Brochure - Global Governance Programme
Transcription
Brochure - Global Governance Programme
RESEARCH TURNED INTO ACTION The Global Governance Programme Published in June 2016 by the European University Institute © European University Institute, 2016 FOREWORD The Global Governance Programme is one of the flagship programmes of the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies at the European University Institute. It aims to build a community of outstanding professors and scholars, produce high quality research, engage with the world of practice through policy dialogue, and contribute to the fostering of present and future generations of policy- and decision-makers through its executive training. The launch of the Programme in 2010 was based on the understanding that the world has fundamentally changed over the last twenty years, becoming ever more connected and multipolar, with a pronounced expansion in demand for global governance given the problems facing our contemporary societies. Many of the big issues facing the world can only be addressed through cooperation across borders involving states, international organisations, civil society and private actors. The international system is characterised by a serial rise in the number of regional organisations, trade agreements, arbitration mechanisms, and NGOs with a global focus. States remain powerful actors in the international system but as parts of a world of connectivity and deep interdependence. As the European University Institute’s response to these developments in regional and international cooperation, the Global Governance Programme focuses on four broad interdisciplinary themes and on many cross-cutting issues related to globalisation: • European, Transnational and Global Governance • Global Economics • Europe in the World • Cultural Pluralism In all of these areas, established and early-career scholars within and beyond academia research, write on and discuss issues of global governance in a unique environment full of creativity and intellectual vitality, in close cooperation with other Robert Schuman Centre programmes and the wider European University Institute community. Thanks in part to the unparalleled convening power of the Robert Schuman Centre, the Global Governance Programme has attracted distinguished scholars and leading decision-makers for intellectually vibrant discussions which have contributed robust critical thinking to questions of policy and institutional design. The Global Governance Programme produces highquality academic and policy publications, including the Policy Brief series. Find out more about our research community and how to join us and learn more about our core activities in the following pages. Brigid Laffan Director of the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies and of the Global Governance Programme 1 INTERDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH AT THE FOREFRONT EUROPEAN, TRANSNATIONAL AND GLOBAL GOVERNANCE The European, Transnational and Global Governance research area develops policy-oriented research with a transversal character. This is based on the understanding that a serial increase has occurred in the number of actors engaging in governance beyond state borders. For example, some 60,000 NGOs are operating in the international system. Moreover, many different modes of governance exist at the regional and global levels, including state-led forms of transnational governance, governance and regulation produced by non-state actors, and a multiplicity of regime complexes involving both public and private actors. This research area focuses on the mechanisms, processes and agents of governance at the global and regional levels, while its activities bridge other Global Governance Programme research areas that concentrate more on specific global public goods, notably trade, investment, development, cultural pluralism and the role of Europe in the world. With a substantive focus on governance, emphasis is placed on how transnational cooperation evolves and operates in different parts of the world. The research area draws on the experiences of European, regional and international organisations 2 Global Governance Programme to analyse negotiation dynamics, power and asymmetrical relations, the institutionalisation of co-operation, the roles of law and norms, issues of regulation and compliance, and differences across policy fields and the regions of the world. Attention is paid to questions of the design, effects and compliance of different modes of governance. The research area also addresses issues pertaining to the legitimacy, efficiency and accountability of evolving modes of governance that are weakly rooted in democratic politics within states. The European Union has evolved into the most institutionalised and legally bounded system of governance above the level of the state. The depth and range of its policy reach, its central institutions, and the constitutionalisation of its treaties have transformed the original communities into a distinctive compound polity. The European Union represents an intensive site of transnational governance unmatched in other regions in the world. Europe possesses unparalleled experience as a laboratory of transnational governance and co-operation. The focus here is on ‘Europe as a Laboratory’ in which the core dynamics of European integration and the governance modes that it has fostered are developed. RESEARCH AREA DIRECTOR Brigid Laffan is Professor and Director of the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies and of the Global Governance Programme. In August 2013, Professor Laffan left the School of Politics and International Relations at University College Dublin, where she was Professor of European Politics. She was Vice-President of University College Dublin and Principal of the College of Human Sciences from 2004 to 2011. She was the founding director of the Dublin European Institute at University College Dublin from 1999 and in March 2004 was elected as a member of the Royal Irish Academy. She is a member of the Board of the Mary Robinson Foundation for Climate Justice. She was on the Fulbright Commission until September 2013 and was the 2013 Visiting Scientist for the EXACT Marie Curie Network. PART-TIME PROFESSOR Thomas Christiansen holds the Chair in European Institutional Politics in the Department of Political Science at Maastricht University, The Netherlands, and is also part-time Professor at the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies. He is Executive Editor (with Simon Duke) of the Journal of European Integration, co-editor with Sophie Vanhoonacker of the ‘European Administration Governance’ book series at Palgrave Macmillan and a member of the board of the Research Committee on European Unification of IPSA. He has published widely on different aspects of European integration. ‘Security Relations between China and the European Union – From Convergence to Cooperation?’, co-edited with Emil Kirchner and Han Dorussen, is due to be published by Cambridge University Press in August 2016. RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Graeme Crouch is a PhD candidate at the University of Victoria, Department of Political Science, working under the supervision of Dr Amy Verdun. He holds an MA in Political Science from the University of Victoria, and a BA in History Education from Eastern Kentucky University. In the final year of his Ph.D (2013-2014), Graeme was Visiting Student at the EUI, and from March to June 2015 he was Visiting Researcher at Leiden University, College of The Hague. Broadly, his work covers the Europeanisation of southeast Europe, investigating the importance of bureaucratic cooperation and NGO engagement during the accession process. EUROPEAN, TRANSNATIONAL AND GLOBAL GOVERNANCE 3 Research Project ON THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF MEASURING STATE CAPACITY AND GOVERNANCE Given the immediate relevance of ‘good’ governance to the Post-2015 Development Agenda, the project takes the problematic state of measuring governance and state capacity as its starting point. It maps the political economy of governance and state capacity measures by systematically analysing who rates state capacity and governance where, how, what for, and by whom it is funded. It also assesses the differences between and the performance of different measures. This analysis is a particularly innovative contribution to research on state effectiveness and governance, to which little attention has been given so far. The project is producing an innovative cross-sectional dataset on the political economy of state capacity and governance indicators. It maps the type of producer; the type of funder financing the production of governance measures; the governance level at which measures are produced; the production process; and the geographical location of a wide range of governance measures. Quantitative and qualitative analysis of systematic differences in measures and their production processes as well as work on key definitions of governance and 4 Global Governance Programme state capacity complement data collection in this research project. The project is funded by the Effective States and Inclusive Development (ESID) Research Centre of the University of Manchester and is co-directed by Dr Gaby Umbach and Dr Antonio Savoia (ESID), with the participation of Professor David Hulme (ESID) and Dr Debora V. Malito (University of Cape Town). The project extends previous research on ‘Global Governance by Indicators,’ codirected by Professor Nehal Bhuta (EUI) and Dr Gaby Umbach, with Dr Debora V. Malito participating as Research Associate. This project examined the development, application and impact of indicators, composite indicators and indices in global governance and global administrative law. It analysed indicators as differently institutionalised governance forms, and investigated questions of democracy and accountability that accompany their deployment. The results of this project are due to be published in The Palgrave Handbook of Indicators in Global Governance (edited by Bhuta, Malito and Umbach) in 2016. GLOBAL ECONOMICS: TRADE, INVESTMENT AND DEVELOPMENT The ‘Global Economics’ research area conducts policy-relevant research in the area of trade, investment and economic development. An ever larger share of national output and employment involves participation in international value chains, with firms specialising in defined inputs and services that are embodied in a final product. An ever rising share of national employment and output is also accounted for by services. The economic development and growth prospects of countries depend on effective policies that support the ability of firms to participate in the global economy and allow households and firms to have access to a wide range of high quality service inputs. Global value chains offer a useful framework to better understand how regulations impact on trade and investment, and to identify policies that governments can adopt to enable firms to better exploit trade opportunities. However, these policies may generate negative impacts on other countries. International agreements are a key instrument used by governments to agree on policy disciplines to reduce these detrimental spill over effects. The research team focuses on issues of interest to the European Union and its Member States, but also ones reaching beyond the European borders, including in relation to the functioning and future of the multilateral trading system (the WTO), so-called mega-regional trade agreements (such as the EU negotiations on a Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) agreement and a plurilateral Trade in Services Agreement), and the trade and investment policies of large emerging economies and other developing countries. Under this umbrella, a number of research projects aim to investigate: • The future of the multilateral trading system – analysis of trade and investment policies and trade agreements aiming to identify national interests and concerns about current international trade governance mechanisms, as part of an evolving network of policy research institutes based in Europe, including the Geneva-based International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development and the World Economic Forum, and around the world. • Approaches towards international regulatory cooperation – on the design of new modalities of economic cooperation policies that generate trade and investment barriers for goods and services • Trade and development policies in a supply chain world – in particular, looking at the design of policies to assist small firms to integrate into international value chains, trade facilitation, foreign direct investment, intellectual property protection, and other government policies in a world characterised by extensive international specialisation and production networks. GLOBAL ECONOMICS: TRADE, INVESTMENT AND DEVELOPMENT 5 • Transparency in government procurement – on policies that governments implement when engaging in public purchasing and assessing their economic effects. on service trade and investment as channels to increase economic productivity and growth and the impact of service trade policies on the performance of service sectors. • Services and Sustainable Development – on the role of services in economic development, with a particular focus RESEARCH AREA DIRECTORS Bernard M. Hoekman is Professor at the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies. He has held senior positions at the World Bank, including Director of the International Trade Department and Research Manager of the Development Research Group. He has also worked as an economist in the GATT Secretariat and held visiting appointments at Sciences Po, Paris. He has published widely on trade policy and development, the global trading system, and trade in services. He is a graduate of the Erasmus University Rotterdam, holds a PhD in economics from the University of Michigan and is a Research Fellow at the Centre for Economic Policy Research, where he co-directs the Trade Policy Research Network. Petros C. Mavroidis holds the Chair in Global and Regional Economic Law in the Law Department of the European University Institute and the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies. He is Edwin B. Parker Professor of Law at Columbia Law School in New York, on leave at the EUI. He was Chief Reporter in the American Law Institute project on ‘The Law and Economics of the WTO.’ He has published on the law and economics of international trade organisation, and has been advising developing countries that litigate before the WTO since 1996. He is one of the two experts that the WTO has hired under Art. 27.2 DSU to provide legal advice and assist developing countries when acting as complainants or defendants before WTO Panels and the Appellate Body. 6 Global Governance Programme PART-TIME PROFESSOR Giorgia Giovannetti is Vice President for International Relations and Professor of Economics at the University of Florence, as well as part-time Professor at the European University Institute. She acted as Director of the Research Centre of the Italian Trade Institute from 2005 to 2007, and was Scientific Director to the European Report on Development in 2009 and 2010. She has also served as advisor to the Italian Treasury and Ministry of Foreign Trade (2002-2014). She has collaborated with several international organisations and think tanks (UNCTAD, ITC, Center for Global Development etc.). She holds a PhD and an MPhil in Economics from Cambridge University and a Laurea cum laude in Statistics (Rome). She has been Fellow at Trinity College, Cambridge (19901995) and Visiting Professor at several universities. RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Matteo Fiorini works as an economist on services trade, trade policy and migration. He holds a PhD in Economics and a Master of Research in Economics from the European University Institute. He also holds a Master of Science in Economics and Social Sciences from Bocconi University. Prior to joining the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies, he held various short-term positions as Research Assistant for the Migration Policy Centre of the European University Institute, as an intern in the Economic Research and Statistics Division of the WTO (Geneva), and Research Assistant at Bocconi University. His research interests are international economics, migration, political economics and economic networks. GLOBAL ECONOMICS: TRADE, INVESTMENT AND DEVELOPMENT 7 Research Projects TRADE POLICY RESEARCH NETWORK The Trade Policy Research Network (TPRN) conducts research on trade policyrelated issues, including assessments of proposed trade negotiations and the effects of trade agreements, the policy dimensions of supply chain trade, trade in services and foreign direct investment, and enforcement and dispute settlement. It aims to offer conceptually solid, theoretically wellgrounded analysis that is directly relevant to informing the design of economic integration initiatives and managing the globalisation process. Co-directed by Professors Joe Francois (University of Bern) and Professor Bernard Hoekman of the Global Governance Programme, the TPRN engages Centre for Economic Policy Research fellows and affiliates, as well as research associates, including leading practitioners and researchers at the forefront of trade policy analysis from around the world. One of the activities of the Network is the Trade Policy Modelling Forum, which brings together leading academic modellers and analysts from international organisations to improve model-based analysis of deep integration initiatives – such as the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) – by agreeing on common standards and benchmarks to assess the impact of regulatory policies and cooperation in this area. E15 INITIATIVE TASK FORCE ON REGULATORY SYSTEMS COHERENCE The Task Force aims to examine the problems posed by differences in regulation and regulatory regimes across markets and to consider alternative approaches that could be taken by governments and the business community to reducing regulatory barriers to trade. Research and deliberations aim to assess how countries are pursuing regulatory cooperation in the context of bilateral, regional or multilateral initiatives, the state of play in the World Trade Organisation (WTO), and more generally options for multilateral cooperation on 8 Global Governance Programme regulation to enhance global welfare. The Task Force aims to propose short-, medium- and long-term policy options to be brought to the attention of a representative group of policy-makers and business and civil society leaders at the 2016 World Economic Forum Annual Meeting in Davos. The Global Governance Programme, with Professors Bernard Hoekman, is the knowledge partner of the Task Force, which is part of the broader E15 Initiative of the International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development and the World Economic Forum. RESTORING MULTILATERAL TRADE COOPERATION Twenty years after the establishment of the WTO, the institution continues to struggle to conclude the Doha round of negotiations. Major WTO members, including the EU and the US, are focused on the negotiation of preferential trade agreements, such as the TTIP. This project, coordinated by the South African Institute for International Affairs, brings together a number of policy research institutes and think tanks in emerging economies to search for new ideas that can assist in revitalising multilateral trade cooperation. The Global Governance Programme, with Professor Bernard Hoekman, is one of the partners of this World Bank-funded project. A series of expert roundtables has been – and will be – convened in major emerging economies. These have already produced a number of publications that have been discussed with policy-makers in capitals and in Geneva. The results and recommendations of the project were presented at the Trade and Development Symposium held at the 2015 WTO Ministerial Conference. REGULATING THE ORIGIN OF GOODS IN THE TRANSATLANTIC TRADE AND INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIP: A PATH TOWARDS HARMONISATION IN THE WTO? This project centres on an underresearched area of trade regulation: analysis of the law, politics and economics of Rules of Origin (RoO), with a particular focus on differences in approaches in the EU and the US, motivated by the ongoing negotiations to establish a Ttransatlantic Trade Investment Partenership (TTIP). The RoO that are agreed will help determine the magnitude and distribution of the benefits from TTIP. The RoO will also be a determinant of the effects of TTIP on third countries. One motivation for the project is to assess whether, and to what extent, there is scope for what may be agreed in TTIP to overcome the differences in views of the EU and the US on RoO that have resulted in the deadlock of negotiations in the WTO and to establish a set of harmonised RoO for a broad range of trade policy instruments that do not involve trade preferences. GLOBAL ECONOMICS: TRADE, INVESTMENT AND DEVELOPMENT 9 EUROPE IN THE WORLD The ‘Europe in the World’ research area explicitly ties the study of Europe’s international relations and role in international and security affairs to the central changes and challenges in world politics today. Through its research, seminars and scholarly publications, this research area seeks to integrate theoretical and conceptual insights from a wide range of perspectives in international relations, the social sciences, history and international law with politically relevant empirical analysis. The research area contributes to theoretical and political debates on European and international affairs, and the implications of a multicentred multi-actor world for emerging global dynamics. It engages with key areas of European affairs and addresses some of the big questions confronting Europe and the European Union (EU) in the decades ahead. Central research themes of this research area include: • Europe’s role and place in the emerging world of 21st century global politics; • Europe’s foreign relations broadly, including the evolving relations of the European Union with major and emerging powers (including the United States, China, Russia, India, 10 Global Governance Programme Brazil) as well as regional and global international organisations; • EU foreign, security, and defence policy, including questions of purpose and strategy; • the rocky and still tenuous consolidation of the EU as a ‘high politics’ actor in global affairs; • issues of coherence and cohesion versus divisions and fragmentation in external engagement; • internal and external aspects of European security and defence; • the foreign, security and defence policies of individual European states or groups of states; • the impact of major shifts and continuities in international affairs on Europe itself. The animating vision of the research area is to bring together prominent and promising scholars and practitioners in the field, both from within and outside the EUI, and to support politically and theoretically important research, with the goal of generating widely read publications in internationally recognised journals and publishing houses. This research area was created in the spring of 2014. RESEARCH AREA DIRECTOR Professor Ulrich Krotz holds the Chair in International Relations in the Department of Political and Social Sciences, and the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies. He is the author of ‘Shaping Europe: France, Germany and Embedded Bilateralism from the Elysée Treaty to Twenty-First Century Politics’ (with Joachim Schild) (Oxford, hardback 2013, paperback 2015); ‘History and Foreign Policy in France and Germany’ (Palgrave Macmillan, 2015); and ‘Flying Tiger: International Relations Theory and the Politics of Advanced Weapons’ (Oxford, 2011). His articles have appeared in journals such as World Politics, International Security, International Affairs, and the European Journal of International Relations. RESEARCH FELLOW Richard Maher received a PhD in Political Science from Brown University, an MSc in Political Theory from the London School of Economics and a BA in Political Science from the University of Michigan. His research project ‘Does Europe Need a Foreign Policy?’ explores Europe’s uneven progress toward developing a more coherent and effective foreign and security policy. Despite Europe’s ambition to achieve closer cooperation in these policy areas, there remain persistent political, ideological, bureaucratic, and strategic impediments to greater collaboration. This project evaluates Europe’s external relations toward the United States, Russia, China, the Middle East and North Africa, and sub-Saharan Africa, and examines functional issue areas such as the politics of globalisation and global governance. RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Danilo Di Mauro holds a PhD in Political Science from the Italian Institute of Human Science. He was a Postdoctoral Fellow at the universities of Siena and Catania, and Marie Curie Research Fellow at the European University Institute. His work covers various research interests from International Relations to European and Democracy Studies. His articles have appeared in peer-reviewed journals and several book chapters. He is the author of the monograph ‘The UN and the ArabIsraeli Conflict: American Hegemony and UN Intervention since 1947,’ published by Routledge, and co-author of the forthcoming book ‘Attitudes Towards Europe Beyond Euroscepticism: Supporting the European Union through the Crisis,’ published by Palgrave. EUROPE IN THE WORLD 11 Research Projects THE HISTORY OF EC FOREIGN RELATIONS, 1957-1992 This research project provides a comprehensive review and analysis of the European Community’s (EC’s) external relations during the Cold War. Empirically, the project focuses on two key dimensions of EC external relations during this period: its relations with individual countries and world regions (such as the United States, China, Japan, the Middle East and the Soviet Union and its satellites); and key policy domains (including trade, foreign and security policy, EC enlargement and economic development). In both areas of inquiry, the project evaluates and interprets the scope and nature of external relations, including the various policy goals and objectives pursued, the instruments and strategies deployed, the key actors involved, and the Community’s record of achievement. The project’s cross-disciplinary approach draws on, connects and contributes to two 12 Global Governance Programme major bodies of literature in international history and international relations that have traditionally existed in isolation and mutual neglect: (1) Europe’s international history at the crossroads of the Cold War, decolonisation and European integration; and (2) the growing scholarly literature on the rise, from the mid-1990s onward, of an EC/EU foreign, security and defence policy, and on the EU’s foreign relations more broadly in the twenty-first century. The project has received generous funding from the Research Council of the European University Institute, the Jean Monnet Activities programme of the European Commission, and the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences of Maastricht University, and will lead to the publication of a book, ‘The History of EC Foreign Relations, 1957-1992,’ edited by Ulrich Krotz, Kiran Klaus Patel and Federico Romero. DIVIDED WE STAND: EUROPE’S NEW WAYS OF PROJECTING POWER AND INFLUENCE IN 21ST-CENTURY WORLD POLITICS This research project examines the nearly 40 military operations and civilian missions launched by the EU under the Common Security and Defence Policy (CSDP) banner, which have been among the most remarkable features of the EU’s emergent foreign, security, and defence policy. Since embarking on the first mission in 2003, the EU has deployed, on average, some 5,000 troops and personnel around the world each day. But while growing in strategic importance, influence and visibility, the EU’s physical engagement in the world often remains sharply contested and politicized. Why do Member States engage abroad to such significantly varying degrees, thus creating operations and missions of very different form and scope? Why has the EU been able to launch military operations of several thousand troops with the backing of almost every member state, while at the same time having difficulty in marshalling support for much more modest civilian missions? Why, finally, does the EU abstain from engagement in other similarly important and politically plausible missions? The research project seeks to answer these novel and essential questions by empirically investigating all EU operations and missions to date as well as a range of ‘negative cases.’ It evaluates the causes and forces that drive, undermine, or limit Europe’s external engagement. The study contributes to scholarship on the fundamental forces that drive foreign affairs and world politics at large by offering a comprehensive and rigorous analysis of Europe’s fitful emergence as an international political actor and its evolving strategic interests around the globe. Funded by the Research Council of the European University Institute, the project will result in a research monograph and several research articles by Ulrich Krotz and Katerina Wright, and, with Danilo Di Mauro, a new dataset on EU civilian and military missions. EUROPE IN THE WORLD 13 CULTURAL PLURALISM The ‘Cultural Pluralism’ research area develops theoretical and policy-oriented research on the governance of cultural and religious diversity in the 21st century. The Cultural Pluralism team approaches this topic from multiple perspectives. It explores normative and conceptual challenges that have arisen in western democratic liberal societies which seek to come to terms with cultural and religious plurality, with a particular interest in the challenge of religious diversity and the ways it can be addressed through more or less secularism within public life. The trade-offs between respect for diversity and the promotion of equality, both in the economic and in the cultural domains, are questioned. This work also focuses on the sociological realities of identity and diversity in a context of intensified mobility. How does globalisation affect national identity and dominant conceptions of the nation? Does it lead to a retreat to defensive nationalism or does it promote new configurations of plural and malleable national identities responding to the fast-changing realities of today? What is 14 Global Governance Programme the role of religion, and in particular of migrant or minority religions, in this field? What new narratives are emerging among right- and left-wing forces in Europe promoting national homogeneity or advocating the need for accommodating the multicultural characteristics brought by migrants and minorities? Focusing on policy, the team investigates how this globalising environment affects different types of migrants. How are migrant domestic workers influenced by these changes? How are highly skilled and elite migrants reacting to the global economic recession? How do transnational migrants mobilise social and economic remittances? Finally, how can Europe deal with a shifting geopolitical context that triggers dramatically increased migration and asylum-seeking flows? The Cultural Pluralism area also engages in training activities through two new Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) launched in early 2016: one introduces students from different parts of the world to the study of ‘International Migration’ and the other to ‘Creative Europe.’ RESEARCH AREA DIRECTOR Anna Triandafyllidou is a Professor at the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies. Before joining the Global Governance Programme, she was a part time professor at the Centre (2010-2012). During the past decade, she headed a migration research team as Senior Fellow at the Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy in Athens (2004-2012). She has been a Visiting Professor at the College of Europe in Bruges since 2002 . She has held teaching and research positions at the University of Surrey (UK), the London School of Economics, the Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche in Rome, the European University Institute and the Democritus University of Thrace. She is consulted as an Evaluator by the European Commission, the European Research Council and several national research funding councils and agencies. RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Hara Kouki trained as a historian in Athens, and holds an MA in Film and History from the University of Kent. She received her PhD from the Law Department of Birkbeck College, University of London. Before joining the Global Governance Programme, she worked for COSMOS (Centre on Social Movement Studies on a project studying anti-austerity mobilizations in Southern Europe hit by the on-going crisis. She has participated in several research projects ranging from political and protest culture to European identities and migration, and has regularly contributed articles to the press (Guardian, Al Jazeera English, etc.). CULTURAL PLURALISM 15 RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Irina Isaakyan holds a PhD from the University of Edinburgh and an MA from the University of Minnesota. She works in the area of high-skill migration and explores links between globalisation and nationalism, as well as between integration and transnationalism. She previously conducted research – as a Marie Curie Intra-European Fellow and PostDoctoral Fellow at the UK Economic and Social Research Council – on gender and diaspora studies, immigrant identities and social remittances. She was also Reader and Research Fellow at the Ryazan State Radio-Engineering University in Russia and at the University of Edinburgh. RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Sabrina Marchetti is mainly specialised in issues of gender, welfare, labour and migration, with a specific focus on the question of migrant domestic work. She completed her PhD in 2010 at Utrecht University in the Netherlands within the Graduate Gender programme. She has been a visiting 16 Global Governance Programme fellow at the Centre for Gendering Excellence at Linköping University in Sweden, and at the Sociology Department of the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. She has also been a Research Fellow at the International Centre for Development and Decent Work at Kassel University in Germany. RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Letizia Palumbo is Research Associate for the project ‘Trafficking for Labour Exploitation: Assessing Anti-Trafficking Interventions in Italy.’ (TRAFFICKO). She is also a Post-Doctoral Researcher in Comparative Law at the University of Palermo, Italy. From December 2014 to October 2015, she was a Research Associate (national expert for Italy) for the DemandAT project – Domestic Work Case Study. She has been a Visiting Fellow at a number of international universities. At present, she is conducting research on trafficking for labour exploitation in the agriculture and domestic work sectors in the EU, in particular in Italy and the UK. She also serves as a trainer on trafficking issues. RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Alexandra Ricard-Guay is a Research Associate and main researcher for the Case Study ‘DemandSide of Trafficking in Domestic Work,’ of the DemandAT project, conducted in seven European countries. She holds a PhD in Social Work from McGill University. Prior to joining the European University Institute, she was coordinator of a national anti-trafficking coalition (Quebec). She has worked for more than seven years on anti-trafficking research and projects. She has also coordinated and worked as researcher in many projects (international and national) in the areas of gender-based violence and (irregular) migration. She previously worked as Programme Officer in International Development in the area of education and human rights. CULTURAL PLURALISM 17 Research Projects DEMANDAT ADDRESSING DEMAND IN ANTITRAFFICKING EFFORTS AND POLICIES DemandAT examines the history, economics and politics of anti-trafficking measures, and explores how effective they have been in practice. By delivering both theoretical and empirical background knowledge, the project aims to inform EU and national policy-making in order to ultimately eliminate or at least reduce suffering from the worst forms of exploitation. Trafficking in human beings covers a wide range of forced labour and exploitation of women, men and children. While responses to trafficking have traditionally focused on combating the criminal networks involved in trafficking or protecting the human rights of victims, European countries are increasingly exploring ways of influencing the demand for the services or products of those trafficked within their own economies and societies. The project, coordinated by the International Centre for Migration 18 Global Governance Programme Policy Development, investigates demand in Trafficking of Human Beings and related policies from a multi- and interdisciplinary perspective across a wide range of fields – migration, development and labour studies. It combines a broad mapping of conceptual and theoretical issues and evidence in specific fields with empirical in-depth analysis of case studies on demand in Trafficking of Human Beings and the related policies. Based on research in seven different countries – Belgium, the UK, France, Greece, Italy, Cyprus and the Netherlands – the DemandAT research team, led by Professor Anna Triandafyllidou, examines demand for trafficking in human beings in the domestic work sector, the motivations and the profits behind it, and the circumstances that allow it to take place. DemandAT is funded by the 7th Framework Programme of the EU (20142017). CULTURAL BASE: SOCIAL PLATFORM ON CULTURAL HERITAGE AND EUROPEAN IDENTITIES The ‘Cultural Base’ research project responds to the need to place the governance of culture centre stage when studying Europe’s future. Acknowledging that the main societal challenges of our time are cultural in nature (such as racism, extremism, and even climate change and our use of natural resources), the project suggests that the solutions are also cultural (in terms of finding a common ground for mutual tolerance and respect, or developing sustainable lifestyles). ‘Cultural Base’ brings together a range of diverse stakeholders (intellectuals, researchers, local and regional authorities, civil society, artists and culture practitioners) to discuss the main challenges and issues that need to be addressed by research and policy initiatives in the culture domain. The project critically reviews the state of knowledge in the field, the existing policy programmes, and through stakeholder consultation contributes to the production of new research agendas in the fields of cultural heritage and European identity. The ‘Cultural Base’ project has created an interactive digital platform for such consultations, alongside research reports and actual meetings with stakeholders. This two-year research project (20152017) is funded by the Horizon 2020 research and innovation framework programme of the European Union. The European University Institute, with Professor Anna Triandafyllidou, is one of the partner institutions, and the project is coordinated by Professor Arturo Rodriguez Moratò of the University of Barcelona. CULTURAL PLURALISM 19 ITHACA INTEGRATION, TRANSNATIONAL MOBILITY AND HUMAN, SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC CAPITAL TRANSFERS (2013-2015) Between 2013 and 2015, Professor Anna Triandafyllidou coordinated a research consortium with the Real Instituto Elcano, the London Metropolitan University, and the International Centre for Migration Policy Development in Vienna, implementing the ITHACA research project, funded by the Directorate General for Migration and Home Affairs of the European Commission. The project examined the link between migrant integration and transnational mobility by analysing the types of capital transfer between origins and destinations that such mobility generates. The methodological approach brought together qualitative and quantitative data. During 2014 and early 2015, interviews were conducted with relevant stakeholders in four EU countries (Austria, Italy, Spain, the UK) and in five non-EU countries (Bosnia, India, Morocco, the Philippines and the Ukraine) as well as a mixed method (quantitative and qualitative) survey among transnationally mobile migrants in all nine countries (both at destination and returnees). The project was concluded at the end of 2015 and put together a database with the results of 331 quantitative questionnaires and semi-structured interviews with transnationally mobile individuals. Some conclusions could be drawn: 20 Global Governance Programme • Transnational (physical) mobility is a niche phenomenon concerning a very small number of migrants that are usually highly educated. It takes different forms in different phases of the person’s life and migration trajectory. • Regularisation and acquisition of long-term status determines migrants’ transnational mobility and the ease with which they can move between origin and destination. • Integration into the host society facilitates transnational engagement: it enables for instants the gathering of financial and social networking resources that can subsequently be invested in the country of origin. • Family motives are a powerful driver of transnational mobility: plans to return, and particularly retirement plans and small investment activities are the most dynamic catalysts. • Transnational mobility may or may not be associated with transnational engagement. Individuals who are highly mobile between two (or more) locations may be economically engaged in either or both of these locations. • Transnationally mobile migrants generate social remittances: they disseminate new ideas and sociocultural practices in both origin and destination countries. TRAFFICKING FOR LABOUR EXPLOITATION: ASSESSING ANTI-TRAFFICKING INTERVENTIONS IN ITALY (TRAFFICKO) (2015-2016) This 12-month project (2015-2016) was coordinated by Professor Anna Triandafyllidou and co-funded by the Open Society Foundation (Fund to Counter Xenophobia). The project aimed to critically assess current policy responses to trafficking for labour exploitation in Italy, and proposed alternative frameworks for more effective strategies with regard to the prevention and protection of the victims. It also aimed to provide tools and suggestions to improve the implementation of existing legislation, and to advocate for more effective measures. The project focused on the trafficking of adults (men and women) for labour exploitation in the agricultural sector in Sicily, and in the domestic work sector in Tuscany. Bringing together legal studies, migration studies, sociology and gender studies, and engaging in fieldworkbased research, the project delivered the following results: 1) It mapped the ways in which migration and labour law and their implementation produces vulnerabilities that expose migrant workers to the risks of trafficking. 2) It delivered a comprehensive analysis of the impact of anti-trafficking interventions in Italy with regard to identification, assistance and the protection of victims, as well as preventive measures. 3) It offered relevant policy advice to lawyers, social workers and officials engaged in the fight against trafficking and severe labour exploitation 4) It proposed amendments to the policy implementation framework. CULTURAL PLURALISM 21 GLOBALSTAT GlobalStat is a database that aims to meets the need for publicly available information on our globalised world and globalising societies to support evidencebased analysis and informed decisionmaking. As a data gateway, it offers statistical information on globalisation, sustainability and human wellbeing from 1960 onwards from a broad range of international sources. Taking into account the multidimensional nature of these phenomena, it presents country-level data focusing on the economic, environmental, political, social, societal and cultural performance of nations in a harmonised format. GlobalStat follows a broad and informed approach to globalisation as well as to its triggers, drivers and effects, and provides detailed information on the way human beings live, what freedoms they enjoy and what limitations they face. As a freely available information tool it offers citizens, academics, stakeholders and policy-makers easy access to an excellent source of information to strengthen their knowledge base on the many aspects and multiple impacts of globalisation. GlobalStat is structured in 12 thematic and three horizontal areas. The thematic areas are divided into sub-themes that include statistical data series. The horizontal areas offer insights into data on cross-cutting 22 Global Governance Programme aspects of sustainable livelihood, national wealth, human wellbeing and quality of life. GlobalStat is designed to grow over time, and in 2016 will be embedded in the European Parliamentary Research Services’ website, to provide Members of the European Parliament and their collaborators direct access to reliable statistical information. Collaboration with the European Parliamentary Research Services will be further extended to various forms of data-related publications and events during 2016. WESTERN BALKAN ROUTE February 2016 SEA ROUTE 2015 April 2016 Example of an infographic developed by the GlobalStat team, 2016 RESEARCH PROJECT DIRECTOR Gaby Umbach is Founding Director of GlobalStat and codirects the research projects ‘On the Political Economy of Measuring State Capacity and Governance’ and ‘Global Governance by Indicators.’ She holds a PhD in Political Science from the University of Cologne, where she was Senior Research Associate of the Jean Monnet Chair for Political Science and the Seminar for Social Policy from 2000 to 2014. In both positions she analysed and taught European integration topics. In 2010, she joined the Global Governance Programme for a Jean Monnet Fellowship and joined the Programme’s staff in 2011. Since July 2015 she serves as Book Review Editor of the Journal of Common Market Studies (JCMS) and in October 2015 she became a member of the EUI’s Ethics Committee. In her research at the Global Governance Programme she has focussed on global governance, sustainable development and global governance by indicators. RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Laura Bartolini holds an MSc degree in Development Economics from the University of Florence and a Master’s in Public Policy and Social Change from the Collegio Carlo Alberto in Turin (Italy). She joined the Global Governance Programme as a Project Assistant for GlobalStat in December 2011. In 2014-2015 she worked as Research Associate for the ITHACA project on transnationalism and integration of third-country nationals in Europe. She also participates in the European University Institute study on highly-skilled emigration in times of crisis. She collaborates on a World Bank project on migrant remittances and financial inclusion, and on research regarding the impacts of crisis on migrant integration in southern Europe. GLOBALSTAT 23 RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Caterina Francesca Guidi is a Research Associate at GlobalStat and Ph.D. Candidate in Economics at the University of Siena. She an expert in analysis and modeling of quantitative data. Her research interests are mainly concentrated on the European welfare and health systems changes due to the mobility and integration of migrants. Prior to joining the GlobalStat team in February 2013, she has also worked in several international organizations and NGOs in Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Italy, Serbia and Spain, dealing mainly with public health and migration issues. She holds an MSc in Development Economics from the University of Florence and a BSc degree in Law and Economics from the University of Bologna. RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Luca Mancini holds a PhD in Economics from the University of Warwick, with a thesis on higher education and the labour market for university graduates. Between 2004 and 2007 he was Research Officer in Applied Econometrics at the Centre for Research on Inequality, Human Security and Ethnicity at the University of Oxford, and continued to collaborate with the 24 Global Governance Programme Centre on inequality-related research until 2009. In 2010 he was Research Assistant for the 2010 European Report on Development at the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies, on poverty, inequality and social protection. Later, he joined the Italian National Institute of Statistics, where he has been working on methodological issues relating to the engineering and quality assessment of population censuses. BRIDGING RESEARCH AND POLICY TO ADDRESS WORLD CHALLENGES In the post-1989 period, important changes have occurred in the organisation of the world economy and of world politics more broadly. The new global (dis)order is characterised by both interdependence and mutual vulnerability among world regions and nation-states. The intensification of linkages and connections driven by technology, trade, investment, aid, and the mobility of people and ideas is transforming states and societies around the world. The period of uncontested American hegemony is waning; a new multipolar international system is emerging, underscored by the eclipse of the G7/ G8 of western powers by the G20. The growing weight of countries such as China, India and Brazil points to a relative decline in the power and influence of the ‘West’, especially within the international political economy. Demands for the supply of public goods at both the regional and international level are rising, but significant – and in some cases rising – barriers to their provision confound policymakers. The European Union (EU) is drawn into a web of global governance as it tries to shape – and is also shaped by – international regimes, bilateral and multilateral agreements that comprise today’s patterns of transnational governance. Research conducted at the Global Governance Programme aims to identify the medium- and long-term challenges that the world faces, and possible ways to address them. Global thinkers and leaders, academics and senior officials, constitute the pool of experts on whom the Programme can draw for inspired and cutting- edge debates on the problems the world currently faces. The Programme fosters dialogue between the worlds of research and policy in an objective, evidence-based manner, and seeks to contribute robust and critical thinking to important questions of policy and institutional design. The Programme has been represented at meetings hosted by the European Union Institute for Security Studies (EUISS) to discuss a global foreign policy and security strategy for the EU. It also hosts conferences, seminars, and workshops on Europe’s external relations that bring together scholars and policymakers. In April 2016, for example, the Programme hosted a workshop on ‘China’s Rise and Europe’s Response’, a critical issue for Europe’s international relations. Speakers explored policy areas in which there has been a convergence of perspectives and policies between the EU and China, and issues on which there continues to be disagreement and discord. Individual panels were devoted to exploring the security, economic, political and normative dimensions of EU-China relations. In June 2016 the Global Governance Programme is also bringing together BRIDGING RESEARCH AND POLICY TO ADDRESS WORLD CHALLENGES 25 institutional actors from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the European Commission and the European Central Bank (ECB) (the so-called ‘Troika’) together with former ministers and senior officials from countries interested in the ‘Macro Economic Adjustment’ programmes. The ‘High Level Dialogue on Policy Conditionality’ examines the technicalities of the loan agreements, and aims to reflect on the implementation of ‘conditionality’ during the programmes and to discuss improvements that could be made in these critical interventions. The Programme also regularly organises academic and policy workshops that address major challenges related to the governance of cultural diversity in Europe and the world today. In March 2014, for example, a policy workshop was held with all the leading international organisations that deal with minority and migrant rights and integration, including the Council of Europe, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the International Organization for Migration (IOM), the European Commission, and the European Parliament, as well as the European Fundamental Rights Agency and several experts from Europe and North America. Similarly, in summer 2015 the Programme held a large conference on ‘secularism’ to discuss how religious diversity is managed in Asia, the Middle East, and Oceania, and what lessons Europe can draw from those experiences. More recently, in spring 2016, experts from Europe, North America, and Australia gathered to discuss how greater mobility and interconnectedness of migrants and diasporas with both countries of origin and destination affect our policies and 26 Global Governance Programme practices of integration, as well as our models of citizenship and belonging. The ‘Cultural Pluralism Area’ of the Programme seeks to elaborate and simplify the complex realities of international migration and provide results that can inform current and future policy making at the national and transnational level. The Global Governance Programme is also regularly represented in events and debates on trade and investment at the World Trade Organisation (WTO), the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), the International Trade Centre and leading think tanks. It acts for example as the knowledge partner for the International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development (ICTSD)/World Economic Forum (WEF) Expert-15 group on trade and regulatory cooperation, which brings together leading scholars and practitioners. The Programme also serves as a venue for offline deliberations between senior trade and economic development officials, including WTO Ambassadors and managers of international agencies. It maintains strong ties to Geneva-based international organisations, and in 2015 it was selected as the only European venue to reflect on the first 20 years of the operation of the WTO Appellate Body. Finally, the Global Governance Programme’s policy-focused engagement is always based on research, frequently undertaken as part of a consortium. For example, the results of a collaborative research project on the multilateral trading system were the focus of discussion at the 2015 Trade and Development Symposium at the Nairobi WTO ministerial meeting. TRAININGS ACADEMY OF GLOBAL GOVERNANCE The Academy of Global Governance was established to offer a unique executive training model which combines academic research-based knowledge and evidencebased practice. Its purpose is to combine the forces of both academia and the professional world. Thus, it brings together young and mid-level professionals from the EU institutions, international organisations, national administrations, non-governmental organisations and private enterprises on the one hand, and young promising academics (doctoral and postdoctoral researchers) on the other hand. Since the first executive training course in 2010, the Academy has built a global community from a great variety of sectors. More than 1,100 participants were trained between 2010 and 2015. By reflecting the four research areas of the Global Governance Programme, the courses cover a wide range of topics, such as, for instance, WTO dispute settlement mechanisms, institutions of regional integration, European foreign and security policy, etc. The teaching staff of the Academy include leading academics from universities and research centres such as the Universities of Cambridge, Oxford, Yale, Princeton, Columbia, Harvard, New York, the ASEAN Studies Centre and the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED), as well as officials from EU institutions, national ministries, government agencies, and international organisations such Training Participants 23% National Governments, Government Agencies 9% Think Tanks 6% Private Sector 4% NGOs 13% European Institutions 45% International Organisations TRAININGS 27 as the World Trade Organisation, the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), the US State Department, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the European Court of Justice, and practitioners from the business sector. In 2014 the Academy expanded its offer with ’tailor-made training’, which is designed to fulfil specific institutional training needs, geared towards either staff professional advancement or towards offering refresher courses. Building on its expertise, and taking advantage of the staff of the European University Institute as well as of its wide network of experts, the Academy can design customised training course for junior, middle or senior management officials on a variety of global governance issues. The first of this series of courses were addressed to officials of the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, to the International Trade Centre (ITC), and to the UNCTAD. Programmes and registration forms are available at: Academy.eui.eu MASSIVE OPEN ONLINE COURSES (MOOCS) In 2016, the Global Governance Programme launched three Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs). These are online university courses that are available and free of charge to anyone who has Internet access. In offering these courses, the Global Governance Programme is working in partnership with Iversity.org, a German company supporting international scholars, with the aim of providing a globally available and interactive learning experience. Iversity.org offers a customised and specifically designed online teaching platform, as well as the use of multimedia formats and easy interaction between students and instructors. In March 2016, two courses entitled ‘Why Do People Migrate?’, prepared by Anna Triandafyllidou and Sabrina Marchetti, were launched. The first course (Part 1: Facts) provides a general introduction to the situation of refugees, asylum seekers and irregular migrants worldwide (data, regions, etc.) and an overview of the 28 Global Governance Programme terminology used. The second course (Part 2: Theories) approaches migration as a constant phenomenon in human history and discusses the theoretical approaches used to explain why migration starts and why it continues. Theories cover both individual and structural factors driving migration. In June 2016, Anna Triandafyllidou, Sabrina Marchetti and Hara Kouki plan to launch a new MOOC on ‘Cultures and Identities in Europe. Past, Present and Future.’ This course offers a general introduction to the issue of ‘European identity and culture’ and to EU policies on cultural industries for students and practitioners in the fields of the arts, culture and heritage. All courses are based on video-lectures, didactic videos and podcast interviews with international experts. Coursework includes short quizzes for each unit covered. Written assignments are based on the readings suggested for each unit. FELLOWS JEAN MONNET AND MAX WEBER PROGRAMME FELLOWS (ACADEMIC YEAR 2015/16) Through the ‘Jean Monnet Postdoctoral Fellowship Programme,’ the Global Governance Programme offers one-year fellowships (renewable for one more year) to scholars who have obtained their doctorate more than five years prior to the start of the fellowship. The ‘Max Weber Programme’ is the largest international postdoctoral programme in the Social Sciences and Humanities in Europe. The Programme offers Max Weber fellowships to junior post-docs who have received a doctorate in economics, law, history, social and political sciences or a related field within the last five years. European, Transnational and Global Governance Robert Ian Cooper is a Jean Monnet Fellow and studies questions related to democracy and constitutionalism in the European Union, with a particular focus on the role of national parliaments. He has previously held positions at the University of Cambridge, University of Oslo, and University of Toronto. A Canadian, he has a PhD in Political Science from Yale University. He has lectured widely, and has spoken at the European Parliament, the United Kingdom House of Commons, and the Swedish Riksdag. He is writing a book making the argument that national parliaments should be understood as a ‘virtual third chamber’ within the political system of the EU, in that they collectively perform many of the functions of a parliamentary chamber at the EU level, even though they do not meet in the same physical location. This study will show how these developments have fundamentally altered the structure of democratic politics in the EU. FELLOWS 29 Lora Anne Viola is a Jean Monnet Fellow and is on leave from the Freie Universität, Berlin, where she is Assistant Professor in the Politics Department of the John F. Kennedy Institute. She received a PhD in Political Science from the University of Chicago, a Master’s Degree in International Relations from the University of Chicago, and a Bachelor’s Degree in Political Science and Economics from Columbia University. Previously, she was a Senior Research Fellow at the Social Sciences Research Center, Berlin and a visiting scholar at Stanford and Oxford Universities. Her research project on ‘Groupification and the Transformation of Governance Institutions’ investigates the institutional ‘coping mechanisms’ that actors turn to under conditions of actor heterogeneity. It argues that under conditions of multipolarity and actor heterogeneity, we should expect governance institutions to prefer selective membership rules, informal designs and network governance. Konstantin Vössing is a Jean Monnet Fellow and is on leave from his position at Humboldt University in Berlin. He received his PhD in Political Science from Ohio State University in August 2008, specialising in Comparative Politics and Political Psychology. He was previously a John F. Kennedy Memorial Fellow at the Center for European Studies (CES) at Harvard University, and Lecturer in Political Science and International Studies at Ohio State University for the academic year 2008/09. His current research project on ‘The Formation of Public Opinion about European Integration’ analyses the influence that political elites exercise on public opinion about European integration. He argues that political elites can transform citizen attitudes, while the effectiveness of their efforts is highly contingent on the political explanations they use to justify their positions, the features of their varying audiences, and the dynamic nature of party competition. Tobias Lenz is a Max Weber Fellow and is currently on leave from the University of Goettingen, Germany, and the German Institute of Global and Area Studies, Hamburg, where he is Assistant Professor of Global Governance and Comparative Regionalism. He holds a DPhil in International Relations and an MPhil in Politics, both from Oxford University. He has held research positions at the Free University of Amsterdam, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the University of Colorado at Boulder and the Free University of Berlin. His research project on ‘Under What Conditions Do Regional Organizations Evolve Institutionally?’ investigates the conditions under which states are willing to delegate supranational authority to regional organisations. It seeks to contribute to unravelling the underlying causes of this empirical observation by leveraging both quantitative and qualitative methods and new systematically comparative data. 30 Global Global Governance Governance Programme Programme Global Economics: Trade, Investment and Development Sylvanus Kwaku Afesorgbor is a Max Weber Fellow and affiliated Researcher at Tuborg Research Centre for Globalisation and Firms, Aarhus University, Denmark. He obtained his PhD in Economics and Business from Aarhus University in 2015. He obtained his Master in Economics of Development from the Erasmus University of Rotterdam, and his Bachelor in Economics and Statistics from the University of Ghana. His research project on ‘Economic Sanctions, International Trade and Political Regimes’ draws on established theoretical works in international political economy to compare the empirical impacts of the threat of economic sanctions to the those of actual imposition of economic sanctions on international trade under different political regimes. His results show that the impact of threatened sanctions differs qualitatively and quantitatively from that of imposed sanctions. Europe in the World James Reilly is a Jean Monnet Fellow and Associate Professor in the Department of Government and International Relations at the University of Sydney. He holds a PhD from the George Washington University and an MA from the University of Washington, and was a postdoctoral research fellow at the University of Oxford. He served as the East Asia Representative of the American Friends Service Committee in China from 2001-2008. His research project on ‘Chinese Carrots and Sticks: Beijing’s Economic Statecraft in Europe’ draws on Chinese and European economic data, policy documents and interviews to examine how China engages in economic statecraft across Europe, and to compare China’s effectiveness over time and across countries. He is affiliated to the ‘Global Economics’ research area. Nadav Kedem is a Max Weber Fellow and holds a PhD in International Relations from the University of Haifa (Israel). After completing his PhD, he was a visiting scholar at the Hebrew University and the Bundeswehr University (Munich). His current research projects are on ‘Status-Seeking by European Powers’ and ‘Humanitarian Interventions as a Status-Seeking Tool.’ While the first of these is an attempt to better understand, identify and predict the status-seeking policies of major European powers after the end of the Cold War, the second one focuses on filling a gap in the literature, where status considerations are largely neglected by human rights scholars, leading to a limited understanding of the process that leads to humanitarian interventions, while status scholars do not give enough weight to human rights. FELLOWS 31 Cultural Pluralism Heather Grabbe is a Jean Monnet Fellow and is currently on sabbatical from the Open Society European Policy Institute in Brussels. She was previously Senior Advisor to the European Commissioner for Enlargement, responsible in his Cabinet for the Balkans and Turkey, and has been Deputy Director of the Centre for European Reform. Her academic career includes teaching at the London School of Economics and research at Oxford and Birmingham universities and Chatham House. Her current research project on ‘Inside the Black Box: Policy-Making at EU Level During the Migration Crisis’ looks at the dynamics of decisionmaking during the migration crisis since summer 2015 as experienced by senior policy-makers in the EU institutions. She is undertaking a qualitative study of policy-makers’ own understandings of the role of trust and values, how they have been articulated in policy decisions in the pressured environment of crisis, and the implications for the future of European integration. Aitana Guia is a Max Weber Fellow and holds a PhD in History from York University, Toronto, Canada, where she was associated with the Canadian Centre for German and European Studies and the Centre for Refugee Studies. She holds two Bachelor degrees, in Law and History, from the University of Valencia, Spain, and a Master in Ethnicity and Nationalism from the London School of Economics and Political Science. Her research project on ‘Nativism, Human Rights, and the New Discourses of Xenophobia in Southern Europe’ is a study of contemporary nativism in Spain and Italy, its effects on the political process, and ultimately its concrete impacts on the rights of religious minorities. Guia is analysing what triggers nativism and what makes it wither; how nativist discourses in southern Europe resemble and differ from their closest kin in northern Europe and North America; and how these discourses have assimilated the traditional New Left concerns for women’s rights, secularism, and the rights of sexual minorities. 32 Global Global Governance Governance Programme Programme MARIE SKŁODOWSKA-CURIE (AND SIMILAR) (ACADEMIC YEAR 2015/16) The European University Institute acts as a host institution for Marie SkłodowskaCurie Fellowships, which are awarded by the European Commission. Some of these fellows are hosted in the framework of the Global Governance Programme. Through ‘Robert Schuman Fellowships’ the programme also invites established academics with an international reputation to pursue their research at the Centre for a period of three to ten months. Furthermore, established post-doctoral scholars who work in one of the core research areas of the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies can apply to spend a research period at the Centre and be affiliated to the Global Governance Programme as visiting fellows. MARIE SKŁODOWSKA-CURIE FELLOW Francesca Scrinzi holds a position as a Senior Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Glasgow, UK, and is an associated member of the French Research Centre on Gender Work and Mobilities of the National Centre for Scientific Research. Since 2001, she has carried out ethnographic comparative research work on migrant domestic/care workers in Italy and France. Her research project on ‘MIGRANTCHRISTIANITY. Migration, Religion and Work in Comparative Perspective: Evangelical ‘ethnic churches’ in Southern Europe’ focuses on how Evangelical migrants use religion and church-related networks to seek employment, pursue social mobility, construct respectability and resist racism. This research aims to contribute to our understanding of the role of minority religions in migrant integration or marginalisation, and how migration is reconfiguring Italian and Spanish societies through the production of new understandings of Christianity that challenge the Catholic majority religion, as well as dominant views of migrant religion only being Islam. FELLOWS 33 Daniela DeBono Ph.D. (Sussex) is Marie Curie COFAS Fellow at the Global Governance Programme. She is also Senior Lecturer in International Migration and Ethnic Relations (IMER) at the Department of Global Political Studies, Malmö University (Sweden). Daniela is the country expert for Malta at the EUDO Citizenship Observatory, and the Country of Origin contact person for Malta for the Rights in Exile Programme, an international resource for legal aid for refugees. Her project on ‘Daily encounters at the border: reception in the EU and irregular migrants arriving by sea’ examines the reception of irregular migrants in Italy, Malta and Greece, Member States which lie on the two most important routes for irregular entry into the EU - the Central and Eastern Mediterranean Maritime routes. This study will generate an ethnography of the everyday implementation of the reception activity on the ground by studying the interaction between state and NGO officials, and migrants. Katie Kuschminder Ph.D. (Maastricht) is a Rubicon Research Fellow, with the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) at the Global Governance Programme. She is a Researcher in Migration Studies at Maastricht Graduate School of Governance/ United Nations University- MERIT wherein her work focuses on return, irregular, and transit migration. Her research project at Global Governance Programme will examine irregular migrants decision making factors in Italy including the decision to apply for asylum and/or migrate onwards from Italy, and how these decisions do or do not change over time. This results of this study will make a contribution to further understanding the different factors influencing irregular migrants decisions, and in particular the role of policies in these decisions. 34 Global Governance Programme PROGRAMME STAFF Elena Cau (Project Manager) joined the Programme in February 2016. She holds a BA in Humanities as well as a Master in Diplomatic Studies (University of Westminster, Diplomatic Academy of London, UK) and another in European Studies (University of Florence). She worked as Project Manager of European Commission-funded projects in the private sector in Brussels for several years before becoming an EC official in 2008 and taking up service at the DG Research. She joined the European University Institute in 2010 as Financial Officer and the Robert Schuman Centre in March 2012 as Assistant Project Manager. Matthias Kindel (Training Coordinator) is in charge of the Academy’s Executive Training Seminars. He holds a BA in Political Science as well as an MA in European Studies, both from FU Berlin. During his studies he was an intern at the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, a humanitarian NGO in Padua, and at the Permanent Representation of Germany to the EU in Brussels. After graduation, he worked as a seminar organiser for diplomats within the German Federal Foreign Office and at the Centre International de Formation Européenne in Nice and Berlin, before joining the Programme team in September 2014. PROGRAMME STAFF 35 Elena Torta (Communications Specialist) has over fifteen years of professional experience in different international organisations, such as the European Commission, Médecins Sans Frontières and Science Europe. After graduating in Communications Sciences at the University of Siena in 1998, she moved to Brussels for a traineeship at the European Commission. Over time she combined her different professional skills as editor, press officer, web manager and communications advisor with her passion for both research and human rights. Whilst working, she successfully undertook post-graduate studies in human rights and migration and asylum law. She joined the Programme in April 2016. Valentina Bettin (Administrative Assistant) graduated in Political Sciences – International Relations and was awarded a prize for best student in 2000. She obtained her PhD in International Law at the European University Institute in 2005. She worked as Project Manager for the EU project Moveact on mobile EU citizens. She joined the European University Institute in 2009 as Project Coordinator for the European Union Democracy Observatory (EUDO) and she became Administrative Assistant for EUDO and the Global Governance Programme in April 2015. Mia Saugman (Administrative Assistant) holds a BA in Geography and Spanish as well as an MA in Intellectual History and the History of Social and Political Thought, both obtained at the University of Sussex. Mia also studied at the Universidad de Salamanca as an Erasmus student. Before joining the Programme in September 2012, she worked as European Customer Service Representative at Genesys Conferencing in the UK, followed by a year and a half as an English language instructor, and subsequently as Administrative Assistant to various professors at the European University Institute. 36 Global Governance Programme CONTACTS European University Institute Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies Global Governance Programme Villa La Fonte Via Delle Fontanelle, 18 50014 San Domenico Firenze (Italy) PHONE: +39 055 4685 973 FAX: +39 055 4685 804 Email: GlobalGovernance.Programme@EUI.eu http://globalgovernanceprogramme.eui.eu QM-AK-16-001-EN-N The European Commission supports the EUI through the European Union budget. This publication reflects the views only of the author(s), and the Commission cannot be held responsible for any use which may be made of the information contained therein. ISSN:1977-8279 ISBN:978-92-9084-430-3 doi:10.2870/655202