. Her research interests pertain to the fields of international migration, migrant integration, migration policies, multiculturalism and sociology of ethnic relations.
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