Scholars at other institutions whose work complements that of the Centre and who have an association:
Dr Laurel Birch Aguilar, Malawi Famine and Community Development Charitable Trust:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and community, urbanism and rural change;
Dr Hayder Al-Mohammad, University of Southampton:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and existentialism, embodiment, war and death;
Professor Vered Amit, Concordia University, Montreal:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and migration, transnationalism and globalism;
Dr Mette Berg, University of Oxford:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and multiculturalism, gender, equality, diaspora and labour;
Professor Aleksandar Boskovic, Institute of Social Sciences, Belgrade:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and nationalism, gender and intellectual history;
Eduardo Caetano da Silva, UNICAMP, Brazil:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and migration, nationalisms and nation-States;
Dr Shuhua Chen, University of Birmingham:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and migration, history, and writing;
Dr Peter Collins, University of Durham:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and selfhood, health, religion, narrative and dialogue;
Ms Liria de la Cruz:
specialising on collaborative anthropology, ethnographic writing, gender and Roma/Gypsies;
Professor Andrew Dawson, University of Melbourne:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and community, home, migration and post-industrialism;
Dr Guilherme Mansur Dias, UNICAMP, Brazil:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and international migrations, migration governability and multilateral entities, temporary labour, human trafficking;
Dr Jan Grill, University of Manchester:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and migration, Gypsies and the state;
Dr Anna Gustafsson, University of St. Andrews:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and the emotions, craftwork and identity;
Professor Ulf Hannerz, University of Stockholm:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and the global ecumene, mass media, culture and politics, transnationalism and localism;
Professor Keith Hart, The Memory Bank:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and economics, development studies and philosophy;
Dr Jonatan Kurzwelly, University of the Free State, South Africa:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and nationalism, ethnicity and identity;
Dr Hua Liu, Guangxi University for Nationalities:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and Chinese history and culture, globalism and health;
Dr Mils Hills, Analytic Red and University of Coventry:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and policy, computer modelling and security;
Dr Gonzalo Iparraguirre, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Institute of Anthropological Sciences:
specializing in temporality, agendas of development, anticipation, cultural rhythmics, policymaking;
Dr Andrew Irving, University of Manchester:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and phenomenology and issues of health and embodiment, in particular AIDs in Africa and North America;
Dr Laura Jeffery, University of Edinburgh:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and human rights, refugees, displacement and migration;
Professor Lisette Josephides, Queens University Belfast:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and existentialism, morality and social practice;
Dr Trenholme Junghans, Cambridge Univesity:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and state institutions, health and quality of life;
Dr Panas Karampampas, Institut interdisciplinaire d’anthropologie du contemporain (IIAC):
specializing in cosmopolitanism and intangible cultural heritage;
Dr Kai Kresse, Zentrum Moderner Orient, Berlin:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and Islam, post-colonialism, philosophy and intellectual practice;
Professor Kristin Kuutma, University of Tartu:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and heritage (tangible and intangible), and the United Nations;
Dr Sonja Lenk, Cosmopolitan Institute, Heidelberg:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and the phenomenon of human consciousness;
Dr Huw Lloyd-Richards, University of St Andrews:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and listening and, hearing, sound and music.
Raquel Machaqueiro, ISCTE – IUL, Portugal:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and post-colonialism, development and the environment;
Bethan McRobbie, University of St. Andrews:
specializing in Health and Wellbeing, Scotland, Digital Technologies, Vulnerability, Diversity, Access to Healthcare.
Dr Hideko Mitsui, University of Macau:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and war, gender, nationalism and narrative;
Dr Riyad Mustafa, Oxford University:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and Islam, urbanism, ethnicity and globalism;
Dr Morten Nielsen, Aarhus University:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and statehood, issues of urban poverty and pragmatism;
Dr Laura Obermuller, University of the West Indies, Mona:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and Caribbean migration, asylum seekers and border control;
Dr Salma Siddique, Edinburgh Napier University:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and clinical-cum-applied anthropology, issues of displacement, vulnerability and trauma;
Dr Elena Sischarenco, University of St Andrews:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and identity, entrepreneurialism and business;
Dr Jonathan Skinner, Roehampton University, London:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and travel, identity, postcolonialism, tourism and leisure;
Dr Marta Sokol-Klepacka, University of St Andrews:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and migration, community and home;
Dr Giovanni Spissu, University of Cagliari:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and urbanism, mapping and movement;
Dr Márcia Anita Sprandel, UnB, Brazil:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and migration, peasantries, Brazilian social thought;
Professor Ronald Stade, Malmö University:
specializing in cosmopolitanism from Classical philosophy, and peace and conflict;
Dr Simone Toji, Institute for the Historic and Artistic Heritage, Ministry of Culture, Brazil:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and urbanism, methodology and representation, identity and belonging;
Edurne Urrestarazu, University of the Basque Country:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and cultural identity;
Dr Holly Warner, Existential Risk Observatory:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and technological futures, and sonic cultures;
Professor Solrun Williksen, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and home, narrative, reverie, memory and the self;
Professor Richard Wilson, University of Connecticut:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and human rights, humanitarianism, empathy and reconciliation;
Professor Pnina Werbner, Keele University:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and postcolonialism, migration, urbanism and pluralism;
Professor Helena Wulff, University of Stockholm:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and embodiment, emotion, gender and dance;
Dr Yang Yang, China:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and aspiration, artistry, capitalism and creativity;
Dr Qingqing Yang, Minzu University:
specializing in cosmopolitanism and urbanism, space, modernization and personal identity;
Dr Jvan Yazdani, Sapienza University, Rome
specializing in cosmopolitanism and diaspora, ethnicity and home.