present
European Public Policy Conference 2011
Migration in Europe: Challenges and Opportunities
Central European University Budapest 18 - 19 April 2011
Contacts Address CEU Nador u. 9 1051 Budapest Reception:
+3613273000
Organizing Committee Evan de Riel +36705557205
[email protected] Emergency International Police Fire department Ambulance
112 107 105 104
Table of contents
EPPC: background
1
Welcome messages
3
Conference Programme Breakout sessions schedule CEU map Speakers & Panelists
5 7 9 10
Social activities Budapest map Social activities: schedule
15 17
Organizing Committee
18
List of participants
19
1
The European Public Policy Conference Organized in turn by students from some of the world’s leading public policy schools, the EPPC provides an interactive platform for challenging debates and valuable networking between political leaders, scholars and students. Aiming to create strong links between future leaders studying at the participating institutions, the concept of the EPPC is to have the conference organized each year in a different European city, discussing some of today’s most important public policy issues. After two successful editions, organized by the London School of Economics in 2009 and Sciences Po (Paris) in 2010, the Hertie School of Governance (Berlin) is taking the lead this year. Aside from the host, the Central European University (Budapest), students attending the three organizing universities are invited to attend, as well as students at the National University of Singapore Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy (Singapore) and the Columbia University School of International Public Affairs (New York). We hope you enjoy the conference and look forward to welcoming you again next year. For more information, please visit www.hertie-school.org/eppc
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EPPC 2011 Migration in Europe: Challenges and Opportunities (Im)migration is generally perceived as a public concern in Europe: migration is considered a security issue, with migrants burdening the welfare system, stealing local jobs or even causing a ‘clash of civilizations’. Even though migration is challenging Western European states in many different ways, being an immigration state is less a choice than a fact. In reality, the EU often needs migration from an economic perspective since it can offer a solution to some of the current societal problems such as demographic change and an expected labour shortage. For migrants themselves and their families in turn, migration is foremost an important livelihood strategy. Nowadays many developing countries, national economies as well as households survive thanks to remittances being sent ‘home’. Despite the possibility of a win-win-win-situation for sending and receiving countries as well as migrants and their families, numerous challenges remain. On the one hand, the right to mobility is often heavily violated. Not only irregular migration and human trafficking are associated with physical risks, psychological distress and high economic costs, but also regular, high-skilled migrants face multiple obstacles. On the other hand, European nation-states are still struggling to deal with societies that grow increasingly heterogeneous. How can Europe overcome the current obstacles to create a triple-win-situation for sending and receiving countries as well as migrants themselves? The 2011 EPPC conference will try to find an answer to this question by looking at three key topics: a) Labour migration to and within Europe The central question arising in this regard is: What are the specific challenges of labour migration? How can these be resolved? b) Refugees and asylum seekers / Human trafficking What are the implications of the rise of trafficking and the stricter control of international borders it brings along? Can migration be halted and to what extent is migration control effective? c) Identity, integration and diversity Still it frequently renews societal debates on fundamental questions at the core of democracy: Who is a citizen? Which rights are linked to citizenship? Should migrant workers be eligible? Is there a need for ‘integration’ of migrants into society?
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Welcome messages Dear conference participants, It is my distinct pleasure to welcome you to the third European Public Policy Conference which will be held on the premises of the Central European University in Budapest. This year, after LSE and Sciences Po, the responsibility of organising the event fell to the students of the Hertie School of Governance. I am confident that the 2011 conference will again be worth all the hard work the students put in. Under the heading of “Migration in Europe: opportunities and challenges”, participants of the conference will discuss how both sending and receiving countries might mutually benefit from migration. And what better place to talk about this than in Budapest - at the heart of Europe? What is more, this conference brings together a number of high-profile academics and practitioners from the realm of migration and a group of highly motivated students from some of the world’s leading public policy schools – Sciences Po, LSE, Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, SIPA, CEU and the Hertie School. Let me also thank the many institutions and organisations that have helped make this event possible, in particular CEU for kindly hosting the conference and the European Commission for their generous support, to name but two. In closing, let me leave you with these words by Hungarian Nobel Laureate Albert Szent-Gyorgyi: “Discovery consists of seeing what everybody has seen and thinking what nobody has thought.”
Wishing you a stimulating and enjoyable conference,
Yours sincerely,
Prof. Helmut K. Anheier, PhD Dean, Hertie School of Governance
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Dear participant, On behalf of the student organizing committee at the Hertie School of Governance, I am extremely proud to welcome you to the 3rd European Public Policy Conference, hosted here in Budapest at Central European University. The conference is organized in turn by the London School of Economics, SciencesPo (Paris), and this year’s organizers, the Hertie School of Governance, joined for the first time this year as co-organizer by the European Commission. EPPC is student-focused in content and presentation, but also in its inception and implementation. As such, we are presented with a unique opportunity to engage collaboratively with the realworld public policy issues that revolve around migration, while at the same time meeting fellow students and future colleagues and counterparts in an open and reflective environment. I hope you find the discussion informative and stimulating, your peers engaging and perspicacious, and your stay in Budapest as enriching and rewarding as the experience of organizing it all has been for us. A special thanks goes to Ali Sökmen, co-organizer of last year’s EPPC for his support and insight, and to the students at CEU, who have helped us greatly with the preparations for this conference.
Beste Grüße,
Evan de Riel Chair, 2011 EPPC Organizing Committee Hertie School of Governance
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Programme Pre-‐Conference: Sunday, 17th April 2011
19:30 –
th
Day 1: Monday, 18 April 2011
9.00 – 09.30 9.30 – 10.00
10.00 – 11.00 11.00 – 11.30 11.30 – 12.30
12.30 – 14.00 14.00 – 15.30
15.30 – 16.00 16.00 – 17.15
17.15 – 18.15
18.15 – 19.45 19.45 – 22.30
Welcome Drinks at Ötkert Bar (snacks provided)
Zrínyi u. 4 (next to CEU)
Conference Registration & Breakfast Introduction to the Conference: Evan de Riel, Hertie School of Governance Welcome Note: Prof. Martin Kahanec, PhD, CEU Keynote Speech: Morten Kjaerum Director, European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights Coffee Break Breakout 1-‐1 Breakout 1-‐2 Breakout 1-‐3 Labour Migration Asylum and Identity and its Economic Refugees Effects Lunch Break Panel Discussion The management of labour migration: How can migration policies redirect irregular migration into legal channels? Panelists: Marianne Hartmann, IOM Dr. Roderick Parkes, SWP Brussels András Kováts, Menedék -‐ Hungarian Association for Migrants Eszter Oroszlany, European Commission Chair: Prof. Dr. Claus Offe, Hertie School of Governance Coffee Break Keynote Speech: Elias Bierdel Chair of Borderline Europe Fortress Europe and its unknown victims Breakout 2-‐1 Breakout 2-‐2 Breakout 2-‐3 Citizenship European Union Integration Migration Policies Free time Boat Tour (with Dinner and Drinks) on the Danube Meeting at 19.20 at CEU for a guided walk to the pier
CEU Lobby Nador u. 13 CEU Lobby Nador u. 13
CEU Lobby Nador u. 13 CEU Lobby Nador u. 13 CEU Nador u. 9 1-‐1: MB 201 1-‐2: MB 202 1-‐3: MB 203 CEU Room 1 Nador u. 13 CEU Lobby Nador u. 13
CEU Lobby Nador u. 13 CEU Lobby Nador u. 13 CEU Nador u. 9 2-‐1: MB 201 2-‐2: MB 202 2-‐3: MB 203 Margit híd
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Day 2: Tuesday, 19th April 2011
9.00 – 10.00
Breakfast
10.00 – 11.15
Keynote Speech: Prof. Martin Kahanec, PhD Assistant Professor at CEU, Senior Research Associate, Deputy Program Director "Migration" Migration in an Enlarged EU: Who Wins, Who Loses? Coffee Break
11.15 – 11.30
11.30 – 12.30
Breakout 3-‐1 Challenges in Migration Policy
12.30 – 14.00
Lunch Break Keynote Speech: Elizabeth Collett European Policy Fellow, Migration Policy Institute (MPI) Integration and Diversity Policies in Europe Coffee Break
14.00 – 15.30
15.30 – 16.00
16.00 – 17.00
17.00 – 17.30 18.00 – 21.00
21:00 -‐
Breakout 3-‐2 Legal Framework and Human Rights
Breakout 3-‐3 Brain Drain & Brain Gain
In front of CEU Auditorium Nador u. 9 CEU Auditorium Nador u. 9
In front of CEU Auditorium Nador u. 9 CEU Nador u. 9 3-‐1: MB 201 3-‐2: MB 202 3-‐3: MB 203 In front of CEU auditorium CEU Auditorium Nador u. 9
In front of CEU Auditorium Nador u. 9 Keynote Speech: Dr. Jorrit J. Rijpma CEU Auditorium Assistant Professor, Leiden University, Leiden Law School, Nador u. 9 Europa Instituut What does the Arab Spring teach us about EU Migration Control? EPPC 2011 Closing Session and IPLI Prize Award CEU Auditorium NN, Hertie School of Governance Nador u. 9 Timothy Reno (IPLI) Free Time (see booklet for dinner recommendations) Final Party at 400 Bar Kazinczy u. 52 (with drinks sponsored by IPLI, see voucher in booklet) (see booklet for directions)
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Breakout sessions: schedule Breakout 1-‐1: Labour migration and its economic effects Peppin, Kyle
European migration and the creative class
LSE
Shapiro, Eva
The labor market effect of immigration to France from North Africa
SciencesPo
Jacob, Naomi& Puri, Attracting high skilled labor from developing Raghav countries: Can Europe learn from Singapore?
LKY
Moderation: Catherine Wurth – Room: CEU Nador st. 9,MB 201 Breakout 1-‐2: Asylum and Refugees Hölscher, Dagmar
State obligation concerning the rescue of persons in HSoG distress at sea
DeVries, Eric
Entry of refugees into the EU during time of crises
Vosyliute, Lina
ECtHR and ECJ overlapping jurisdiction on common CEU EU asylum policy Issues: What matters?
HSoG
Moderation: Julian Herwig – Room: CEU Nador st. 9,MB 202
Breakout 1-‐3: Identity Singh, Sonjuhi
Immigration and national identity in Europe
LKY
Shapiro, Gilla
A psychosocial explanation and policy implications HSoG of European xenophobia
Abbas, Seher
Muslim crisis in Europe: Does integration mean homogeneity?
LKY
Moderation: Jan Korte – Room: CEU Nador st. 9,MB 203
Breakout 2-‐1: Citizenship Khaghaghordyan, Aram
Acquiring citizenship: Conditionality and its effect
HSoG
Hansen, Camilla
A reconceptualization of citizenship tests
LSE
Tjaden, Jasper
Unable and willing? Do non-‐European migrants really oppose new integrationist citizenship policies?
LSE
Moderation: Jan Korte – Room: CEU Nador st. 9, MB 201
8 Breakout 2-‐2: European Union migration policies Jana Gottschalk
EU citizenship, labor mobility and unfulfilled promises: Practices from an enlarged EU
CEU
Xu, Zhenqing/Chao, Tong/Li, Lei
The dilemma of European immigration policy
LKY
Zsolt, Bobis
Inequality and the right to free movement of persons in the European Union
CEU
Moderation: Anika Wirtz – Room: CEU Nador st. 9,MB 202 Breakout 2-‐3: Integration Wilhelminah, Isaboke Language as a powerful tool for integration
CEU
Leal Vallejo, Alejandra
The importance of an effective preschool and child HSoG care system for the integration of migrants into society
Sahani, Puneet
Lessons from India’s experiment with case-‐based reservations for the integration of Romani in Europe
HSoG
Moderation: Catherine Wurth – Room: CEU Nador st. 9,MB 203 Breakout 3-‐1: Challenges in Migration Policy Nazirova, Aneliya
Multiculturalism vs. collective identity: Case study of British integration and immigration policies
LSE
Schulze, Lisa
Transitional requirements for new member state nationals: Regulatory arbitrage through self-‐ employment
LSE
Trends in migration: A microscopic model
LSE
Malik, Khyati
Moderation: Julian Herwig – Room: CEU Nador st. 9, MB 201 Breakout 3-‐2: Legal framework and Human rights Stoyanov, Miroslav
Directive 2009/52/EC: Preventing economic migration or enhancing human rights of irregular migrants
LSE
Roig, Emilia
Restrictive Immigration Laws and Policies in France: HSoG What implications for human trafficking?
Lill, Felix & Rahmann, Joachim
The Right to Vote for Non-‐Citizens
HSoG
Moderation: Anika Wirtz – Room: CEU Nador st. 9,MB 202 Breakout 3-‐3: Brain Drain & Brain Gain Gonzalez, Santiago & Brain drain: A global problem Nun, Eleonora
HSoG
Ruffini, Krista
Brain drain versus brain gain: A zero-‐sum game?
LSE
Mutesi, Florence
Africa-‐Europe migration dilemma
LKY
Moderation: Catherine Wurth – Room: CEU Nador st. 9, MB 203
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CEU map 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
CEU main entrance CEU main reception EPPC registration Washrooms Zrinyi Gate Display area Lockers Reception area Cloakroom Auditorium Lobby
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Speakers & panelists Elias Bierdel, born in Berlin in 1960, he worked as a journalist for German Public Radio ARD before becoming director and chairperson of the relief organization “Komitee Cap Anamur/Deutsche Notärzte e.V.” (German Emergency Doctors). In 2004 he was involved in the rescue of 37 African refugees who had come into sea distress during their crossing to Europe. Affected by this experience, Bierdel founded “Borderline-Europe - Menschenrechte ohne Grenzen e.V.” (Human rights without borders) in 2007.
Speaker
This organization is dedicated to the documentation of the situation of refugees on the external borders of the European Union. Mr. Bierdel is currently working for the Austrian Study Center for Peace and Conflict Resolution (ASPR) where he is responsible for the International Civilian Peace-keeping and Peace-building Training Program, with clients including the UN and Médecins Sans Frontieères. He has received several human rights awards such as the Ute-Bock-Preis für Zivilcourage (Vienna, 2009) and the International Blue Planet Award (Berlin, 2010).
Elizabeth Collett is a European Policy Fellow at the Migration Policy Institute and Senior Advisor to MPI’s Transatlantic Council on Migration. She is based in Brussels and works on the International Program, with a particular focus on European policy. She is also a research associate at the Centre for Migration Policy and Society at Oxford University.
Speaker
Prior to joining MPI, Ms. Collett worked as a Senior Policy Analyst at the European Policy Centre, an independent Brussels-based think tank, where she was responsible for its migration program, which covered all aspects of European migration and integration policy. During her time at EPC she produced numerous working papers and policy briefs focused on the future of European Union immigration policy. She used to also work in the Migration Research and Policy Department of the International Organization for Migration in Geneva as well as for the Institute for the Study of International Migration in Washington, DC. Ms. Collett holds a Master’s degree in Foreign Service from Georgetown University, where she specialized in foreign policy. Furthermore she holds a certificate in refugee and humanitarian studies, as well as a Bachelor’s degree in law from Oxford University.
11 Martin Kahanec
Speaker
is Assistant Professor at the Central European University in Budapest. He also holds is a Senior Research Associate (since 2005, Senior since 2007), Deputy Program Director “Migration” (since 2007), is leader of the research sub-area EU Enlargement and the Labor Markets (since 2006) and former Deputy Director of Research (2009) at the Institute for the Study of Labor in Bonn, Germany. He has held several advisory positions and participated in a number of scientific and policy projects with the World Bank, the European Commission, the European Parliament, OECD, and other international and national institutions. He is a member of several professional associations (AEA, ESPE, EALE, EEA) and a founding member and Fellow of the Slovak Economic Association. His main research interests concern labor and population economics, ethnicity, migration and reforms in Central Eastern European labor markets. His work has been published in refereed journals, contributed chapters to several edited books, including the Oxford Handbook of Economic Inequality (Oxford University Press), he has edited scientific volumes and journal special issues. In 2006 he earned his Ph.D. in Economics from the Center for Economic Research, Tilburg University, the Netherlands.
Morten Kjærum
Speaker
was born in 1957 in Denmark and has worked in the field of human rights for 25 years. In 2008 he was appointed Director of the European Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA) in Vienna. After completing a Master of Laws from the University of Aarhus, Kjaerum started his career in the nongovernmental sector as the Head of the Asylum Department in the Danish Refugee Council, until 1991. Then he directed the Danish Centre for Human Rights until 2003, and was the founding Director of the Danish Institute for Human Rights where he stayed until he was appointed as the new director of FRA. Mr. Kjaerum has written extensively on issues relating to human rights, especially about refugee law, the prohibition of racial discrimination, and the role of national human rights institutions. In 2002, he was elected member of the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination. In 2004, he was elected President of the International Coordination Committee for National Human Rights Institutions, a network coordinating the relations between the UN and national institutions.
12 Jorrit Rijpma
Speaker
is Assistant Professor at Leiden University, where he teaches European law at the bachelor and master level. He holds a degree from the European Law School of Maastricht University and an LL.M. degree from the College of Europe (Bruges). He obtained his Ph.D. at the European University Institute in Florence with a dissertation on the regulatory framework for the management of the external borders of the EU. As part of his research he spent three months at the European Border Agency (Frontex) in Warsaw. He participated in a number of research projects for the European Parliament, the Italian government and the International Labor Organization. He is a member of the Dutch Standing Committee of Experts on international immigration, refugee and Criminal Law (Meijers Commissie) and a regular speaker at conferences on EU migration and border management. His current research focusses on the insitutional development of the EU in the area of Freedom, Security and Justice.
András Kováts
Panelist
obtained degrees in special education and in social policy at ELTE University, Budapest. Furthermore, he has been a research fellow of the Minority Research Institute of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. His fields of research include immigration and asylum policies, immigrant integration, and welfare policy. For the last few years he has also been involved in consultancy for various governmental and EU bodies dealing with immigration and asylum related issues. Besides being involved in adult education programmes he is a lecturer on international migration, labour migration, immigrant integration and migration and asylum policy at ELTE University and the Zsigmond Király College. Since 1998 he has been in charge of co-ordinating the activities of Menedék, the Hungarian Association for Migrants, first as a programme co-ordinator, later as director. The Association’s aims are to represent international migrants (asylum seekers, refugees, temporarily protected persons, foreign employees, immigrants, and other foreigners in Hungary) towards the majority society, as well as to promote the legal, social, and cultural integration of those refugees and migrants who are planning to stay in Hungary, by means of targeted programmes and projects.
13 Marianne Hartmann
Panelist
holds a Master of Public Policy from the Hertie School of Governance, as well as a Bachelor of Arts in history. She currently works as an Associate and Counter-Trafficking Focal Point for the International Organization for Migration (IOM) in Berlin, Germany. As part of the project management team for the Berlin Alliance against Human Trafficking for Labor Exploitation (BBGM), she has been responsible for the interim management of the project’s activities, most recently for the development and coordination of training modules on trafficking and labor exploitation. The project aims at sensitizing organizations, institutions and occupational groups who deal with persons affected by trafficking for labor exploitation. Ms Hartmann has worked for IOM in the area of migration and development and joined the Counter-Trafficking Department in 2009. Prior to this, she gained her initial professional experiences with the German Ministry for Labor and Social Affairs, Catholic Charities in Dallas, Texas and the Atlantic Council of the United States in Washington, D.C.
Eszter Oroszlany
Panelist
is currently working at the Representation of the European Commission in Budapest in the area of political reporting and analysis. She completed postgraduate studies in European law (LL.M. EUR) at the EuropaInstitut UdS in Saarbrücken with a focus on Human Rights and European Integration with the postgraduate scholarship of the Konrad-AdenauerStiftung and is now researching EU migration law and policy. She holds an M.A. in French Studies from ELTE University, Budapest, with a thesis on French-Hungarian relations. For her M.A. in English Studies (ELTE, Budapest) she researched the policy of Multiculturalism in the Blair era and its effects on the contemporary British art scene. Ms. Oroszlany obtained a brief insight into German national policy making in the German Bundestag within the framework of the International Parliamentary Scholarship, working in the office of MdB Juratovic, where she focused on social and labour policy, as well as German migration and integration policy.
14 Claus Offe,
Panelist
born in 1940, was Professor of Political Science at Humboldt University, Berlin, where he has held a chair of Political Sociology and Social Policy. He earned his PhD (Dr. rer. pol.) at the University of Frankfurt (1968) and his Habilitation at the University of Constance. As of 2006 he has taught at the Hertie School of Governance, where he held a chair of Political Sociology. Previous positions include professorships at the Universities of Bielefeld and Bremen, where he served as director of the Center of Social Policy Research. He has held research fellowships and visiting professorships in the US, Canada, Australia, Hungary, Poland, Austria, Italy, and the Netherlands and was awarded an honorary degree by the Australian National University in 2007. His fields of research include democratic theory, transition studies, EU integration, and welfare state and labor market studies. He has published numerous articles and book chapters in these fields, a selection of which is reprinted as Herausforderungen der Demokratie. Zur Integrations- und Leistungsfähigkeit politischer Institutionen (2003). Books in English include Varieties of Transition (1996), Modernity and the State: East and West (1996), Institutional Design in Post-Communist Societies (1998, with J. Elster and U. K. Preuss) and Reflections on America.
Roderick Parkes heads the Brussels Office of Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik, the German Institute for International and Security Affairs. He studied at Edinburgh University, Sciences Po Grenoble and Cambridge University before being awarded a PhD at Bonn University. Mr Parkes worked on EU immigration and asylum policy for the Bonn Institute for Media Analysis and the Centre for European Integration Studies before joining SWP in 2005.
Panelist
His recent publications include EU Migration Policy: The End of the Responsibility Decade? (2010, Nomos Publishers) and “The Blue Card Impasse” (2010, SWP briefing).
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Budapest map
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An interactive map can be found at : http://www.bit.ly/eppc2011map
Drink Voucher
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Social activities: schedule Sunday, 17 April Get-together/ice-breaker drinks! On Sunday night we would like to give you a fun welcome to Budapest and to the EPPC 2011! Join us at Ötkert, a popular hang-out in the heart of the V District, a stone’s throw away from the CEU. Take this opportunity to kick off the conference in a friendly atmosphere and get to know the other participants as well as the EPPC team! We look forward to seeing you there! Where & when? 19:30 @ Ötkert, Zrinyi u. 4
Monday, 18 April Boat cruise and dinner! All aboard on Monday evening! We invite you for a cruise on the Danube, onboard an exclusively selected riverboat. A hot buffet and drinks will be provided. Over the 2.5 hours of the trip you will have plenty of time to dine, socialise and network as well as marvel the stunningly illuminated riverside of Budapest. Where & when? The cruise departs at 19:45 from a pier near Margaret’s Bridge (Margit híd). Meet at CEU at 19:20 to head over together.
Tuesday, 19 April Post-conference drinks! The closing session is not quite when the conference ends! On your final evening in Budapest we invite you to the 400 Bar, a stylish venue in the historical Jewish quarter of Pest. We hope to see you there! Thanks to the generosity of IPLI (The International Policy and Leadership Institute) you will receive coupons for complimentary drinks – please bring the voucher below. Where & when? 21:00 at 400 Bar, VII. Kazinczy utca 52/b
IPLI invites you for drinks! Cut out this voucher and present it at the entrance of the 400 Bar on Tuesday night. You will receive coupons which you can exchange for drinks at the bar. - Only one voucher per person – vouchers are not transferable -
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Organizing Committee Logistics
Communications Academic
Finance
Peter Drahn
Steven Lauwers
Catherine Wurth
Anne Spranger
Claudia Braun
Miguel Del Estal
Jan Korte
Jan Jakub Chromiec
Tina Dankmeyer
Samuel Marmer
Julian Herwig
JQ Choo
Karen Schober
Imane Lahlou
Anika Wirtz
Piotr Zakowiecki
Lukas Schmid
Magdalena Orth Sandra Pfluger
Chair Evan de Riel
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List of participants Abbas Seher Antrobus Kate Bobis Zsolt Boess Martin Braun Claudia Cazagou Baptiste Cepulis Arvydas Chao Tong Chonkova Blagovesta Choo Jun Quan Chromiec Jan Jakub Dankmeyer Marie-Christina Dayringer Sarah de Castro Armando de Riel Evan de Vries Eric del Estal Miguel Drahn Peter Gottschalk Jana Gurau Ana Haenicke Johannes Hansen Camilla Herwig Julian Hölscher Dagmar Jacob Naomi Khaghaghordyan Aram Kok Hong Chea Korte Jan Lahlou Imane Lai Gloria Lauwers Steven Le Hanh Leal Vallejo Alejandra Li Lei Lill Felix Malik Khyati Marmer Samuel Martinie Mael Mihailovic Dragan
[email protected] LKY
[email protected] LSE
[email protected] CEU
[email protected] LSE
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] ScPo
[email protected] CEU
[email protected] LKY
[email protected] CEU
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] CEU
[email protected] LSE
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] CEU
[email protected] CEU
[email protected] ScPo
[email protected] LSE
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] LKY
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] LKY
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] CEU
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] ScPo
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] LKY
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] LSE
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] ScPo
[email protected] CEU
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Mulé Müller Mutesi Nagpal Nazirova Nitko Nun Orth Peppin Puri Rahmann Reno Roig Ruffini Sahani Salah Seddik Schmid Schober Schulze Shapiro Shapiro Singh Sökmen Spranger Stoyanov Szabo Szik Tjaden Vosyliute Wilhelminah Wirtz Wurth Xu Zakowiecki
Elaina Sebastian Florence Anushka Aneliya Justyna Eleonora Magdalena Kyle Raghav Joachim Timothy Emilia Krista Puneet Rania Lukas Karen Lisa Gilla Eva Sonjuhi Ali Anne Miroslav Ildiko Martin Jasper Lina Isaboke Anika Catherine Zhenqing Piotr
[email protected] CEU
[email protected] LSE
[email protected] LKY
[email protected] LSE
[email protected] LSE
[email protected] CEU
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] LSE
[email protected] LKY
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] IPLI
[email protected] Alumna HSoG
[email protected] LSE
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] CEU
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] LSE
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] ScPo
[email protected] LKY
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] LSE
[email protected] CEU
[email protected] CEU
[email protected] LSE
[email protected] CEU
[email protected] CEU
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] HSoG
[email protected] LKY
[email protected] HSoG
Total participants: 72 CEU HSoG LKY LSE ScPo
Central European University Hertie School of Governance Lee Kuan Yew London School of Economics Sciences Po
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In Cooperation with