|
10월 23일~26일 매시대학 알바니 캠퍼스에서의 'Pathways to Metropolis in the 21st century'에 뉴질랜드 한인여성회 부스가 마련되어 관련 정보를 공유할 예정입니다.
참석하시고자 하는 분들은
http://newsettlers.massey.ac.nz/events.php?pathtab=2
로 들어가셔서 참석 신청하시면 됩니다.
프로그램은 아래와 같이 진행됩니다.
24-26 October 2012
Massey University Albany (East Precinct)
Albany Expressway (SH17); Gate 1
Albany 0632
New Zealand
Phone: 0800 627 739 (within NZ)
Phone: +64 6 350 5701 (outside NZ)
Map of the area:
http://www.massey.ac.nz/massey/contact/albany-campus/google-maps-albany.cfm
Map of Massey University East Precinct:
http://contact.massey.ac.nz/massey/fms//About%20Massey/contact-us/maps/AK%20East%20Precinct.pdf
Programme
The final 2012 Pathways to Metropolis in the 21st Century conference programme is now available here to download as a PDF. Please note, this programme is subject to change. If you require any further detail to assist in your travel arrangements,please contact Trudie Cain: t.cain@massey.ac.nz.
We have the following plenary speakers confirmed:
Oliver Bakewell is Co-Director and James Martin Fellow at the International Migration Institute (IMI), University of Oxford. His research interests include migration, diasporas and global development; social theory and migra-tion; 'force' versus 'voluntar'’ migration; African migration; borderlands; identity papers; migration discours-es; Zambia; and Angola. In addition to working on the Global Migration Futures project, Oliver is the principal investigator for the project Theorizing the Evolution of European Migration Systems (THEMIS) funded by NOR-FACE, which examines the conditions that encourage initial moves by pioneer migrants to become established migration system. He is also principal investigator for the MacArthur-funded Mobility in the African Great Lakes project and leading research into the formation of African diasporas within the African continent as part of the Oxford Diasporas Programme. He has been conducting research from the mid-1990s into the changing patterns of cross-border movements between Angola and Zambia. Before joining IMI, he spent many years working with migrants and refugees both as a researcher and as a practitioner with a range of development and humanitarian NGOs. He holds a PhD and MSc in Development Studies and a BA in Mathematics.
Ayla Bonfiglio is a Researcher at the International Migration Institute, University of Oxford, working on the Afri-can Great Lakes Region Mobility project and the Global Migration Futures project, where she has developed future migration scenarios for Europe, North Africa, and, most recently, the Horn of Africa. Ayla obtained her Masters in Forced Migration in 2010 from the University of Oxford. Her dissertation, published by UNHCR in 2010, examined non-formal education programs for refugees living in UNHCR-sponsored settlements and for urban refugees in Uganda. Ayla also holds a BA (Hons) in Political Science from Columbia University, United States. Her dissertation, which won the Charles A. Beard prize for the best paper in political science in two years, was a comparative study of the levels of self-reliance of urban self-settled and rural settlement refugees in Uganda. Ayla has worked and carried out research in Uganda, Guatemala, Senegal and Rwanda. She has worked as a Google Policy Fellow in Washington, D.C. studying the proliferation of African mobile telecommu-nications and she has worked with the Refugee Studies Centre at Oxford on issues of child protection in the Occupied Palestinian Territories and faith-based humanitarianism.
Jock Collins is Professor of Social Economics in the Management Discipline Group of the Faculty of Business at the University Technology, Sydney (UTS), Australia, where he has been teaching since 1977. He is Co-Director of the Cosmopolitan Civil Societies Research Centre at UTS. His research interests centre on an interdisciplinary study of immigration and cultural diversity in the economy and society. His recent research has been on Australian immigration, ethnic crime, immigrant and indigenous entrepreneurship, immigrant youth, ethnic precincts and tourism, multiculturalism, the Cronulla Beach Riots and the social use of ethnic heritage and the built environment.
Jean-Christophe Dumont is Head of the International Migration Division (IMD) of the Directorate for Employment, Labour and Social Affairs at the OECD. He is responsible for the publication of the OECD Annual Report International Migration Outlook and other OECD publications related to international migration. Dr Dumont joined the OECD in 2000 as an economist in the International Migration Division. He has many publications on the economics of international mobility of persons, including on labour market integration of immigrants and on the management of migration flows. Recently he has published several reports on the international mobility of health workers to OECD countries, in collaboration with the WHO. Prior to joining the OECD, M. Dumont has worked as a research fellow in Laval University, Quebec Canada and at the European research Centre on Eco-nomic Development DIAL in Paris, France. He holds a PhD in development economics and a master degree in mathematics applied to social sciences from University Paris IX Dauphine, France.
Simona Vezzoli is a Research Officer at the International Migration Institute, Oxford University. She has re-searched migration and development initiatives in Mexico, Morocco, Ghana, Senegal and Serbia, and she gained an understanding of applied migration and development projects while working on the Migration for the Development in Africa (MIDA) project at the International Organization for Migration in Rome. While at IOM Rome, she also conducted research on unaccompanied Afghan minors seeking asylum in Italy to document their journeys from Afghanistan and Iran to Italy. At IMI, Simona has worked on the Global Migration Fu-tures project and has contributed to the adoption and the adaptation of the scenario methodology for the study of the future of migration. Currently, her research focuses on the determinants of migration within the Determinants of International Migration (DEMIG) project, specifically conducting research on the history and evolution of migration patterns and policies in the Caribbean region. Her research interests include migration policy, in particular sending countries' perspectives on emigration and the interaction between emigration and immigration policies; sending country policies to engage diaspora communities; and return and reintegration of migrants in their communities of origin.
Brenda Yeoh is Professor at the Department of Geography and Head of the Southeast Asian Studies Programme at the National University of Singapore. She is also Research Leader of the Asian Migration Research Cluster at the University’s Asia Research Institute as well as Principal Investigator of the Asian MetaCentre, a research programme on population, health and development in Asia funded by the Wellcome Trust. Her research interests include the politics of space in colonial and post-colonial cities; and gender, migration and transnational communities. She has published widely and her books on gender, migration and transnationalism include: Gender and Migration; Gender Politics in the Asia-Pacific Region; Approaching Transnationalisms; State/Nation/Transnation: Perspectives on Transnationalism in the Asia-Pacific; Migration and Health in Asia; and Asian Women as Transnational Domestic Workers.
|