Marcello Carammia
Associate Professor of [GSPS-02/A]
More details at www.marcellocarammia.eu
Marcello Carammia is an Associate Professor at the University of Catania, where he holds the Jean Monnet Chair on Challenges to Democracy and Representation in the EU (EuDARe), and he chairs the Master Programme in Global Politics and Euro-Mediterranean Relations. Marcello is also an Affiliate of the Institute for Quantitative Social Science at Harvard, and a Visiting Professor at the University of Belgrade.
His research focuses on the comparative analysis of institutions and public policies, with special interest in the interaction between migration dynamics, politics, and policy.
Between 2015 and 2019 he was a Senior Researcher at the European Asylum Support Office (EASO – the EU Asylum Agency), where he was responsible for the Agency’s Research programme on the push and pull factors of asylum-related migration. Previously he was a Lecturer and then a Senior Lecturer (2011-2015) in comparative European politics at the University of Malta.
He is the national coordinator of the Project of Relevant National Interest Questioning the EU. Politicisation, representation, and agenda setting in the European Parliament (EUQuest). He is a founding co-director of the Italian Agendas Project and a core member of the EU Agendas Project. He has taken part to several Horizon Europe and COST projects with various roles. He has been a consultant for the European Commission, the OECD, and the British Home Office.
He has been a Visiting Fellow, Visiting Scholar or Visiting Researcher at the Universities of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Zaragoza, Sheffield, and Louvain-la-Neuve. He held invited seminars or lectures at the Universities of Barcelona, Belgrade, Bologna, Exeter, Lecce, Lisbon, Nicosia, Siena, Trieste and at the European University Institute.
His articles appeared in such journals as European Union Politics, the International Migration Review, the Journal of Common Market Studies, the Journal of European Public Policy, the Policy Studies Journal, and Nature Scientific Reports, among others.
Marcello Carammia is an Associate Professor at the University of Catania, where he holds the Jean Monnet Chair on Challenges to Democracy and Representation in the EU (EuDARe), and he chairs the Master Programme in Global Politics and Euro-Mediterranean Relations. Marcello is also an Affiliate of the Institute for Quantitative Social Science at Harvard, and a Visiting Professor at the University of Belgrade.
His research focuses on the comparative analysis of institutions and public policies, with special interest in the interaction between migration dynamics, politics, and policy.
Between 2015 and 2019 he was a Senior Researcher at the European Asylum Support Office (EASO – the EU Asylum Agency), where he was responsible for the Agency’s Research programme on the push and pull factors of asylum-related migration. Previously he was a Lecturer and then a Senior Lecturer (2011-2015) in comparative European politics at the University of Malta.
He is the national coordinator of the Project of Relevant National Interest Questioning the EU. Politicisation, representation, and agenda setting in the European Parliament (EUQuest). He is a founding co-director of the Italian Agendas Project and a core member of the EU Agendas Project. He has taken part to several Horizon Europe and COST projects with various roles. He has been a consultant for the European Commission, the OECD, and the British Home Office.
He has been a Visiting Fellow, Visiting Scholar or Visiting Researcher at the Universities of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Zaragoza, Sheffield, and Louvain-la-Neuve. He held invited seminars or lectures at the Universities of Barcelona, Belgrade, Bologna, Exeter, Lecce, Lisbon, Nicosia, Siena, Trieste and at the European University Institute.
His articles appeared in such journals as European Union Politics, the International Migration Review, the Journal of Common Market Studies, the Journal of European Public Policy, the Policy Studies Journal, and Nature Scientific Reports, among others.
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