- Maastricht UniversityPhD CandidateMaastricht
Dr. Eveline Reisenauer is researcher at the Munich-based German Youth Institute (DJI). Previously, she was post-doc researcher in the RTG "Transnational Social Support" (TRANSSOS) at the University of Hildesheim, and research collaborator and assistant for research and teaching at the "Center for Migration, Citizenship and Development" (COMCAD) at the Faculty of Sociology at Bielefeld University.
- German Youth InstituteResearcherMunich
Dr. Eveline Reisenauer is researcher at the Munich-based German Youth Institute (DJI). Previously, she was post-doc researcher in the RTG "Transnational Social Support" (TRANSSOS) at the University of Hildesheim, and research collaborator and assistant for research and teaching at the "Center for Migration, Citizenship and Development" (COMCAD) at the Faculty of Sociology at Bielefeld University.
Victoria Reitter is a PhD fellow at the Department of Sociology and Social Geography at the University of Salzburg. In her dissertation, she investigates administrative practices in Austrian state authorities regarding the identification of stateless persons in the context of (forced) migration to Europe. Her research is triggered by an interest in the production of difference, the governance of migration by legal status, policy implementation and institutional work in state authorities. She holds an MA in Social and Cultural Anthropology and in International Business Administration and worked as a research associate in two projects (on non-deported rejected asylum seekers) at the Department for Political Science at the University of Vienna and (on expectations of refugees in Vienna) at the Institute for Urban and Regional Research at the Austrian Academy of Sciences.
- SociologyResearch associate and PhD FellowSalzburg
Victoria Reitter is a PhD fellow at the Department of Sociology and Social Geography at the University of Salzburg. In her dissertation, she investigates administrative practices in Austrian state authorities regarding the identification of stateless persons in the context of (forced) migration to Europe. Her research is triggered by an interest in the production of difference, the governance of migration by legal status, policy implementation and institutional work in state authorities. She holds an MA in Social and Cultural Anthropology and in International Business Administration and worked as a research associate in two projects (on non-deported rejected asylum seekers) at the Department for Political Science at the University of Vienna and (on expectations of refugees in Vienna) at the Institute for Urban and Regional Research at the Austrian Academy of Sciences.
- Radboud University Nijmegen, Gender & Diversity Studiesexternal PhD studentNijmegen
I did my PhD at the University of Lausanne about the political and social treatment of old age in Switzerland. I did a postdoctoral research on retirement migration and inequalities in Europe and the U.S.A. I am now professor at the University of Applied Sciences and Art Western Switzerland, department of social work.
I did my PhD at the University of Lausanne about the political and social treatment of old age in Switzerland. I did a postdoctoral research on retirement migration and inequalities in Europe and the U.S.A. I am now professor at the University of Applied Sciences and Art Western Switzerland, department of social work.
Bastien Revel has worked on the response to the Syrian refugee crisis for the past seven years, in Lebanon and Turkey, focusing on the social cohesion, livelihoods, municipal support, and the overall resilience dimension of the response. Bastien served as inter-agency sector lead for livelihoods and social cohesion for UNDP Lebanon and is now acting as Inter-Agency Coordinator for UNDP Turkey in charge of the resilience component of the Regional Refugee and Resilience Plan (3RP).
Bastien has over thirteen years of experience working on peacebuilding and governance issues with various international organizations and NGOs. Prior to UNDP, Bastien worked on natural resource governance with the
NGO Global Witness in London, and for four years on municipal governance, democratization and human rights in Kosovo and North Macedonia. Bastien holds a Masters degree in Political Science and International Relations from
Institute of Political Science of Grenoble (France).
- UNDPInterAgency CoordinatorIstanbul
Bastien Revel has worked on the response to the Syrian refugee crisis for the past seven years, in Lebanon and Turkey, focusing on the social cohesion, livelihoods, municipal support, and the overall resilience dimension of the response. Bastien served as inter-agency sector lead for livelihoods and social cohesion for UNDP Lebanon and is now acting as Inter-Agency Coordinator for UNDP Turkey in charge of the resilience component of the Regional Refugee and Resilience Plan (3RP).
Bastien has over thirteen years of experience working on peacebuilding and governance issues with various international organizations and NGOs. Prior to UNDP, Bastien worked on natural resource governance with the
NGO Global Witness in London, and for four years on municipal governance, democratization and human rights in Kosovo and North Macedonia. Bastien holds a Masters degree in Political Science and International Relations from
Institute of Political Science of Grenoble (France).
Léa Réville is a doctoral student on a CIFRE contract with the City of Paris, in the Housing Department, and a member of the UMR Géographie-cités. Her research combines urban geography and the sociology of migration through a study of temporary reception and accommodation facilities for exiles in Paris. Her PHD work, supervised by Camille Schmoll, is entitled: "The refuge city through the lens of temporary urbanism: analysis of a political initiative to open up public buildings to exiled populations in Paris".
- VILLE DE PARISPHD employee (CIFRE)Paris
Léa Réville is a doctoral student on a CIFRE contract with the City of Paris, in the Housing Department, and a member of the UMR Géographie-cités. Her research combines urban geography and the sociology of migration through a study of temporary reception and accommodation facilities for exiles in Paris. Her PHD work, supervised by Camille Schmoll, is entitled: "The refuge city through the lens of temporary urbanism: analysis of a political initiative to open up public buildings to exiled populations in Paris".
Yvonne Riaño is an Associate Professor at the Geography Institute of the University of Neuchâtel (Switzerland), and chairs the Swiss National Committee of the International Geographical Union (IGU). She is also a Research Project Leader at the Swiss National Centre for Competence in Research - The Migration-Mobility Nexus, and leads the 'Transnational Mobilities' Module. Yvonne Riaño obtained a PhD in Human Geography in 1996 from the University of Ottawa (Canada), and has since taught at Canadian, Austrian and Swiss universities. She specialises on Geographies of Inequality. Using a feminist perspective and participatory methodologies, her work contributes to understanding self-organisation in Latin American informal settlements; the role of geographical imaginations in international migration; love migration as search for gender equality; the critical places and moments shaping gender- and ethnic inequality in the labour-market, the role of migration policies in shaping unequal work opportunities, and the strategies of return migrants. Currently, she studies transnational migrant entrepreneurship in Colombia, Spain and Switzerland. Yvonne Riaño has being a Guest Editor for Globalisation, Societies and Education, Qualitative Research, and Géoregards. She has extensively published in international books and peer-reviewed journals including Environment and Planning A; Equality, Diversity and Inclusion; Journal of International Migration and Integration; Globalisation, Societies and Education; Diversities; Géoregards; Oxford Bibliographies, Population, Space and Place, and Qualitative Research.
- Université de NeuchâtelAssociate ProfessorNeuchâtel
- University of BernLecturerBern
- University of NeuchâtelSenior ResearcherNeuchâtel
- Karl-Franzens-Universität GrazLecturerGraz
- University of OttawaTeaching associateOttawa
- International Development Research CentreUrban officer for Latin AmericaOttawa
- Dr. Ernst A. BruggerAdviser for small-scale business developmentZurich
- State Planning Department of BogotaUrban officerBogotá
Yvonne Riaño is an Associate Professor at the Geography Institute of the University of Neuchâtel (Switzerland), and chairs the Swiss National Committee of the International Geographical Union (IGU). She is also a Research Project Leader at the Swiss National Centre for Competence in Research - The Migration-Mobility Nexus, and leads the 'Transnational Mobilities' Module. Yvonne Riaño obtained a PhD in Human Geography in 1996 from the University of Ottawa (Canada), and has since taught at Canadian, Austrian and Swiss universities. She specialises on Geographies of Inequality. Using a feminist perspective and participatory methodologies, her work contributes to understanding self-organisation in Latin American informal settlements; the role of geographical imaginations in international migration; love migration as search for gender equality; the critical places and moments shaping gender- and ethnic inequality in the labour-market, the role of migration policies in shaping unequal work opportunities, and the strategies of return migrants. Currently, she studies transnational migrant entrepreneurship in Colombia, Spain and Switzerland. Yvonne Riaño has being a Guest Editor for Globalisation, Societies and Education, Qualitative Research, and Géoregards. She has extensively published in international books and peer-reviewed journals including Environment and Planning A; Equality, Diversity and Inclusion; Journal of International Migration and Integration; Globalisation, Societies and Education; Diversities; Géoregards; Oxford Bibliographies, Population, Space and Place, and Qualitative Research.
My overarching research focuses on the dynamics of migration, transnationalism, social capital, and identities. My current project examines the political debates regarding Muslim marriage migrants' integration in Canada and Britain and reflect on how these perceived problems and state interventions are constructed on the intersections of gender, religion, class and national origin. My primary methodological approach – ethnography – sheds light on the voices of those often silenced within these matrixes.
- Monash UniversityPhD CandidateMelbourne
- Lahore School of EconomicsResearch FellowLahore
- University of the PunjabLecturerLahore
- British Council Pakistan21st Century Core Skills Teacher TrainerLahore
- York UniversityProfessional Learning CoordinatorToronto
My overarching research focuses on the dynamics of migration, transnationalism, social capital, and identities. My current project examines the political debates regarding Muslim marriage migrants' integration in Canada and Britain and reflect on how these perceived problems and state interventions are constructed on the intersections of gender, religion, class and national origin. My primary methodological approach – ethnography – sheds light on the voices of those often silenced within these matrixes.
Joana Sousa Ribeiro is a researcher at Centre for Social Studies (Europe and the Global South: Heritages and Dialogues´ thematic line) and a PhD student at the School of Economics, University of Coimbra, Portugal. Her PhD thesis is about the de-skilling and re-skilling process of migrants in the healthcare sector. Her main research interests include socio-professional mobility of migrants and refugees, admission and inclusion´migrant policies, health and migration, longitudinal studies, intercultural studies and citizenship. From its publications stand out the organization of the book, in co-authorship, (2021), Material Politics of Citizenship Connecting Migrations with Science and Technology Studies. London: Routledge. She was a co-founder and coordinates a CES working group, the ITM - Inter Thematic group on Migration and she is a member of CES Trauma Observatory.
- CES, University of CoimbraResearcherCoimbra
Joana Sousa Ribeiro is a researcher at Centre for Social Studies (Europe and the Global South: Heritages and Dialogues´ thematic line) and a PhD student at the School of Economics, University of Coimbra, Portugal. Her PhD thesis is about the de-skilling and re-skilling process of migrants in the healthcare sector. Her main research interests include socio-professional mobility of migrants and refugees, admission and inclusion´migrant policies, health and migration, longitudinal studies, intercultural studies and citizenship. From its publications stand out the organization of the book, in co-authorship, (2021), Material Politics of Citizenship Connecting Migrations with Science and Technology Studies. London: Routledge. She was a co-founder and coordinates a CES working group, the ITM - Inter Thematic group on Migration and she is a member of CES Trauma Observatory.
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*References to Kosovo shall be understood to be in the context of United Nations Security Council resolution 1244 (1999).