Events
Doctoral lecture series on cross-border labour mobility
on cross-border labour mobility (2023-2024)
Supported by the Luxembourg National Research Fund (FNR) PRIDE19/14302992
Human history is a migration story. It features men and women on the move in search of better opportunities or seeking protection abroad. Notwithstanding being a constitutive element of societies, migration represents an ever-divisive topic in political and public debates, as well as a renewed challenge in policymaking. Economic scholars have extensively investigated the socio-economic determinants and implications of economic and forced migration in both origin and destination countries. New methodological tools are increasingly available to investigate these issues.
LISER and DEM (University of Luxembourg) organize this Ph.D. course for the FNR-funded doctoral program devoted to migration research ACROSS (Analysis of Cross-Border Human Mobility). The course consists of monthly lectures given by renowned scholars in the field. It is meant to equip PhD students with state-of-the-art research insights and methods. Upon completion of this course, students will have learned how new pressing questions over the role played by migration in the distribution of resources, labor market outcomes, and economic prosperity are currently addressed in the literature. Attending students will be asked to write an essay on one of the topics covered.
Contact: frederic.docquier@liser.lu & michel.beine@uni.lu
Registration: via Moodle or by email (noemie.courtois@uni.lu)
Location: Kirchberg, Luxembourg
Agenda
ECONOMICS OF FORCED DISPLACEMENT AND SOCIOECONOMIC INTEGRATION
London School of Economics
IDENTITY, CULTURE AND POLITICS
Southern Methodist University in Dallas
FISCAL IMPACT OF IMMIGRATION: EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE AT THE LOCAL LEVEL
Georgetown University
IMMIGRATION ATTITUDES, INTERGROUP CONTACT AND PERSPECTIVE-TAKING
Università degli Studi di Milano Bicocca
DYNAMIC LABOR MARKET EQUILIBRIUM MODELS OF IMMIGRATION
Barcelona School of Economics
EXPERIMENTAL APPROACHES IN MIGRATION AND DEVELOPMENT
University of Bristol
BENEFITS AND COSTS OF BIG CITIES
CEMFI, Madrid
THE SONGS OF REFUGEES
Brown University