Archived News and Events
New publication by Divcult members Ana Laura Rodríguez Quiñones and Monika Salzbrunn (University of Lausanne) Download pdf file of the full issue Contents: Monika Salzbrunn and Ana Laura Rodríguez Quiñones (University of Lausanne) Introduction:...
- Category: News from Members
Application Deadline: 09 December 2024
As a postdoctoral researcher in the RUNOMI Research Programme on Labour Migration you will be employed in the Geography, Planning and Environment department at the Nijmegen School of Management.
- Category: Jobs & opportunities
Deadline: 15th January 2025
Displaced Arts: Creative Practices and Geographies of Asylum Symposium hosted by the Institute for Adanced Studies in the Humanities (IASH), University of Edinburgh, 24th June 2025.
- Category: News from Members
Wednesday 18th Dec. from 14:30 – 16:00
This event will bring together experts on highly skilled migration in major migrant receiving countries in (South) East Asia as well as Germany to explore and compare the challenges of retaining, rather than simply recruiting, highly skilled migrants in...
- Category: News from Members
CIMR is open access and editorial-reviewed journal which offers a flexible medium to publish texts that contribute to salient academic and public debates and discuss issues that have not yet received sufficient scholarly attention.
- Category: News from Members
IMISCOE is now seeking candidates for 3 positions as Members of the Jury for the Maria Ioannis Baganha Best Thesis Award.
- Category: Network News
The Immigration Research Network of the Council for European Studies(CES) invites submissions for the Best Paper Award to be presented at the 2025 CES Annual Conference.
- Category: News from Members
The Immigration Research Network of the Council for European Studies (CES) invites you to register to their first Webinar.
- Category: News from Members
The next session of the Mobilities and Belonging seminar will take place on Tuesday 19 November, 3:00 PM-5:00 PM (Paris time, GMT+2).
- Category: News from Members
Human movement from one place to the other – or occasions of non-movement and stuckness – can lead to various forms of social conflicts and can cater potential for both explicit and implicit forms of violence.
- Category: News from Members