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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 381 - 390 of 2461
Centre de Recherches Internationales (CERI)
Paris

Dr Carrillo Lerma is currently a Research Fellow at the Centre for International Studies (CERI) and a Lecturer at Sciences Po - Paris. Her research interests and expertise touch upon diaspora politics, memory politics/politics of memory, social transformation, conflict transformation, and participatory research methodologies.
Photo - credit must read: Christelle Alix.

  • Centre de Recherches Internationales (CERI)
    Paris

Dr Carrillo Lerma is currently a Research Fellow at the Centre for International Studies (CERI) and a Lecturer at Sciences Po - Paris. Her research interests and expertise touch upon diaspora politics, memory politics/politics of memory, social transformation, conflict transformation, and participatory research methodologies.
Photo - credit must read: Christelle Alix.

NOVA University - Portugal
researcher and professor
Lisboa

I'm an anthropologist. I became interested in Arab and Muslim contexts, which are central to my academic work. Initially in Mauritania and Morocco, more recently in Portugal. My themes of research are gender and family but I often go where the fieldwork takes me. I integrate a collective of anthropologists that directed the documentary A Ramadan in Lisbon, a project I'm really proud of. I'm currently a postdoctoral fellow, conducting research about Islam in Portugal. I'm a researcher at the Center for Network of Research in Anthropology (CRIA) and a visiting assistant professor at the Department of Anthropology at NOVA-School of Humanities and Social Sciences in Lisbon, Portugal

  • NOVA University - Portugal
    researcher and professor
    Lisboa

I'm an anthropologist. I became interested in Arab and Muslim contexts, which are central to my academic work. Initially in Mauritania and Morocco, more recently in Portugal. My themes of research are gender and family but I often go where the fieldwork takes me. I integrate a collective of anthropologists that directed the documentary A Ramadan in Lisbon, a project I'm really proud of. I'm currently a postdoctoral fellow, conducting research about Islam in Portugal. I'm a researcher at the Center for Network of Research in Anthropology (CRIA) and a visiting assistant professor at the Department of Anthropology at NOVA-School of Humanities and Social Sciences in Lisbon, Portugal

Brown University
Doctoral student (candidate)
Providence

I am a doctoral candidate in Sociology at Brown University. I hold a Bachelor of Science in Geography and Regional Planning from the New University of Lisbon and a Master's of Arts degree in Sociology from Brown University.

My research interests lie in the intersection of international migration, race and ethnicity, and urban spaces. More specifically, my current scholarship looks at how immigration-driven ethnoracial diversity shapes social (especially intergroup) interactions and attitudes; and at how race and racism influence the outcomes, experiences and social networks of international migrants.

My ongoing dissertation project looks at how race and racism matter for understanding the outcomes and migration processes of international migrants. Specifically, it examines how: ethnoracial identities are transformed during migration processes; race and racism shape the incorporation outcomes and the transnational networks of migrants; and how all these processes are shaped by differences in meso-level factors and macro-level contexts of racial formation and migrant reception. I focus on one ethnoracially diverse migrant group in two comparable metropolitan areas: Brazilians in Boston (United States) and Lisbon (Portugal).

Beyond the dissertation, I am currently working on two papers looking at the aspects influencing trust in neighbors and the establishment of interethnic contacts in twelve ethnically diverse neighborhoods located in four European cities: Bilbao, Spain; Lisbon, Portugal; Thessaloniki, Greece; and Vienna, Austria.

  • Brown University
    Doctoral student (candidate)
    Providence

I am a doctoral candidate in Sociology at Brown University. I hold a Bachelor of Science in Geography and Regional Planning from the New University of Lisbon and a Master's of Arts degree in Sociology from Brown University.

My research interests lie in the intersection of international migration, race and ethnicity, and urban spaces. More specifically, my current scholarship looks at how immigration-driven ethnoracial diversity shapes social (especially intergroup) interactions and attitudes; and at how race and racism influence the outcomes, experiences and social networks of international migrants.

My ongoing dissertation project looks at how race and racism matter for understanding the outcomes and migration processes of international migrants. Specifically, it examines how: ethnoracial identities are transformed during migration processes; race and racism shape the incorporation outcomes and the transnational networks of migrants; and how all these processes are shaped by differences in meso-level factors and macro-level contexts of racial formation and migrant reception. I focus on one ethnoracially diverse migrant group in two comparable metropolitan areas: Brazilians in Boston (United States) and Lisbon (Portugal).

Beyond the dissertation, I am currently working on two papers looking at the aspects influencing trust in neighbors and the establishment of interethnic contacts in twelve ethnically diverse neighborhoods located in four European cities: Bilbao, Spain; Lisbon, Portugal; Thessaloniki, Greece; and Vienna, Austria.

Peace Research Institute Oslo
Research assistant
Oslo

I am a young researcher interested in how we can use quantitative data to understand and contribute to Human Development.

Currently I am working as a Research Assistant at the Peace Research Institute Oslo, where I contribute to the development of two projects related to migration: MIGNEX and FUMI.

FUMI (Future Migration as Present Fact) is an ERC funded project led by Jørgen Carling that examines young adults’ thoughts and feelings about the possibility of migrating, based on empirical mixed-methods research in three West African countries. For more, please visit www.prio.org/fumi

MIGNEX (New knowledge on migration, development and policy) is a large collaborative project funded by the European Commission. PRIO leads a consortium of nine institutions. We collect data in ten countries in Africa, the Middle East and Asia, and have an extensive programme of publishing and research communication. For more, please see www.mignex.org.

I hold a Master of Arts in Development Studies from the Erasmus University of Rotterdam, where Imajored in development economics with a specialisation in econometric analysis. My main expertise is on survey design, analysis and communications.

  • Peace Research Institute Oslo
    Research assistant
    Oslo

I am a young researcher interested in how we can use quantitative data to understand and contribute to Human Development.

Currently I am working as a Research Assistant at the Peace Research Institute Oslo, where I contribute to the development of two projects related to migration: MIGNEX and FUMI.

FUMI (Future Migration as Present Fact) is an ERC funded project led by Jørgen Carling that examines young adults’ thoughts and feelings about the possibility of migrating, based on empirical mixed-methods research in three West African countries. For more, please visit www.prio.org/fumi

MIGNEX (New knowledge on migration, development and policy) is a large collaborative project funded by the European Commission. PRIO leads a consortium of nine institutions. We collect data in ten countries in Africa, the Middle East and Asia, and have an extensive programme of publishing and research communication. For more, please see www.mignex.org.

I hold a Master of Arts in Development Studies from the Erasmus University of Rotterdam, where Imajored in development economics with a specialisation in econometric analysis. My main expertise is on survey design, analysis and communications.

College of Europe
Senior research fellow
Warsaw

I hold a PhD in social and political sciences, awarded in 1998, by the European University Institute. Previously, I studied political science at the Institut d’Etudes Politiques in Aix-en-Provence where I specialized on the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region while learning Arabic.

I have lived and worked in Jordan, Morocco and Tunisia. Currently, I am a Senior Research Fellow at the European Neighbourhood Policy Chair of the College of Europe (Natolin Campus) where I direct the Natolin Academy of Migration while teaching and developing research on how migration affect bilateral and multilateral patterns of cooperation. I am also a research associate at the Tunis-based Research Institute on the Contemporary Maghreb (IRMC). As of February 2020, I will direct the Chair on Migration Studies at the Institute for Advanced Studies IMéRA, Aix-Marseille University.

My publications and major interests focus on the expansion of international regulatory systems and bilateral/regional patterns of cooperation, and on the diffusion and internalization of norms and practices pertaining to the “governance” of international migration, especially with reference to MENA and African countries.

Prior to this, I was part-time professor at the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies (European University Institute, Florence) where I supervised and managed interdisciplinary research projects on migration policies and developed field surveys mobilizing EU and non-EU partner institutions (in North and sub-Saharan Africa, the Mediterranean and the Caucasus).

I have also worked for the International Training Centre of the International Labour Organisation (ITC-ILO). I have served as a consultant to the European Parliament (LIBE Committee) on readmission policies and human rights observance in the EU. I have also cooperated with the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) and the OECD Sahel and West Africa Club (SWAC).

Finally, I am a member of the scientific committee of the Laboratory of Critical Studies on Forced Migration based at the University of Milan (Italy).

  • College of Europe
    Senior research fellow
    Warsaw

I hold a PhD in social and political sciences, awarded in 1998, by the European University Institute. Previously, I studied political science at the Institut d’Etudes Politiques in Aix-en-Provence where I specialized on the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region while learning Arabic.

I have lived and worked in Jordan, Morocco and Tunisia. Currently, I am a Senior Research Fellow at the European Neighbourhood Policy Chair of the College of Europe (Natolin Campus) where I direct the Natolin Academy of Migration while teaching and developing research on how migration affect bilateral and multilateral patterns of cooperation. I am also a research associate at the Tunis-based Research Institute on the Contemporary Maghreb (IRMC). As of February 2020, I will direct the Chair on Migration Studies at the Institute for Advanced Studies IMéRA, Aix-Marseille University.

My publications and major interests focus on the expansion of international regulatory systems and bilateral/regional patterns of cooperation, and on the diffusion and internalization of norms and practices pertaining to the “governance” of international migration, especially with reference to MENA and African countries.

Prior to this, I was part-time professor at the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies (European University Institute, Florence) where I supervised and managed interdisciplinary research projects on migration policies and developed field surveys mobilizing EU and non-EU partner institutions (in North and sub-Saharan Africa, the Mediterranean and the Caucasus).

I have also worked for the International Training Centre of the International Labour Organisation (ITC-ILO). I have served as a consultant to the European Parliament (LIBE Committee) on readmission policies and human rights observance in the EU. I have also cooperated with the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) and the OECD Sahel and West Africa Club (SWAC).

Finally, I am a member of the scientific committee of the Laboratory of Critical Studies on Forced Migration based at the University of Milan (Italy).

Northumbria University
Professor of Political Geography
Newcastle upon Tyne

Kathryn is a political geographer and activist, whose work explores processes and practices of bordering and ordering contemporary societies and the ways in which these are being disrupted both through collective and mundane actions.

Her current research, funded by the Leverhulme Trust (2019-2021), seeks to address current theoretical and conceptual gaps in the field of border(ing) studies by developing disorder as a conceptual lens for analysing bordering processes and practices, drawing primarily on the work of Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari. This conceptual work is underpinned by an empirical study of the disorders of bordering within three different UK public institutions: the National Health Service, higher education and social security.

Her current project builds upon earlier work, which focused on the ways in which borders and the processes and practices through which they are (re)made have moved from the margins into the centre of contemporary social and political life. This research primarily emanates from a collaboration with colleagues from the EUBorderscapes (2012-2016) project, Professor Nira Yuval-Davis and Dr. Georgie Wemyss.

Kathryn has wider research interests in geopolitics and institutional geographies. Her PhD research in Ukraine and Romania explored the alter-geopolitical lives of those living in marginalised communities. More recently, she has been collaborating with colleagues to research a range of different forced accommodation settings, including prisons and asylum seeker housing.

Kathryn completed her undergraduate studies in geography at the University of Nottingham, before moving on to study for an interdisciplinary MA at the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, UCL in 1999-2000. After a few years of working in the private sector, she returned to academia in 2005 to complete an MA and PhD at the University of Birmingham, which were funded by the Economic and Social Research Council.

She taught at the University of Birmingham in the 2006-2007 academic year and whilst carrying out research in Ukraine, she also gave a series of lectures at Yuriy Fedkovych Chernivtsi National University. She was a research fellow at the University of Babes-Bolyai in Romania from January to July 2009. Prior to joining Northumbria in September 2013, Kathryn worked in the School of Geography at Queen Mary, University of London, initially as a Teaching Fellow and then as a Lecturer in Human Geography.

  • Northumbria University
    Professor of Political Geography
    Newcastle upon Tyne

Kathryn is a political geographer and activist, whose work explores processes and practices of bordering and ordering contemporary societies and the ways in which these are being disrupted both through collective and mundane actions.

Her current research, funded by the Leverhulme Trust (2019-2021), seeks to address current theoretical and conceptual gaps in the field of border(ing) studies by developing disorder as a conceptual lens for analysing bordering processes and practices, drawing primarily on the work of Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari. This conceptual work is underpinned by an empirical study of the disorders of bordering within three different UK public institutions: the National Health Service, higher education and social security.

Her current project builds upon earlier work, which focused on the ways in which borders and the processes and practices through which they are (re)made have moved from the margins into the centre of contemporary social and political life. This research primarily emanates from a collaboration with colleagues from the EUBorderscapes (2012-2016) project, Professor Nira Yuval-Davis and Dr. Georgie Wemyss.

Kathryn has wider research interests in geopolitics and institutional geographies. Her PhD research in Ukraine and Romania explored the alter-geopolitical lives of those living in marginalised communities. More recently, she has been collaborating with colleagues to research a range of different forced accommodation settings, including prisons and asylum seeker housing.

Kathryn completed her undergraduate studies in geography at the University of Nottingham, before moving on to study for an interdisciplinary MA at the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, UCL in 1999-2000. After a few years of working in the private sector, she returned to academia in 2005 to complete an MA and PhD at the University of Birmingham, which were funded by the Economic and Social Research Council.

She taught at the University of Birmingham in the 2006-2007 academic year and whilst carrying out research in Ukraine, she also gave a series of lectures at Yuriy Fedkovych Chernivtsi National University. She was a research fellow at the University of Babes-Bolyai in Romania from January to July 2009. Prior to joining Northumbria in September 2013, Kathryn worked in the School of Geography at Queen Mary, University of London, initially as a Teaching Fellow and then as a Lecturer in Human Geography.

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