- Tampere UniversityTampere
- Tampere Universityacademy research fellowTampere
- University of TampereSenior LecturerTampere
- Tampereen YliopistoPostdoctoral FellowTampere
- Tampereen YliopistoSenior research fellowTampere
- Tampereen Yliopistopostdoctoral researh fellowTampere
- University of Sussexvisiting research fellowBrighton
- Goa UniversityVisiting ScholarTaleigao
- Tampereen YliopistoSenior LecturerTampere
- Tampereen YliopistoPhD researcherTampere
- Tampereen YliopistoPhD researcherTampere
- Tampereen YliopistoResearch assistantTampere
Anna Korteweg is Professor of Sociology at the University of Toronto Mississauga. Her research focuses on the ways in which the perceived problems of immigrant integration are constructed in the intersections of gender, religion, ethnicity and national origin. From this critical vantage point, she has published extensively on debates surrounding the wearing of the headscarf, so-called “honour-based” violence, and Sharia law. Her current projects look at the return of women who joined IS to their European home countries, the construction of LGBTQ/gender rights in refugee politics, and the citizenship implications of refugee sponsorship in Canada. Her research has been funded by multiple national and international grants.
- University of TorontoProfessorMississauga
Anna Korteweg is Professor of Sociology at the University of Toronto Mississauga. Her research focuses on the ways in which the perceived problems of immigrant integration are constructed in the intersections of gender, religion, ethnicity and national origin. From this critical vantage point, she has published extensively on debates surrounding the wearing of the headscarf, so-called “honour-based” violence, and Sharia law. Her current projects look at the return of women who joined IS to their European home countries, the construction of LGBTQ/gender rights in refugee politics, and the citizenship implications of refugee sponsorship in Canada. Her research has been funded by multiple national and international grants.
Dr. Oksana Koshulko is a Ukrainian scientist. She has an M.A. degree in Economy and Society from Lancaster University and a PhD in Economic Sciences. Her areas of research are Gender and Migration Studies, including Refugeeism. Dr Koshulko has published over 150 scientific papers, books, and chapters of books in various countries as the results of her international projects, carried out in different international universities
Dr. Oksana Koshulko is a Ukrainian scientist. She has an M.A. degree in Economy and Society from Lancaster University and a PhD in Economic Sciences. Her areas of research are Gender and Migration Studies, including Refugeeism. Dr Koshulko has published over 150 scientific papers, books, and chapters of books in various countries as the results of her international projects, carried out in different international universities
- Radboud University, RUNOMIPostdoctoral Researcher
Leah Koskimaki is a Senior Lecturer at the Institute for Social Development (ISD) and Coordinator for an interdisciplinary project on Migration and Mobilities in the Office of the DVC- Academic at the University of the Western Cape in Cape Town, South Africa. She received her PhD in Sociocultural Anthropology from the University of Washington in Seattle. She has conducted extensive research in India on small town youth politics, regionalism, development and migrant transnationalism. Her current research project, “Tailoring Futures”, interrogates the precarity, aspirations and religious networks of contemporary South Asian migrants in Cape Town, South Africa.
- University of the Western CapeSenior LectuerCape Town
Leah Koskimaki is a Senior Lecturer at the Institute for Social Development (ISD) and Coordinator for an interdisciplinary project on Migration and Mobilities in the Office of the DVC- Academic at the University of the Western Cape in Cape Town, South Africa. She received her PhD in Sociocultural Anthropology from the University of Washington in Seattle. She has conducted extensive research in India on small town youth politics, regionalism, development and migrant transnationalism. Her current research project, “Tailoring Futures”, interrogates the precarity, aspirations and religious networks of contemporary South Asian migrants in Cape Town, South Africa.
PhD candidate at TU Dublin, Ireland, MSc in International Business and BSc in Business & Management. I'm working closely with people from different countries, which gave me a better understanding of how important integration with the host society is and how much migrants valued their connections with their home country. I wrote a thesis: "The meaning of working among employees from different countries". This master thesis enhanced my interest in first- and second-generation migrants' acculturation process and transnational connections. This interest created an avenue to explore how first and second generation of Polish migrants make sense of the experience of acculturation and transnationalism.
PhD candidate at TU Dublin, Ireland, MSc in International Business and BSc in Business & Management. I'm working closely with people from different countries, which gave me a better understanding of how important integration with the host society is and how much migrants valued their connections with their home country. I wrote a thesis: "The meaning of working among employees from different countries". This master thesis enhanced my interest in first- and second-generation migrants' acculturation process and transnational connections. This interest created an avenue to explore how first and second generation of Polish migrants make sense of the experience of acculturation and transnationalism.
- Institute for Employment Research (IAB)Head of Research DepartmentNuremberg
- University of BambergProfessorBamberg
- Research Centre for Astronomy and Earth SciencesResearch FellowBudapest
Pagination
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*References to Kosovo shall be understood to be in the context of United Nations Security Council resolution 1244 (1999).