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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

 
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Displaying 111 - 120 of 2458
University of Bristol
Associate Professor in International Migration and Business
Bristol

I am an interdisciplinary scholar in social sciences delivering empirically-based original work in international labour migration. My current research investigates the globalisation of electronics firms and studies how TNCs' production and management practices are engendering novel migration flows and regimes of labour control in Central and Eastern Europe. My earlier work focused on human trafficking for sexual expoitation and its link to the reorganisation of citizenship in enlarged Europe. I explore these topics in detail in my research monograph 'Agency, Migration and Citizenship in Sex Trafficking' (Palgrave, 2010) . I have also co-edited the volume 'Flexible workforces and low profit margins: electronics assembly between Europe and China' (ETUI, 2016) and several special issues such as 'Foreign Workers: On the Other Side of Sexual, Gendered, Political and Ethical Borders' with Organization (2019); 'Digital Labour' with Feminist Review (2019); 'Le migrazioni lavorative intra-UE: modelli, pratiche e traiettorie di mobilita dei cittadini europei' with Mondi Migranti (2016); 'Trafficking Representation' with Anti-Trafficking Review (2016); 'Revolutions' with Feminist Review (2014); and 'Conflicts of Mobility: Migration, Labour and Political Subjectivities' with Subjectivity (2009).

  • University of Bristol
    Associate Professor in International Migration and Business
    Bristol

I am an interdisciplinary scholar in social sciences delivering empirically-based original work in international labour migration. My current research investigates the globalisation of electronics firms and studies how TNCs' production and management practices are engendering novel migration flows and regimes of labour control in Central and Eastern Europe. My earlier work focused on human trafficking for sexual expoitation and its link to the reorganisation of citizenship in enlarged Europe. I explore these topics in detail in my research monograph 'Agency, Migration and Citizenship in Sex Trafficking' (Palgrave, 2010) . I have also co-edited the volume 'Flexible workforces and low profit margins: electronics assembly between Europe and China' (ETUI, 2016) and several special issues such as 'Foreign Workers: On the Other Side of Sexual, Gendered, Political and Ethical Borders' with Organization (2019); 'Digital Labour' with Feminist Review (2019); 'Le migrazioni lavorative intra-UE: modelli, pratiche e traiettorie di mobilita dei cittadini europei' with Mondi Migranti (2016); 'Trafficking Representation' with Anti-Trafficking Review (2016); 'Revolutions' with Feminist Review (2014); and 'Conflicts of Mobility: Migration, Labour and Political Subjectivities' with Subjectivity (2009).

University of Amsterdam
Postdoc
Amsterdam

Apostolos Andrikopoulos is a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Global Fellow at Harvard University and at the University of Amsterdam. His research focuses on issues of kinship and marriage, migration and citizenship, and gender and sexuality.

His book Argonauts of West Africa: Unauthorized Migration and Kinship Dynamics in a Changing Europe (University of Chicago Press, 2023) examines the paradoxes of kinship in the lives of unauthorized African migrants as they struggle for mobility, employment, and citizenship in Europe.

  • University of Amsterdam
    Postdoc
    Amsterdam
  • Harvard University
    Marie Skłodowska-Curie Global Fellow
    Cambridge, MA

Apostolos Andrikopoulos is a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Global Fellow at Harvard University and at the University of Amsterdam. His research focuses on issues of kinship and marriage, migration and citizenship, and gender and sexuality.

His book Argonauts of West Africa: Unauthorized Migration and Kinship Dynamics in a Changing Europe (University of Chicago Press, 2023) examines the paradoxes of kinship in the lives of unauthorized African migrants as they struggle for mobility, employment, and citizenship in Europe.

  • University of Eastern Piedmont Amadeo Avogadro
    Post-doctoral researcher
    Alessandria
  • University of Urbino
    Adjunct Professor of Sociology of Gender and Family
    Urbino
  • University of Urbino Carlo Bo
    Post-doc
    Urbino
  • Stellenbosch University
    Full Professor (snr Lecturer 2003-06; Associate Professor (2006-14)
    Stellenbosch
  • University of the Western Cape
    Senior Lecturer
    Bellville
  • Stellenbosch University
    Lecturer (contract appointment)
    Stellenbosch
University of Cadiz
Lecturer
Cadiz

My career as a researcher and university professor has been marked by interdisciplinarity, an approach by which I bet to analyze the complex and hybrid sociocultural reality in which we currently live the social sciences. Birth of an initial and postgraduate training in Social and Cultural Anthropology, closely linked to social intervention. My postgraduate training was taught by teachers from the Department of Social Anthropology and Social Work of the University of Granada. After participating as a fellow in various research projects on the reality of the migrant population in schools in Andalusia, I was able to obtain a predoctoral training grant from the Department of Social Work and Social Services of the Pablo de Olavide University, Seville (Spain) . My doctoral thesis focused on a comparison of public policies and intercultural practices in Spain and Mexico from two schools as case studies. Most of the publications, as well as the participation in congresses address this issue, receiving my doctoral research the prize of the Intercultural Chair City of Córdoba in 2013.
This commitment to interdisciplinarity leads me to participate in different networks and associations where, as in the rest of my career, my political commitment to my research interests such as: attention to minority groups; the field of migrations; a gender and human rights approach and the application of all this to social intervention and action.

  • University of Cadiz
    Lecturer
    Cadiz
  • Universidad de Cádiz
    Profesora Ayudante Doctor
    Cadiz

My career as a researcher and university professor has been marked by interdisciplinarity, an approach by which I bet to analyze the complex and hybrid sociocultural reality in which we currently live the social sciences. Birth of an initial and postgraduate training in Social and Cultural Anthropology, closely linked to social intervention. My postgraduate training was taught by teachers from the Department of Social Anthropology and Social Work of the University of Granada. After participating as a fellow in various research projects on the reality of the migrant population in schools in Andalusia, I was able to obtain a predoctoral training grant from the Department of Social Work and Social Services of the Pablo de Olavide University, Seville (Spain) . My doctoral thesis focused on a comparison of public policies and intercultural practices in Spain and Mexico from two schools as case studies. Most of the publications, as well as the participation in congresses address this issue, receiving my doctoral research the prize of the Intercultural Chair City of Córdoba in 2013.
This commitment to interdisciplinarity leads me to participate in different networks and associations where, as in the rest of my career, my political commitment to my research interests such as: attention to minority groups; the field of migrations; a gender and human rights approach and the application of all this to social intervention and action.

Teesside University
Professor of Criminology
Middlesbrough

Georgios A. Antonopoulos is professor of criminology at Teesside University. He has conducted research for the local authorities in Britain, the British Police, the British Ministry of Justice and the European Commission. He has published widely in the areas of illegal markets (human smuggling, human trafficking, counterfeiting etc.) as well as ethnicity, crime and justice, and in a range of international peer-reviewed journals including the European Journal of Criminology, the British Journal of Criminology, Crime, Law & Social Change, Trends in Organised Crime, the European Journal on Criminal Policy & Research, the Journal of Consumer Culture, and the International Criminal Justice Review.

He is an associate of the Cross-Border Crime Colloquium, series editor of Routledge Studies in Organised Crime, editor-in-chief of the journal Trends in Organised Crime, and member of the editorial boards of the journals Global Crime, International Journal of Cyber-Criminology, Journal of Financial Crime, Journal of Money Laundering Control, Journal of Applied Security Research, International Criminology, and the British Journal of Criminology. He has acted as consultant to RAND Europe, HM Revenue and Customs, the Cabinet Office, the US Department of Commerce and other government bodies and agencies, as well as the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). He is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences.

  • Teesside University
    Professor of Criminology
    Middlesbrough

Georgios A. Antonopoulos is professor of criminology at Teesside University. He has conducted research for the local authorities in Britain, the British Police, the British Ministry of Justice and the European Commission. He has published widely in the areas of illegal markets (human smuggling, human trafficking, counterfeiting etc.) as well as ethnicity, crime and justice, and in a range of international peer-reviewed journals including the European Journal of Criminology, the British Journal of Criminology, Crime, Law & Social Change, Trends in Organised Crime, the European Journal on Criminal Policy & Research, the Journal of Consumer Culture, and the International Criminal Justice Review.

He is an associate of the Cross-Border Crime Colloquium, series editor of Routledge Studies in Organised Crime, editor-in-chief of the journal Trends in Organised Crime, and member of the editorial boards of the journals Global Crime, International Journal of Cyber-Criminology, Journal of Financial Crime, Journal of Money Laundering Control, Journal of Applied Security Research, International Criminology, and the British Journal of Criminology. He has acted as consultant to RAND Europe, HM Revenue and Customs, the Cabinet Office, the US Department of Commerce and other government bodies and agencies, as well as the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). He is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences.

About the Migration Network Hub

What is the Migration Network Hub?

The Hub is a virtual “meeting space” where governments, stakeholders and experts can access and share migration-related information and services. It provides curated content, analysis and information on a variety of topics.

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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The Hub aims to help you find information on migration, ranging from policy briefs and journal articles, existing portals and platforms and what they offer, to infographics and videos. The different types of resources submitted by users undergo peer review by a panel of experts from within the UN and beyond, before being approved for inclusion in the Hub. To provide guidance to users based on findings of the needs assessment, the content is ordered so that more comprehensive and global resources are shown before more specific and regional ones. Know a great resource? Please submit using the links above and your suggestion will be reviewed. Please see the draft criteria for existing practices here.

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