I am an Assistant Professor at the Department of Economics of Masaryk University (Brno, Czechia) and CERGE-EI Foundation Teaching Fellow (NY, USA).
I am an IZA Affiliate and GLO Fellow.
I am a member of the National Institute for Research on the Socioeconomic Impacts of Disease and Systemic Risks (SYRI).
I am a labour economist and my core research focuses on two broad topics:
1) Discrimination in the marketplace (e.g., labour, rental housing, service markets)
2) Effects of within cohort age differences (i.e., relative age/age at school entry)
Among other things, I am specialized in designing field experiments.
- Masaryk UniversityAssistant ProfessorBrno
I am an Assistant Professor at the Department of Economics of Masaryk University (Brno, Czechia) and CERGE-EI Foundation Teaching Fellow (NY, USA).
I am an IZA Affiliate and GLO Fellow.
I am a member of the National Institute for Research on the Socioeconomic Impacts of Disease and Systemic Risks (SYRI).
I am a labour economist and my core research focuses on two broad topics:
1) Discrimination in the marketplace (e.g., labour, rental housing, service markets)
2) Effects of within cohort age differences (i.e., relative age/age at school entry)
Among other things, I am specialized in designing field experiments.
- Universidade Federal de PernambucoProfessor colaboradorRecife
- Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do NorteProfessor colaboradorNatal
- Fundacao Joaquim NabucoResearcherRecife
Ola G. El-Taliawi is a Postdoctoral Researcher and a Scholar Affiliate of the Columbia Center for Middle East Studies. She holds a PhD degree from the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore, and a Master’s degree in Public Policy and Administration from the American University in Cairo. Her 12 year work experience spans across the public, private and non-profit sectors, where she worked as an assistant lecturer, researcher and consultant. Her research lies at the intersection between forced migration, gender and policy science. She has spoken in international conferences on numerous occasions, including as a guest speaker at the International Labour Organization (Geneva, 2012). Her most recent work is an op-ed entitled “Three ways East Asia can avoid a North Korean refugee crisis”; published with the Conversation.
Ola G. El-Taliawi is a Postdoctoral Researcher and a Scholar Affiliate of the Columbia Center for Middle East Studies. She holds a PhD degree from the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore, and a Master’s degree in Public Policy and Administration from the American University in Cairo. Her 12 year work experience spans across the public, private and non-profit sectors, where she worked as an assistant lecturer, researcher and consultant. Her research lies at the intersection between forced migration, gender and policy science. She has spoken in international conferences on numerous occasions, including as a guest speaker at the International Labour Organization (Geneva, 2012). Her most recent work is an op-ed entitled “Three ways East Asia can avoid a North Korean refugee crisis”; published with the Conversation.
- Ramaiah Public Policy CentreSenior research fellowBangalore
- Border Policing OfficeleaderKiszombor
- University of NairobiAdjunct Lecturer of Migration StudiesNairobi
- Kenya Institute of Migration Studies (KIMS),University of NairobiCoordinatorNairobi
- Ohio State University and KIMSPrincipal Investigator: Using a Human Security Lens to Examine Experiences of Violence of Women in Long Term EncampmentNairobi
Lorenzo Gabrielli, Ph.D. cum laude in Political Science from LAMScience Po Bordeaux, France (2011). is post-doctoral researcher at GRITIM-UPF, associate lecturer at Political Science Department at Universitat Pompeu Fabra, and associate researcher at Centre Emile DurkheimSciences Po Bordeaux. He has been visiting researcher at United Nationas University – Institute of Globalisation, Culture and Mobility (UNU-GCM), and senior visiting researcher at IEMed (European Institute of the Mediterranean). Dr. Gabrielli has also worked as researcher for EUNOMAD European Network on Migration and Development, and for the Fundació Jaume Bofill, Barcelona. His research interests covers the following issues: the multilevel governance of international migration in the EuroAfrican space; the ‘migration–development’ nexus; borders and bordering/re-bordering processes; the issue of migrant integration; the transnational political participation of migrants, between other issues related with migration phenomena.
Dr. Gabrielli received a B.S. in Law from the University of Trento, Italy (2001), a DEA (MAS) in “Political analysis of Africa and Southern Countries”, from CEANScience Po Bordeaux (2002), and a Ph.D. cum laude in Political Science from LAMScience Po Bordeaux, France (2011). His PhD dissertation examined the development of Spanish immigration policy, underlying his ambiguities and ambivalences through the case of West African migrations. Dr. Gabrielli was granted a Marie Curie PhD fellowship at Deusto University of Bilbao European Doctorate Program of “Migration, Territory and Conflict” (20032004), and a fellowship by Bofill Foundation (Barcelona) (2006 2007).
He has also collaborated with the MHIC (Museum of Immigration History of Catalonia) where he developed contents and a multimedia application of the issue of forced mobility for the permanent exhibition. He is reviewer for several social sciences journals and book editors.
- GRITIM-UPFSenior ResearcherBarcelona
Lorenzo Gabrielli, Ph.D. cum laude in Political Science from LAMScience Po Bordeaux, France (2011). is post-doctoral researcher at GRITIM-UPF, associate lecturer at Political Science Department at Universitat Pompeu Fabra, and associate researcher at Centre Emile DurkheimSciences Po Bordeaux. He has been visiting researcher at United Nationas University – Institute of Globalisation, Culture and Mobility (UNU-GCM), and senior visiting researcher at IEMed (European Institute of the Mediterranean). Dr. Gabrielli has also worked as researcher for EUNOMAD European Network on Migration and Development, and for the Fundació Jaume Bofill, Barcelona. His research interests covers the following issues: the multilevel governance of international migration in the EuroAfrican space; the ‘migration–development’ nexus; borders and bordering/re-bordering processes; the issue of migrant integration; the transnational political participation of migrants, between other issues related with migration phenomena.
Dr. Gabrielli received a B.S. in Law from the University of Trento, Italy (2001), a DEA (MAS) in “Political analysis of Africa and Southern Countries”, from CEANScience Po Bordeaux (2002), and a Ph.D. cum laude in Political Science from LAMScience Po Bordeaux, France (2011). His PhD dissertation examined the development of Spanish immigration policy, underlying his ambiguities and ambivalences through the case of West African migrations. Dr. Gabrielli was granted a Marie Curie PhD fellowship at Deusto University of Bilbao European Doctorate Program of “Migration, Territory and Conflict” (20032004), and a fellowship by Bofill Foundation (Barcelona) (2006 2007).
He has also collaborated with the MHIC (Museum of Immigration History of Catalonia) where he developed contents and a multimedia application of the issue of forced mobility for the permanent exhibition. He is reviewer for several social sciences journals and book editors.
- University of DenverDenver
Associate Professor in the Technologies in Practice (TIP) group at the IT University of Copenhagen. He completed his Ph.D. at the University of Linköping in Sweden. His current research focuses on social movements and their use of digital media, radical politics, counter-information, internet activism, and lay expertise. Galis has published on social movements and sociotechnical systems from a Science and Technology Studies (STS) perspective, including editing a recent special issue together with Stuart Blume and Andrés Valderama for the journal Science, Technology and Human Values.
- IT university of CopenhagenAssociate ProfessorCopenhagen
Associate Professor in the Technologies in Practice (TIP) group at the IT University of Copenhagen. He completed his Ph.D. at the University of Linköping in Sweden. His current research focuses on social movements and their use of digital media, radical politics, counter-information, internet activism, and lay expertise. Galis has published on social movements and sociotechnical systems from a Science and Technology Studies (STS) perspective, including editing a recent special issue together with Stuart Blume and Andrés Valderama for the journal Science, Technology and Human Values.
I am a social anthropologist working on migration, gender and religion and, more recently on academic displacement and refugees.
- University of Trento - Department of Sociology and Social ResearchAssociate ProfessorTrento
- Scholars at RiskMember of the International Advisory Committee and National Co-coordinator of SAR ItalyNew York
I am a social anthropologist working on migration, gender and religion and, more recently on academic displacement and refugees.
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*References to Kosovo shall be understood to be in the context of United Nations Security Council resolution 1244 (1999).