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Experts Database

Find and contact migration experts worldwide for technical support.

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In partnership with IMISCOE’s Migration Research Hub, this database provides access to a range of migration experts from around the world. The academics and researchers registered with IMISCOE contribute their publications and expertise to further innovation in the field of migration studies, bringing knowledge on a range of topics related to the Global Compact for Migration. Links to their research are provided in their profiles. Search the database below by expertise and location to find an expert and review their latest work. Sign-in to contact an expert directly.

Disclaimer: Contact with the experts is facilitated via the Migration Research Hub and inclusion in this database does not signify endorsement by the United Nations Network on Migration or its members.

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Content submitted to the Migration Network Hub is first peer reviewed by experts in the field from both the UN and beyond. Applications are welcomed to join the roster on an ongoing basis. Learn more about the review criteria here

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Experts database

 
Search Results
Displaying 331 - 340 of 511
University of South-Eastern Norway
Associate Professor
Drammen

I am sociologist with an expertise in ethnic and migration studies and a co-editor of a forthcoming volume "Visual Methods in Migrations Studies" (2021, Springer, with A.Desille). I research immigrant communities in Europe (Turkey included) with use of ethnography and visual and sensory methods. In 2015-2016 I was a Marie Curie Early Stage researcher and INTEGRIM fellow hosted by Migration Research Center, Koc University, Istanbul, Turkey.

  • University of South-Eastern Norway
    Associate Professor
    Drammen

I am sociologist with an expertise in ethnic and migration studies and a co-editor of a forthcoming volume "Visual Methods in Migrations Studies" (2021, Springer, with A.Desille). I research immigrant communities in Europe (Turkey included) with use of ethnography and visual and sensory methods. In 2015-2016 I was a Marie Curie Early Stage researcher and INTEGRIM fellow hosted by Migration Research Center, Koc University, Istanbul, Turkey.

The James Hutton Institute Aberdeen
Social Scientist
Aberdeen

Social scientist with the James Hutton Institute, Aberdeen, Scotland in the Social, Economic and Geographical Sciences group. I work across a number of research projects both national and international in scope, investigating rural issues. These include: demographic change and migration into and out of rural remote areas of Scotland; rural and island responses to Covid-19 in Scotland, exploring the effectiveness of digitalisation and digital tools in crofting communities in Scotland and issues of belonging and home for return migrants in southern and western counties of Ireland.

  • The James Hutton Institute Aberdeen
    Social Scientist
    Aberdeen

Social scientist with the James Hutton Institute, Aberdeen, Scotland in the Social, Economic and Geographical Sciences group. I work across a number of research projects both national and international in scope, investigating rural issues. These include: demographic change and migration into and out of rural remote areas of Scotland; rural and island responses to Covid-19 in Scotland, exploring the effectiveness of digitalisation and digital tools in crofting communities in Scotland and issues of belonging and home for return migrants in southern and western counties of Ireland.

Trinity College Dublin
Teaching Assistant in European Law
Dublin

Morgiane is a Ph.D. researcher in the protection and the creation of an efficient legal framework for climate migrants.
She previously researched the consequences of gender stereotypes in Asylum claims across Europe.
She has experience in immigration law and in migrants and refugees integration.

  • Trinity College Dublin
    Teaching Assistant in European Law
    Dublin

Morgiane is a Ph.D. researcher in the protection and the creation of an efficient legal framework for climate migrants.
She previously researched the consequences of gender stereotypes in Asylum claims across Europe.
She has experience in immigration law and in migrants and refugees integration.

Universität des Saarlandes
Scientific coordinator
Saarbrucken

Eva Nossem is a graduate translator for German, English and Italian. She is the scientific coordinator of the INTERREG V A project “UniGR-Center for Border Studies” at Saarland University. She is an instructor in English linguistics at Saarland University and is working on her PhD project in Italian linguistics: “Un dizionario Queer – il lessico italiano della noneteronormatività”. Her research interests include Border Studies, Linguistics, Gender and Queer Studies, Cultural Studies, and Translation Studies.

  • Universität des Saarlandes
    Scientific coordinator
    Saarbrucken

Eva Nossem is a graduate translator for German, English and Italian. She is the scientific coordinator of the INTERREG V A project “UniGR-Center for Border Studies” at Saarland University. She is an instructor in English linguistics at Saarland University and is working on her PhD project in Italian linguistics: “Un dizionario Queer – il lessico italiano della noneteronormatività”. Her research interests include Border Studies, Linguistics, Gender and Queer Studies, Cultural Studies, and Translation Studies.

Loughborough University
Professor Emerita
Loughborough

Karen has been researching migration, mainly using ethnographic methods, since the early 1990s. Starting with British emigration to Spain, she wrote the British on the Costa del Sol in 2000 (Routledge). She then spent several years establishing the field of lifestyle migration, and is especially known for the edited volume Lifestyle Migration: relations experiences and expectations (Ashgate 2009, ed with M. Benson). Later she has focused on employing sociological theory for broader understandings of migration processes. This work has been published in international Migration and Social Theory, (Palgrave 2012), and Lifestyle Migration and Colonial traces in Malaysia and Panama (Palgrave 2018, with M. Benson).

Karen’s main contribution to migration studies has been to advocate the telling of practice stories to elucidate the structural and agentic aspects of migration processes and how these interrelate over time. This has informed much of her work, including the recently published International Labour migration to Europe’s Rural Regions (Routledge 2021, ed with J.F. Rye).

  • Loughborough University
    Professor Emerita
    Loughborough

Karen has been researching migration, mainly using ethnographic methods, since the early 1990s. Starting with British emigration to Spain, she wrote the British on the Costa del Sol in 2000 (Routledge). She then spent several years establishing the field of lifestyle migration, and is especially known for the edited volume Lifestyle Migration: relations experiences and expectations (Ashgate 2009, ed with M. Benson). Later she has focused on employing sociological theory for broader understandings of migration processes. This work has been published in international Migration and Social Theory, (Palgrave 2012), and Lifestyle Migration and Colonial traces in Malaysia and Panama (Palgrave 2018, with M. Benson).

Karen’s main contribution to migration studies has been to advocate the telling of practice stories to elucidate the structural and agentic aspects of migration processes and how these interrelate over time. This has informed much of her work, including the recently published International Labour migration to Europe’s Rural Regions (Routledge 2021, ed with J.F. Rye).

  • Northumbria University
    Research Fellow
    Newcastle upon Tyne
  • University of Gothenburg
    Researcher
    Gothenburg

Research Fellow, Northumbria University (UK), University of Gothenburg (Sweden)

University of Sussex
Senior Lecturer
Brighton

I am a Senior Lecturer in Human Geography, with a specialisation in Migration Studies. My research interests include return migration, (re)integration, transnationalism and community dynamics. I am an experienced migration researcher with a focus on Afghanistan - including fieldwork with Afghan migrants, refugees and returnees in Afghanistan, India, UK, Norway and the USA.

  • University of Sussex
    Senior Lecturer
    Brighton

I am a Senior Lecturer in Human Geography, with a specialisation in Migration Studies. My research interests include return migration, (re)integration, transnationalism and community dynamics. I am an experienced migration researcher with a focus on Afghanistan - including fieldwork with Afghan migrants, refugees and returnees in Afghanistan, India, UK, Norway and the USA.

Arima Social Lab
Bilbao

Pedro J. Oiarzabal was born and raised in Bilbao and has spent much of his life between the Basque Country, Ireland and the United States. He holds a PhD in Basque Studies-Political Science from the University of Nevada, Reno, a MPhil in Economics and Social Sciences from Queen's University of Belfast (N. Ireland), and BA in History from the University of Deusto (Bilbao). He is currently the Director of Social Innovation Research at Arima Social Lab (Bilbao). For nine years he had been a PhD Researcher on Migration Studies at the Human Rights Institute, University of Deusto, and also the Jon Bilbao Research Fellow on the Basque Diaspora, 2014-2016, at the University of Nevada, Reno. His research examines diaspora communities interaction with information and communication technologies, with particular emphasis on the Basque case.

  • Arima Social Lab
    Bilbao

Pedro J. Oiarzabal was born and raised in Bilbao and has spent much of his life between the Basque Country, Ireland and the United States. He holds a PhD in Basque Studies-Political Science from the University of Nevada, Reno, a MPhil in Economics and Social Sciences from Queen's University of Belfast (N. Ireland), and BA in History from the University of Deusto (Bilbao). He is currently the Director of Social Innovation Research at Arima Social Lab (Bilbao). For nine years he had been a PhD Researcher on Migration Studies at the Human Rights Institute, University of Deusto, and also the Jon Bilbao Research Fellow on the Basque Diaspora, 2014-2016, at the University of Nevada, Reno. His research examines diaspora communities interaction with information and communication technologies, with particular emphasis on the Basque case.

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The Hub aims to support UN Member States in the implementation, follow-up and review of the Global Compact for Migration by serving as a repository of existing evidence, practices and initiatives, and facilitating access to knowledge sharing via online discussions, an expert database and demand-driven, tailor-made solutions (launching in 2021).

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*References to Kosovo shall be understood to be in the context of United Nations Security Council resolution 1244 (1999).