The IMISCOE PhD Network aims to strengthen research and network opportunities for doctoral researchers in the field of migration. The Network has several dedicated working groups, each with active members who plan and carry out activities relevant for PhD migration scholars.
Women have long faced systemic gender discrimination and inequality, economic disparities, obstacles to education, and reproductive health problems in developing regions that are exacerbated by the climate crises. Natural disasters are not neutral since...
Recalling lived experiences of migration can bring about a range of emotions, memories, and aspirations. But what about the children of those who migrate who may have no lived experience or memory of migrating themselves yet bear the burden of retelling...
For Indigenous PhD students who are migrants or refugees, pursuing a doctorate in migration studies is intellectually and emotionally a convoluted undertaking. These scholars offer a profound understanding of their field, conditioned by self-related...
In the intricate landscape of migration studies, the tension between the academic imperative to publish and the moral imperative to effect societal change is particularly pronounced. This tension opened up to me during a conversation with an NGO worker...
Migration toward the Global North introduces us, Global South researchers, to a challenging dance of global immigration policies. Our mobility becomes constrained, hindering access to scientific opportunities concentrated in the Global North. Upon...