The SmartMove2UK is a specialist immigration law firm with branches in India (Mumbai | Delhi | Bengaluru) led by a specialist Solicitor. Evolving from practicing exclusively in the areas of UK nationality and immigration law.
With more than a decade of Experience providing immigration and nationality services, we offer clients a personal and friendly, yet comprehensive solution to their immigration, travel and business needs.
The SmartMove2UK is a specialist immigration law firm with branches in India (Mumbai | Delhi | Bengaluru) led by a specialist Solicitor. Evolving from practicing exclusively in the areas of UK nationality and immigration law.
With more than a decade of Experience providing immigration and nationality services, we offer clients a personal and friendly, yet comprehensive solution to their immigration, travel and business needs.
Kevin Smets is research professor in film studies and cultural media studies. He studied cultural history (KU Leuven) and obtained a PhD in Film Studies and Visual Culture (University of Antwerp). His research focuses primarily on the intersections between migration, media and conflict, with a long research interest in Turkey. Kevin is co-director of the ECHO research group and since 2021 he leads the Reel Borders project, funded by an ERC Starting Grant. He also teaches the course ‘Film history’.
- Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB)Associate ProfessorBrussel
Kevin Smets is research professor in film studies and cultural media studies. He studied cultural history (KU Leuven) and obtained a PhD in Film Studies and Visual Culture (University of Antwerp). His research focuses primarily on the intersections between migration, media and conflict, with a long research interest in Turkey. Kevin is co-director of the ECHO research group and since 2021 he leads the Reel Borders project, funded by an ERC Starting Grant. He also teaches the course ‘Film history’.
I am scholar of migration, transnational and translocal processes as linked to livelihoods, aspirations and identities. This research extends to climate change, rural-urban connectivities, societal engagement with new technologies, the role of diasporas and reconsiderations of the contested notion of development.
- Radboud University NijmegenAssociate ProfessorNijmegen
I am scholar of migration, transnational and translocal processes as linked to livelihoods, aspirations and identities. This research extends to climate change, rural-urban connectivities, societal engagement with new technologies, the role of diasporas and reconsiderations of the contested notion of development.
PhD student in Political and Social Sciences at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra under the supervision of Dr. Miriam Bradley and Dr. Margarita Petrova and as part of the Institut Barcelona d’Estudis Internacionals (IBEI). Prior experience working as a humanitarian practitioner and researcher specialising in migration, security, and gender with ten years of experience working alongside migrants, asylum-seekers, and refugees in Bangladesh, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Rwanda, Ukraine and the UK with UN agencies and NGOs.
Expertise in mixed method and qualitative participatory social research methods. Research interests focus on the securitisation of migration and its relationships to violence, discrimination, and gendered impacts as well as the everyday practices of migrant resistance.
- International Organization for MigrationProtection Officer (Gender-Based Violence)Cox's Bazar
- INTERSOSProtection Officer | Rapid Needs Assessment Focal PointZahle
- The Refugee CouncilPowerful Women Project AssistantLondon
- Africa and Middle East Refugee Assistance (AMERA)CaseworkerCairo
- Rwanda Women’s Network (RWN)Protection SpecialistKigali
- The Academic Development CentreSenior Student Academic Mentor (SSAM)Kingston upon Thames
- Helen Bamber Centre for the Study of Rights, Conflict and Mass ViolenceResearcherKingston upon Thames
- Survivor’s Fund (SURF)ResearcherKigali
- Helen Bamber Centre for the Study of Rights, Conflict and Mass ViolenceResearch InternKingston upon Thames
- International Organization for Migration (IOM)Gender-Based Violence (GBV) ConsultantKyiv and Ternopil
- International Organization for MigrationWomen's Participation Project ConsultantGeneva
- International Organization for MigrationChild Participation and Accessibility ConsultantGeneva
PhD student in Political and Social Sciences at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra under the supervision of Dr. Miriam Bradley and Dr. Margarita Petrova and as part of the Institut Barcelona d’Estudis Internacionals (IBEI). Prior experience working as a humanitarian practitioner and researcher specialising in migration, security, and gender with ten years of experience working alongside migrants, asylum-seekers, and refugees in Bangladesh, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Rwanda, Ukraine and the UK with UN agencies and NGOs.
Expertise in mixed method and qualitative participatory social research methods. Research interests focus on the securitisation of migration and its relationships to violence, discrimination, and gendered impacts as well as the everyday practices of migrant resistance.
I am Senior Research Fellow in Asylum and Migration at the University of Huddersfield. With extensive experience in the field of forced migration, my expertise has developed through long-term research and direct professional practice, service delivery and management with migrant and refugee organisations. My research focuses broadly on migration, asylum and refugee studies, with a particular focus on feminist narrative research and ethical dilemmas in feminist research. Often using creative, visual and participatory methodologies, I am particularly interested in how migration is understood and experienced by women. I have published and presented widely on these topics, including co-editing “Feminist Narrative Research: Opportunities and Challenges” (Palgrave Macmillan 2017). Contributing to many invited presentations at national and international workshops and conferences, my more recent work includes critical engagement with narratives of vulnerability and resistance.
I am one of the Research Leads, shared and alongside Dr. Anna Davidson and Dr. Grainne McMahon, on Feminist Spaces. This project brings together feminist, anti-racist, embodied practices of creating safe(r) spaces and arts activism to resignify space and to perform everyday acts of resistance with voice and action. This research has built a collaborative, capacity-releasing network by pairing up UK and European-based projects of resistance with a range of allied projects in less economically developed countries. Please see our website. We are currently working on Making Spaces which explores feminist responses and survival strategies in the Covid-19 pandemic. Our projects partners include the Racial Justice Network (West Yorkshire) and RAPAR (Manchester).
- University of HuddersfieldSenior Research FellowHuddersfield
I am Senior Research Fellow in Asylum and Migration at the University of Huddersfield. With extensive experience in the field of forced migration, my expertise has developed through long-term research and direct professional practice, service delivery and management with migrant and refugee organisations. My research focuses broadly on migration, asylum and refugee studies, with a particular focus on feminist narrative research and ethical dilemmas in feminist research. Often using creative, visual and participatory methodologies, I am particularly interested in how migration is understood and experienced by women. I have published and presented widely on these topics, including co-editing “Feminist Narrative Research: Opportunities and Challenges” (Palgrave Macmillan 2017). Contributing to many invited presentations at national and international workshops and conferences, my more recent work includes critical engagement with narratives of vulnerability and resistance.
I am one of the Research Leads, shared and alongside Dr. Anna Davidson and Dr. Grainne McMahon, on Feminist Spaces. This project brings together feminist, anti-racist, embodied practices of creating safe(r) spaces and arts activism to resignify space and to perform everyday acts of resistance with voice and action. This research has built a collaborative, capacity-releasing network by pairing up UK and European-based projects of resistance with a range of allied projects in less economically developed countries. Please see our website. We are currently working on Making Spaces which explores feminist responses and survival strategies in the Covid-19 pandemic. Our projects partners include the Racial Justice Network (West Yorkshire) and RAPAR (Manchester).
- Erasmus University RotterdamTeacher/researcherRotterdam
- Ministry of DevelopmentSenior specialistWarsaw
- University of WarsawAsistant professorWarsaw
- Cracow Economic UniversityAssistant ProfessorKraków
- Ministry of DevelopmentSenior specialistWarsaw
Dr Kelly Soderstrom is an academic staff member in the Faculty of Business and Economics at the University of Melbourne. Her PhD thesis in Politics and International Relations (Faculty of Arts, University of Melbourne) examines the role of state responsibilities in shaping the German government's response to the 2015 refugee crisis. Her current research investigates the drivers of interventions by sports-based NGOs in asylum governance.
She holds a Bachelors degree (cum laude) in Political Science / International Relations from Carleton College (USA) and a Masters degree (distinction) in International and European Politics from the University of Edinburgh (UK). Her research interests include asylum governance, European integration and EU politics, NGOs, and sustainability/CSR. Between 2017-2022, she was a Research Partner with the Jean Monnet Erasmus+ network Comparative Network on Refugee Externalisation Policies (CONREP). In 2018, she was awarded a graduate fellowship at the European University Institute in Florence, Italy.
- The University of MelbourneMelbourne
Dr Kelly Soderstrom is an academic staff member in the Faculty of Business and Economics at the University of Melbourne. Her PhD thesis in Politics and International Relations (Faculty of Arts, University of Melbourne) examines the role of state responsibilities in shaping the German government's response to the 2015 refugee crisis. Her current research investigates the drivers of interventions by sports-based NGOs in asylum governance.
She holds a Bachelors degree (cum laude) in Political Science / International Relations from Carleton College (USA) and a Masters degree (distinction) in International and European Politics from the University of Edinburgh (UK). Her research interests include asylum governance, European integration and EU politics, NGOs, and sustainability/CSR. Between 2017-2022, she was a Research Partner with the Jean Monnet Erasmus+ network Comparative Network on Refugee Externalisation Policies (CONREP). In 2018, she was awarded a graduate fellowship at the European University Institute in Florence, Italy.
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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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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 here.
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*References to Kosovo shall be understood to be in the context of United Nations Security Council resolution 1244 (1999).