Carles Pamies is Adjunct Professor and Postdoctoral Researcher at Sciences Po, Paris, where he is also member of the ActEU project. His main research interests include political parties, political elites, and migrants' representation and voting behaviour.
- Sciences PoAdjunct ProfessorParis
- Sciences PoPostdoctoral ResearcherParis
- Universidad Nacional de Educación a DistanciaResearcherMadrid
- Université de LiègeResearch assistantLiège
- Universidad Autónoma de MadridResearcherMadrid
- Universidad Autónoma de MadridInternMadrid
Carles Pamies is Adjunct Professor and Postdoctoral Researcher at Sciences Po, Paris, where he is also member of the ActEU project. His main research interests include political parties, political elites, and migrants' representation and voting behaviour.
Dr. Qiuping Pan is a Lecturer in Chinese Studies at Asia Institute, University of Melbourne and Deputy Director of the Centre for Contemporary Chinese Studies. Her research interests focus on the implications of transnational mobility on self-formation, entrepreneurship, and community self-organization at the grassroots level.
- University of MelbourneMelbourne
Dr. Qiuping Pan is a Lecturer in Chinese Studies at Asia Institute, University of Melbourne and Deputy Director of the Centre for Contemporary Chinese Studies. Her research interests focus on the implications of transnational mobility on self-formation, entrepreneurship, and community self-organization at the grassroots level.
Apostolos G Papadopoulos has studied sociology in Greece (B.Sc. Department of Sociology, Panteion University of Political and Social Sciences) and in the UK (M.Sc (Econ), Department of Sociology, London School of Economics and Political Science) and holds a DPhil in Geography (University of Sussex). He was employed as researcher at the National Centre for Social Research (EKKE), the University of Patras and the Agricultural University of Athens. He was elected Lecturer in the University of Ioannina where he served for five years. He was elected Assistant Professor at the Department of Geography in Harokopio University, where, currently, holds the position of Professor in Rural Sociology and Geography. In the same university, he has been Director of Postgraduate Studies of the M.Sc. entitled: “Applied Geography and Spatial Planning” (2009-2011), Vice-Rector of Economic Affairs and Development (2011-2015), and Dean of the School of Environment, Geography and Applied Economics (2017-2018).
He has coordinated as project leader, while also he worked as a senior researcher in, several research projects financed by the European Commission, the Greek State and other organizations. He has published numerous papers in international journals (Agrarian South: Journal of Political Economy; Agriregionieuropa; Applied Geography; Autonomie Locali e Servizi Sociali; Environment and Planning C; Europa XXI; Frontiers in Sociology; International Review of Sociology; Italian Review of Agricultural Economics; Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies; Journal of Rural Cooperation; Journal of Rural Studies; Méditerranée; Migration Letters; Sociologia Ruralis; Southeast European and Black Sea Studies), in Greek academic journals (Γεωγραφίες; Επιθεώρηση Κοινωνικών Ερευνών; Επιθεώρηση Πολιτικής Επιστήμης; Κοινωνιολογική Επιθεώρηση), collected volumes and conference proceedings. He has edited or co-edited eight collected volumes (two of them were published by Ashgate Publishers in 1999 and 2010) and co-authored one book. His research has been published in Greek, English, Italian and Portuguese.
He has been member of the Working Group on Migration coordinated by the Prime Minister Office (Greek Prime Minister Office –Official Gazette (FEK) Issue 1650/25-08-2011). He was appointed as member of the Advisory Board (2017-2020) of the International Centre for Advanced Mediterranean Agronomic Studies (CIHEAM), which is a European Research and Education Organization with its headquarters located in Paris; for the last two-year period (2019-2020) he was elected Chair of this scientific advisory body.
From the position of President of the Hellenic Sociological Association (HSS) he has undertaken the task to organize in Greece one of the largest social science congresses. He was the Chair of the LOC for the organization of the 13th ESA Conference Athens: “(Un)Making Europe: Capitalism, Solidarities, Subjectivities”, 29 August to 1 September 2017. Consequently, he was elected member of the Executive Committee (EC) of the European Sociological Society (ESA) for two consecutive periods (2017-2019, 2019-2021) and Vice-President of External Affairs in the same organization for both periods.
Currently, he is Editor-in-Chief of the international peer reviewed journal Sociologia Ruralis for four years (2020-2023) and Associate Editor of the journal NEW MEDIT: Mediterranean Journal of Economics, Agriculture and Environment. Moreover, he is member of the editorial board of the journals Migration Letters, Europa XXI and Κοινωνιολογική Επιθεώρηση; member of the international scientific board of the journals Border Studies, Social Studies [Studime Sociale], and Autonomie locali e servizi sociali; and member of the scientific board of the journal Social Cohesion and Development (Κοινωνική Συνοχή και Ανάπτυξη).
- Harokopio UniversityProfessorAthens
- Institute of Social Research, National Centre for Social ResearchManaging DirectorAthens
Apostolos G Papadopoulos has studied sociology in Greece (B.Sc. Department of Sociology, Panteion University of Political and Social Sciences) and in the UK (M.Sc (Econ), Department of Sociology, London School of Economics and Political Science) and holds a DPhil in Geography (University of Sussex). He was employed as researcher at the National Centre for Social Research (EKKE), the University of Patras and the Agricultural University of Athens. He was elected Lecturer in the University of Ioannina where he served for five years. He was elected Assistant Professor at the Department of Geography in Harokopio University, where, currently, holds the position of Professor in Rural Sociology and Geography. In the same university, he has been Director of Postgraduate Studies of the M.Sc. entitled: “Applied Geography and Spatial Planning” (2009-2011), Vice-Rector of Economic Affairs and Development (2011-2015), and Dean of the School of Environment, Geography and Applied Economics (2017-2018).
He has coordinated as project leader, while also he worked as a senior researcher in, several research projects financed by the European Commission, the Greek State and other organizations. He has published numerous papers in international journals (Agrarian South: Journal of Political Economy; Agriregionieuropa; Applied Geography; Autonomie Locali e Servizi Sociali; Environment and Planning C; Europa XXI; Frontiers in Sociology; International Review of Sociology; Italian Review of Agricultural Economics; Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies; Journal of Rural Cooperation; Journal of Rural Studies; Méditerranée; Migration Letters; Sociologia Ruralis; Southeast European and Black Sea Studies), in Greek academic journals (Γεωγραφίες; Επιθεώρηση Κοινωνικών Ερευνών; Επιθεώρηση Πολιτικής Επιστήμης; Κοινωνιολογική Επιθεώρηση), collected volumes and conference proceedings. He has edited or co-edited eight collected volumes (two of them were published by Ashgate Publishers in 1999 and 2010) and co-authored one book. His research has been published in Greek, English, Italian and Portuguese.
He has been member of the Working Group on Migration coordinated by the Prime Minister Office (Greek Prime Minister Office –Official Gazette (FEK) Issue 1650/25-08-2011). He was appointed as member of the Advisory Board (2017-2020) of the International Centre for Advanced Mediterranean Agronomic Studies (CIHEAM), which is a European Research and Education Organization with its headquarters located in Paris; for the last two-year period (2019-2020) he was elected Chair of this scientific advisory body.
From the position of President of the Hellenic Sociological Association (HSS) he has undertaken the task to organize in Greece one of the largest social science congresses. He was the Chair of the LOC for the organization of the 13th ESA Conference Athens: “(Un)Making Europe: Capitalism, Solidarities, Subjectivities”, 29 August to 1 September 2017. Consequently, he was elected member of the Executive Committee (EC) of the European Sociological Society (ESA) for two consecutive periods (2017-2019, 2019-2021) and Vice-President of External Affairs in the same organization for both periods.
Currently, he is Editor-in-Chief of the international peer reviewed journal Sociologia Ruralis for four years (2020-2023) and Associate Editor of the journal NEW MEDIT: Mediterranean Journal of Economics, Agriculture and Environment. Moreover, he is member of the editorial board of the journals Migration Letters, Europa XXI and Κοινωνιολογική Επιθεώρηση; member of the international scientific board of the journals Border Studies, Social Studies [Studime Sociale], and Autonomie locali e servizi sociali; and member of the scientific board of the journal Social Cohesion and Development (Κοινωνική Συνοχή και Ανάπτυξη).
- University of North Carolina at Chapel HillPhD StudentChapel Hill
- Bamberg Graduate School of Social SciencesDoctoral MemberBamberg
Francesco Pasetti is a Research Fellow at CIDOB in the area of Migrations and adjunct professor at the Institut Barcelona d’Estudis Internacionals (IBEI) and at Pompeu Fabra University. His interest in “migration matters” dates back to his experience at the ASK Research Center (Bocconi University) where he developed a two-year project on diasporic media. Turned his attention to the world of politics, he delved into the study of migrant integration and its politics at GRITIM-UPF as PhD candidate. In his thesis, Pasetti addressed the issue of integration policies in Europe through a mixed-method investigation, paying special attention to the political imaginaries that lie beyond citizenship regimes in Italy and Spain. His expertise on integration policy grows in parallel as research collaborator for the Migration Policy Center (European University Institute) between 2013 and 2015. Since 2017, he has specialized in policy evaluation based on indicators. Currently, he is working on policies and political discourses on refugees, paying special attention to the Spanish context.
- CIDOBResearch FellowBarcelona
Francesco Pasetti is a Research Fellow at CIDOB in the area of Migrations and adjunct professor at the Institut Barcelona d’Estudis Internacionals (IBEI) and at Pompeu Fabra University. His interest in “migration matters” dates back to his experience at the ASK Research Center (Bocconi University) where he developed a two-year project on diasporic media. Turned his attention to the world of politics, he delved into the study of migrant integration and its politics at GRITIM-UPF as PhD candidate. In his thesis, Pasetti addressed the issue of integration policies in Europe through a mixed-method investigation, paying special attention to the political imaginaries that lie beyond citizenship regimes in Italy and Spain. His expertise on integration policy grows in parallel as research collaborator for the Migration Policy Center (European University Institute) between 2013 and 2015. Since 2017, he has specialized in policy evaluation based on indicators. Currently, he is working on policies and political discourses on refugees, paying special attention to the Spanish context.
I study borders, mobility, and how experiences of precarious migration are shaped by histories and institutions. My interdisciplinary research has focused especially on Africa-Europe mobilities and questions of asylum, migrant reception, human rights, and racial justice in the Italian context. This work bridges critical refugee studies, transnational Italian studies, and postcolonial studies, through methods including media, narrative, and discourse analysis, and oral history and ethnography. In analyzing shifting border dynamics and engaging a range of testimonial and documentary forms and practices, I aim to inform understandings of the relationship between mobility, sovereignty, memory, rights, and belonging in and beyond Italy and the Mediterranean. I'm also interested in collaborative, comparative work and action research.
My book, Emergency in Transit: Witnessing Migration in the Colonial Present (University of California Press, November 2024), investigates the discourses and experiences of “emergency” that are shaping contemporary Mediterranean migration to the EU.
- University of OregonAssistant ProfessorEugene
- Brown UniversityMellon Postdoctoral FellowProvidence
- Cornell UniversityPostdoctoral Fellow in MigrationsITHACA
- Ohio State UniversityPresidential Fellow and PhD CandidateColumbus
I study borders, mobility, and how experiences of precarious migration are shaped by histories and institutions. My interdisciplinary research has focused especially on Africa-Europe mobilities and questions of asylum, migrant reception, human rights, and racial justice in the Italian context. This work bridges critical refugee studies, transnational Italian studies, and postcolonial studies, through methods including media, narrative, and discourse analysis, and oral history and ethnography. In analyzing shifting border dynamics and engaging a range of testimonial and documentary forms and practices, I aim to inform understandings of the relationship between mobility, sovereignty, memory, rights, and belonging in and beyond Italy and the Mediterranean. I'm also interested in collaborative, comparative work and action research.
My book, Emergency in Transit: Witnessing Migration in the Colonial Present (University of California Press, November 2024), investigates the discourses and experiences of “emergency” that are shaping contemporary Mediterranean migration to the EU.
Luicy Pedroza specializes in comparative citizenship studies. She is a political scientist and was originally trained in International Relations, but her work engages avidly with other disciplines of the social sciences that intersect in the study of migration and citizenship, especially political sociology, legal studies and political theory. Dr. Luicy Pedroza is a Research Professor at the Center for International Studies of El Colegio de México. From 2014 to 2020, she worked as a Research Fellow of the GIGA (Berlin office) on two major research projects: first, a project on the diasporic policies of Latin American and Caribbean states (see "Polities Beyond Borders..." and EMIX), and second, a research project on how migration policies distribute mobility, residence and citizenship rights for both immigrants and emigrants, across world regions (see "Every Immigrant is an Emigrant: How Migration Policies Shape the Paths to Integration -IMISEM" ). Pedroza's research has received awards from the German Political Science Association (DVPW) and the American Political Science Association (APSA). She is the author of "Citizenship Beyond Nationality: Immigrants' Right to Vote Across the World " (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2019).
- El Colegio de MéxicoProfessorMexico
Luicy Pedroza specializes in comparative citizenship studies. She is a political scientist and was originally trained in International Relations, but her work engages avidly with other disciplines of the social sciences that intersect in the study of migration and citizenship, especially political sociology, legal studies and political theory. Dr. Luicy Pedroza is a Research Professor at the Center for International Studies of El Colegio de México. From 2014 to 2020, she worked as a Research Fellow of the GIGA (Berlin office) on two major research projects: first, a project on the diasporic policies of Latin American and Caribbean states (see "Polities Beyond Borders..." and EMIX), and second, a research project on how migration policies distribute mobility, residence and citizenship rights for both immigrants and emigrants, across world regions (see "Every Immigrant is an Emigrant: How Migration Policies Shape the Paths to Integration -IMISEM" ). Pedroza's research has received awards from the German Political Science Association (DVPW) and the American Political Science Association (APSA). She is the author of "Citizenship Beyond Nationality: Immigrants' Right to Vote Across the World " (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2019).
Konrad Pędziwiatr - holds PhD in Social Sciences from the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (Belgium), MA in European Studies from the University of Exeter (UK) and in Sociology from the Jagiellonian University (Poland). He is a principal investigator and coordinator of the Multiculturalism and Migration Observatory, professor in the Department of International Relations at the Cracow University of Economics, Deputy Director of the Center for Advanced Studies of Population and Religion (CASPAR) and an associate researcher in the Centre for Migration Research (CMR) at the University of Warsaw. He is author/co-author of numerous publications on religion and ethnicity in the processes of migration, migration policy, Islam and Muslims in Europe, and the politicization of Islam in Europe and the Middle East and North Africa including the monographs: "From Reception to Integration of Asylum Seekers and Refugees in Poland"-2022, "Migrations and Covid-19" - 2022, "Immigrants in Krakow" - 2021, "Transformation of Islamisms in Egypt and Tunisia in the shadow of the Arab Spring" - 2019, “Polish Migration Policy” - 2015, "The New Muslim Elites in European Cities" - 2010 and "From Islam of Immigrants to Islam of Citizens" - 2007, as well as, academic articles in such prestigious journals as for example: the Patterns of Prejudice, Journal of Ethnic and Migrations Studies, Social Compass and Gender, Place and Culture.
- Cracow University of EconomicsKraków, Poland
Konrad Pędziwiatr - holds PhD in Social Sciences from the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (Belgium), MA in European Studies from the University of Exeter (UK) and in Sociology from the Jagiellonian University (Poland). He is a principal investigator and coordinator of the Multiculturalism and Migration Observatory, professor in the Department of International Relations at the Cracow University of Economics, Deputy Director of the Center for Advanced Studies of Population and Religion (CASPAR) and an associate researcher in the Centre for Migration Research (CMR) at the University of Warsaw. He is author/co-author of numerous publications on religion and ethnicity in the processes of migration, migration policy, Islam and Muslims in Europe, and the politicization of Islam in Europe and the Middle East and North Africa including the monographs: "From Reception to Integration of Asylum Seekers and Refugees in Poland"-2022, "Migrations and Covid-19" - 2022, "Immigrants in Krakow" - 2021, "Transformation of Islamisms in Egypt and Tunisia in the shadow of the Arab Spring" - 2019, “Polish Migration Policy” - 2015, "The New Muslim Elites in European Cities" - 2010 and "From Islam of Immigrants to Islam of Citizens" - 2007, as well as, academic articles in such prestigious journals as for example: the Patterns of Prejudice, Journal of Ethnic and Migrations Studies, Social Compass and Gender, Place and Culture.
Lotte Pelckmans is an anthropologist who has been working on social mobility, displacement, social media, nomadism and rights at the crossroads of (post-)slavery and migration studies, with a focus on francophone West Africa. Currently I am employed as associate professor at the Centre for Advanced Migration Studies, Copenhagen University.
I studied and worked at Leiden University (Anthropology, African Studies Centre, Institute for History) and was associate professor at Nijmegen University (Anthropology and Development Studies). I obtained an EU co-fund scholarship for a year in French academia (CEAF, EHESS) and worked as a researcher at the Danish Institute for International Studies (2015-2016), Copenhagen, Denmark.
In 2016 I co-edited the documentary movie ‘River Nomads’, which is about the transnational mobility of nomadic fishermen in West Africa (Nigeria, Niger, Mali). From 2017 I work at the Centre for Advanced Migration Studies (https://amis.ku.dk) part of the SAXO institute at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. In 2018 I combined my lecturer position there with a postdoc in the project readingslavery.au.dk at Comparative Literature, Aarhus University. From 2018, I started working as an editorial board member of the recently established journal ‘Slaveries and Post-Slaveries’, based at CIRESC in France. In 2019 I was a senior Heinz Heinen fellow at the Bonn Center for Dependency and Slavery Studies (BCDSS), Germany. The fellowship was about testimonies for legal court cases, in contemporary ‘post-slavery’ societies of French West Africa. From early 2020, I started working as a Co-I on a collaborative GCRF/UKRI UK funded research project, about Protracted Displacements of People with slave status in Mali, West Africa, while based at the Centre for Advanced Migration Studies, Copenhagen University.
- Arts facultyPostdocAarhus
- Centre for advanced migration studiesAssociate ProfessorCopenhagen
- Danish Institute for International StudiesResearcherCopenhagen
- Københavns UniversitetKøbenhavn K
- Institute for Advanced Migration Studies, Saxo, Copenhagen University,Copenhagen
- University of CopenhagenExternal lecturerCopenhagen
- Bonn Centre for the study of slavery and Dependence/ Heinz Heinen Centre for Advanced StudySenior research fellowBonn
- Aarhus UniversityPostdocAarhus
- Leiden Universitypost-doc (and vice coordinator)Leiden
- École des Hautes Études en Sciences SocialesCOFUND postdocParis
- Radboud University NijmegenAssistent professorNijmegen
Lotte Pelckmans is an anthropologist who has been working on social mobility, displacement, social media, nomadism and rights at the crossroads of (post-)slavery and migration studies, with a focus on francophone West Africa. Currently I am employed as associate professor at the Centre for Advanced Migration Studies, Copenhagen University.
I studied and worked at Leiden University (Anthropology, African Studies Centre, Institute for History) and was associate professor at Nijmegen University (Anthropology and Development Studies). I obtained an EU co-fund scholarship for a year in French academia (CEAF, EHESS) and worked as a researcher at the Danish Institute for International Studies (2015-2016), Copenhagen, Denmark.
In 2016 I co-edited the documentary movie ‘River Nomads’, which is about the transnational mobility of nomadic fishermen in West Africa (Nigeria, Niger, Mali). From 2017 I work at the Centre for Advanced Migration Studies (https://amis.ku.dk) part of the SAXO institute at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. In 2018 I combined my lecturer position there with a postdoc in the project readingslavery.au.dk at Comparative Literature, Aarhus University. From 2018, I started working as an editorial board member of the recently established journal ‘Slaveries and Post-Slaveries’, based at CIRESC in France. In 2019 I was a senior Heinz Heinen fellow at the Bonn Center for Dependency and Slavery Studies (BCDSS), Germany. The fellowship was about testimonies for legal court cases, in contemporary ‘post-slavery’ societies of French West Africa. From early 2020, I started working as a Co-I on a collaborative GCRF/UKRI UK funded research project, about Protracted Displacements of People with slave status in Mali, West Africa, while based at the Centre for Advanced Migration Studies, Copenhagen University.
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