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- 189 results found
Description
Marija Dobrić
Marija Dobrić is an LLM Candidate at the University of Cambridge. Previously, Marija was a research and teaching assistant at the Section for International Law and International Human Rights Law at Bundeswehr University Munich. She holds a degree in Law (Mag. iur.) from the University of Vienna. Besides her studies in Vienna, she has gained experience in international law through her Erasmus exchange semester at the University of Utrecht and her participation at the 57th Philip C. Jessup International Law Moot Court Competition. She is currently involved in research for her doctoral thesis on statelessness in international law. Apart from statelessness, her research includes human and fundamental rights as well as international dispute settlement.
Marija Dobrić websiteMarine Antonyan
Marine Antonyan has been teaching at the American University of Armenia (AUA) since 2010. She has co-operated with a number of Armenian NGOs in delivering trainings within the framework of different projects as well as provided consultancy services mainly concerned with drafting legislative amendments. Since 2008 she has also worked for the Translation Centre of the Ministry of Justice of Armenia, an entity created to, inter alia, support the Armenian Government in its efforts to approximate the Armenian legislation to the EU legislation. She has been providing consultancy services to UNHCR Armenia since 2011 in the field of statelessness. Â Â
Maureen Lynch
Maureen Lynch is an independent humanitarian advocate and researcher based in Washington, DC.  She is a member of the International Observatory on Statelessness at Kingston University in London.  Previously Maureen was the Senior Advocate for Statelessness Initiatives at Refugees International where much of her work was based on her 2005 report Lives on Hold:  The Human Cost of Statelessness and RI’s 2009 report Nationality Rights for All:  Progress Report and Global Survey on Statelessness. During her tenure at RI, she undertook humanitarian assessment missions to more than 25 countries including Azerbaijan, Bangladesh, Cote d’ Ivoire, Haiti, Ingushetia, Kosovo, Kuwait, the Occupied Palestinian Territories, Syria, and Zimbabwe. Prior to RI, Maureen worked for UNHCR.  Maureen is co-editor of Statelessness and Citizenship: A Comparative Study on the Benefits of Nationality. She has written and presented on issues including refugees, IDPs, stateless persons, immigration, human rights, psychology, child development, and family studies.
Maylis de Verneuil
Maylis de Verneuil is a French-trained attorney who has been working for the past ten years in humanitarian missions with different organizations throughout the world, including the International Committee of the Red Cross, the United Nations, OSCE and NGOs. She researched on migration issues and on the protection of minority rights in the Balkans, and received her PhD in Human Rights from Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna (Pisa) in 2016, with a PhD thesis entitled “Statelessness of Romani Individuals in the Western Balkans: Negligence or Discrimination?”. She is currently managing two EU-funded projects, respectively on Child’s Rights and on Justice Reform in Albania.
Mheadeen Kadora
Hello, I am Mheadeen Kadora, Palestinian of origin, born in Syria, stateless, I grew up in Syria and received my education until I got a degree in information engineering, currently, I am in Germany to complete my education and obtain a master's degree.Â
Michelle van Burik
Michelle is an Individual Member of ENS who has worked on Roma rights issues for twenty years. She is an expert in frontline casework, holistic support for individual cases as well as political lobbying on statelessness issues. Alongside this work, Michelle’s grassroots mobilisation and community engagement work is focused on raising awareness on the effects of antigypsyism related to statelessness. Currently Michelle is active as a guest History Lecturer in schools and universities, curates exhibitions and gives presentations in Dutch, English and German. She is active at local, national and European level.
Migrants' Rights Network
Migrants' Rights Network is a young, dynamic national NGO working and campaigning in support of migrants in the UK. Our work brings together migrant activists and support organizations, think tanks, academics, faith groups and public sector representatives to advocate for a rights-based approach towards migration in the UK.
Migrants' Rights Network website
Mike Sanderson
Mike Sanderson read law (LLB) at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) and holds graduate degrees in law (BCL, MPhil) from Keble College, Oxford and public health (MSc) from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM). He has previously taught law at St. Hugh’s College, Oxford and Queen Mary and King’s Colleges, London. Mike was called to the Bar (Inner Temple) in 2004 and completed pupillage in the Chambers of Lord Gifford QC (8 King’s Bench Walk). Prior to joining the law school at the University of Exeter he served as a legal protection officer with the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in North Africa, West Africa and the former Yugoslavia. Mike continues to act as a consultant to UNHCR on issues related to citizenship and the prevention of statelessness. Mike contributes teaching to undergraduate public international law and is the course convener for undergraduate International Refugee Law (LAW2088/3088), International Refugee Law (LAWM672) and Immigrants and Refugees in the EU (LAWM635).
Mission Armenia
Mission Armenia is a charitable non-governmental organization operating since 1988, which provides comprehensive social and healthcare services to elderly people, people with special needs and disabilities, refugees and displaced persons and other vulnerable populations across 22 towns and 8 regions of the Republic of Armenia. Mission Armenia operates over 50 community-based social infrastructures throughout Armenia, including day care centres, training resource centres, soup kitchens, a 24-hour rehabilitation centre, social houses for temporary accommodation for the elderly, the disabled and refugees. These centres provide support for around 8,000 people. Mission Armenia’s main areas of work are: community-based social, legal and health services, education/vocational support, economic empowerment initiatives for local and refugee vulnerable adults, young people and children.Â
Mission Armenia website
MĂłnika Ganczer
Mónika Ganczer is junior research fellow of the Institute for Legal Studies of the Centre for Social Sciences of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, and assistant lecturer of the Department of Public and Private International Law of Deák Ferenc Faculty of Law and Political Sciences of Széchenyi István University. Her research focuses on nationality matters in international law, international legal aspects of dual nationality and statelessness, nationality problems resulting from state succession as well as the Hungarian citizenship regulation.