Excluding Diversity Through Intersectional Borderings
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Prof. Laura Merla is a Sociologist with a background in Political science, and a professor at the University of Louvain (Belgium) where she is the Director of the Interdisciplinary Research Center on Families and Sexualities (CIRFASE). She is also a member of the Belgian Royal Academy, and the Vice-President of the International Sociological Association’s Research Committee on the Sociology of Migration. Her main research areas are the sociology of the family; migration, transnational families and care; ageing; social policies; and gender and masculinities.
Prof. Sarah Murru is a Sociologist with a background in Political sciences, and a professor at KU Leuven (Belgium). She is a member of the Center for Sociological Research (CeSO – KU Leuven), a research associate to the Centre for Interdisciplinary Research on Families and Sexualities (CIRFASE) at UCLouvain, and co-coordinator of the international Resistance Studies Network. Her expertise lies in the Sociology of Diversity, Resistance Studies, and Gender Studies, especially Feminist research and Institutional Ethnography. She has worked on youth and family research, as well as on mobility and migration. As an institutional ethnographer, she is interested in understanding how institutions socially organize people’s everyday lives.
At the Department of Social Work and Social Pedagogy of Ghent University (Belgium), Dr. Giacomo Orsini coordinates the inter-university research consortium REFUFAM exploring how policy and administrative complexity impact refugee families ‘inclusion pathways in Belgium, and the international thematic network DERM concerned with the Decolonization of Education and Research on Migration. He is also lecturer on migration, race, ethnicity and the politics of diversity at the Université Libre de Bruxelles. In the past, Orsini has conducted studies on unaccompanied minors’ migration into Europe and the structural violence they face along their trajectories, institutional racism within family reunification in Belgium, and Europe’s external border management. His scholarship concentrates on the (coloniality of the) everyday governance of migration and the multiplication of tangible and intangible borders of (racist) exclusion and inclusion.
Dr Tanja Vuckovic Juros is a Sociologist working at the intersections of cultural and political sociology. She is a Marie Sklodowska-Curie (MSCA) post-doctoral research fellow at the Faculty at the Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Zagreb (Croatia) where she is finalizing a project on how citizens respond to gender and sexuality messages in different socio-cultural contexts. Her work often examines relations between institutional frameworks, normative orders, and the active-meaning making of individuals, focusing most recently on families and sexualities, and anti-gender mobilizations. She is currently a board member of the Euroepan Sociological Association’s Research Network Sexuality and a member of a COST action LGBTI+ Social and Economic (in)equalities.