
SPIA UG
SPIA UG
6 Projects, page 1 of 2
Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2024 - 2026Partners:PJAIT, IIASA, University of Ghana, ITTI, SPIA UG +20 partnersPJAIT,IIASA,University of Ghana,ITTI,SPIA UG,SMC,INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE OF MIGRATION AND DEVELOPMENT,PJAIT,INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE OF MIGRATION AND DEVELOPMENT,Ryerson University,Ryerson University,University of Ghana,ASSOCIATION MIGRATION INTERNATIONALE - AMI,SPIA UG,SMC,Osnabrück University,Ukrainian Catholic University,Kozminski University,EUR,IIASA,ITTI,Ukrainian Catholic University,ICMPD,Kozminski University,ASSOCIATION MIGRATION INTERNATIONALE - AMIFunder: European Commission Project Code: 101132476Overall Budget: 2,999,350 EURFunder Contribution: 2,999,350 EURLink4Skills is a global research and innovation project on skill shortages. The acronym reflects the objectives of the call by linking for/4 fair skill matching. It embeds 4 processes of responding to skill shortages: re/up skilling of established populations (incl. migrants and inactive women), raising wages, automation and migration. It considers 4 continents: Europe, Africa, Asia and America, where skill shortages and skill flows will be analysed. It develops the AI-Assisted Skill Navigator for stakeholders from employment, vocational training organisations in origins and destinations. Link4Skills will scrutinize: (a) how to identify the existing and emerging required skills in changing labour markets?; (b) how the EU should respond to skill shortages?; (c) how to recruit the required skills from various pools either from the existing workforce (including established migrant populations and inactive women) also supported by automation, and from the workforce from non-EU countries? The project combines data on skill gaps and matching in the EU with analyses about human capital in origins; investigates emerging and established migration skill corridors between EU and India, Morocco, Ghana, Nigeria, Philippines, Indonesia, and Ukraine, in order to make enriched inventories of skill partnerships. The project achieves its aims via econometric microsimulations based on EU databases, combining skill supply and demand, and by data collections and stakeholders’ expertise oversees. The knowledge will be nested in the AI-Assisted Skill Navigator (TRL5) which is a Knowledge-Based Expert System, that goes beyond existing policy dashboards. It is an open access system available to public. It is co-created by labour market stakeholders in every partner country. Partners will take care about stakeholders’ involvements in the project, by enhancing tailor-made communication and dissemination. The project will also produce Link4Skill Podcast Series and academic outlets.
more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2018 - 2022Partners:SPIA UG, RUSI, UNIVERSITE MOHAMMED V DE RABAT, EUI, CSD +13 partnersSPIA UG,RUSI,UNIVERSITE MOHAMMED V DE RABAT,EUI,CSD,Deakin University,Strategic Information and Research Development Centre,Strategic Information and Research Development Centre,UNIVERSITE MOHAMMED V DE RABAT,University of Bristol,Vytautas Magnus University (VMU),TESEV,SPIA UG,RUSI,CSD,Deakin University,Vytautas Magnus University (VMU),EUIFunder: European Commission Project Code: 770640Overall Budget: 2,360,620 EURFunder Contribution: 2,224,380 EURAs Europe is growing unchurched, trends of religious radicalisation seem to increase both within the continent and across the world. Claims are made that migrant integration has overall failed because marginalised and radicalised second generation youth turns to jihadist terrorism networks. This research project takes stock of these contradictory trends of increasing secularism and intensifying radicalisation while turning to countries and regions outside Europe to study the challenges of religious diversity and radicalisation that they face and investigate how they deal with them. The project develops its empirical and analytical research along two lines: It looks at regimes for governing religious diversity in Europe (covering western, southern and southeastern Europe), North Africa, the Middle East, south Asia and Oceania. It compares the norms, laws and practices and seeks to assess their relative success in integrating migrants as well as in countering radicalisation trends. By studying countries outside Europe we seek also to analyse the mutual influences and transfers of norms and practices for governing religious diversity between Europe and other continents as well as the legacy of colonialism in this domain. The second line of work concentrates on religious radicalisation focussing on radicalised movements in different countries and their trajectories. Both lines of work relate our discussion of secularisation and radicalisation to wider societal transformation processes of the 21st century (including increased connectivity and inter-dependence, faster transport and communication, widening inequalities, and the concomitant re-emergence of nationalism). The project will deliver innovative academic thinking on secularisation and radicalisation trends today as well as key messages to policy makers with regard to the governance of religious diversity and the struggle against violent radicalisation movements.
more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2023 - 2026Partners:UW, HU, HAMMURABI HUMAN RIGHTS ORGANIZATION, STICHTING RADBOUD UNIVERSITEIT, MIGRATION MATTERS EV +22 partnersUW,HU,HAMMURABI HUMAN RIGHTS ORGANIZATION,STICHTING RADBOUD UNIVERSITEIT,MIGRATION MATTERS EV,UNN,Ryerson University,SPIA UG,Uppsala University,University of Sousse,SWEDISH RESEARCH INSTITUTE INISTANBUL,UNN,SPIA UG,Özyeğin University,HAMMURABI HUMAN RIGHTS ORGANIZATION,Ryerson University,Bilim Organization for Research and Social Studies,Özyeğin University,ASSOCIATION MIGRATION INTERNATIONALE - AMI,SWEDISH RESEARCH INSTITUTE INISTANBUL,MIGRATION MATTERS EV,BICC,STICHTING RADBOUD UNIVERSITEIT,HU,ΕΚΚΕ,ASSOCIATION MIGRATION INTERNATIONALE - AMI,Bilim Organization for Research and Social StudiesFunder: European Commission Project Code: 101094341Overall Budget: 3,392,020 EURFunder Contribution: 3,392,020 EURGAPs is a comprehensive study on the drivers of return policies and barriers/enablers in international cooperation on returns. The project examines the disconnects between expectations of return policies and their actual outcomes by de-centering the dominant, one-sided understanding of “return policymaking.” GAPs will: a) scrutinize the shortcomings of the EU’s governance of returns with both its internal and external dimensions; b) analyse enablers and barriers of international cooperation c) shed light on the perspectives of migrants themselves to understand their knowledge of return policies, aspirations and experiences. By taking a close look at governance, cooperation and actor’s agency, the project is able to suggest new avenues for international cooperation, develop recommendations for stakeholders and explore alternative pathways to returning migrants. The project combines its decentering approach with three innovative concepts: a focus on return migration infrastructures that enable GAPs to analyze governance fissures; an analysis of return migration diplomacy to understand how relations among EU MSs and with third countries hinder cooperation on returns; and a trajectory approach that uses a socio-spatial and temporal lens to understand migrant agency. The project achieves its aims via multi-disciplinary, qualitative and quantitative comparative research in 11 countries in Europe, Africa and the broader Middle East (including Afghanistan). The project involves wide-ranging and innovative impacts, including the creation of interactive data repository on returns, a return cooperation index, return governance indicators, policy briefs and workshops, the formation of stakeholder expert panels, a digital storytelling and video series, the launching of Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) as well as open access policy and scholarly publications.
more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications assignment_turned_in Project2011 - 2014Partners:SPIA UG, SYNBEA, SPIA UG, PLS, NHRF +4 partnersSPIA UG,SYNBEA,SPIA UG,PLS,NHRF,APRE,APRE,PLS,SYNBEAFunder: European Commission Project Code: 290431more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications assignment_turned_in Project2012 - 2015Partners:SPIA UG, Signosis, EN, UCL, KIT +6 partnersSPIA UG,Signosis,EN,UCL,KIT,Signosis,DMU,SPIA UG,University of Namur,EN,USTLFunder: European Commission Project Code: 288928more_vert
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