National Center of Competence in Research –
The Migration-Mobility Nexus
nccr – on the move
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  • About Us
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    • – Migration-Mobility Nexus
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      • – CrisisMigRef – The Database on Crisis and Migration
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    • – Policy Briefs
    • – Administrative Detention of Foreign Nationals in Figures
    • – Do Inclusive Labor Market Access Regulations Increase the Employment Rate of Asylum Seekers?
    • – International Students: Switzerland’s Ideal Highly Skilled Migrants?
    • – What Are the Barriers for Asylum Seekers and Refugees Who Want to Enroll at a Swiss University?
    • – Migratory Trajectories of Foreign Nationals in Switzerland: A State of Constant Mobility?
    • – Are Labor Market Programs Always Useful?
    • – Is Control over Migration an Asset? And If It Is, Who Can Make the Most of It?
    • – Naturalization and Prejudice: What We Know, and What Is Uncertain
    • – Language Roulette? Refugee Placement and its Effect on Labor Market Integration
    • – So How Do You Feel about Religion? The Integration of Religious Communities
    • – Why Are so Many Asylum Seekers Male?
    • – The Economic Impact of the Free Movement Agreement in Switzerland
    • – Policy Briefs «kurz und bündig»
    • – Die ausländerrechtliche Administrativhaft in Zahlen
    • – Erhöht ein offener Arbeitsmarktzugang die Erwerbsquote von Asylsuchenden?
    • – Ausländische Studierende mit Schweizer Hochschulabschluss – die idealen Migrant*innen?
    • – Auf welche Hindernisse treffen Asylsuchende und Geflüchtete, die studieren möchten?
    • – Sind Arbeitsmarktprogramme immer nützlich?
    • – Ist die Kontrolle über Migration ein Gut? Und wenn ja, wer kann den grössten Nutzen daraus ziehen?
    • – Einbürgerungen und Voreingenommenheit: Was wir wissen – was unklar ist
    • – Sprachen-Roulette? Die Platzierung von Flüchtlingen und ihre Auswirkung auf die Arbeitsmarktintegration
    • – Nun sag, wie hast du’s mit der Religion? Die Einbindung von Religionsgemeinschaften 
    • – Warum ist die Mehrheit der Asylsuchenden männlich?
    • – Wirtschaftliche Auswirkungen der Personenfreizügigkeit in der Schweiz
    • – Policy Briefs « en bref »
    • – La détention administrative de personnes étrangères en chiffres
    • – L’accès ouvert au marché du travail augmente-t-il le taux d’emploi des requérant·e·s d’asile ?
    • – Etudiants étrangers diplômés d’une haute école suisse : migrants idéals pour la Suisse ?
    • – Quels obstacles rendent les études aux personnes en fuite et en requête d’asile difficiles ?
    • – Les mesures de réinsertion professionnelle sont-elles toujours utiles ?
    • – Trajectoires migratoires des étranger·ère·s en Suisse : une perpétuelle mobilité ?
    • – Le contrôle des mouvements migratoires est-il un bien ? Et si oui, qui peut en tirer le meilleur parti ?
    • – Naturalisations et préjugés : ce qu’on sait – ce qui n’est pas clair
    • – Roulette linguistique ? Le placement des réfugié·e·s et son incidence sur l’intégration sur le marché du travail
    • – Dis-moi donc, que penses-tu de la religion ? L’intégration des communautés religieuses 
    • – Des requérants d’asile de sexe masculin : combien, et pourquoi ?
    • – L’impact économique de l’accord sur la libre circulation des personnes en Suisse
    • – Neuchatel Graduate Conference of Migration and Mobility Studies 
    • – Public Events + Exchanges
    • – Academic Events
      • – Public Lectures
      • – Annual Conferences
      • – Graduate Conference
      • – Academic Workshops
    • – Resources
    • – Cantonal Portraits
    • – Cantonal Portraits
  • Migration-Mobility Survey
    • – Survey on Living as a Migrant in Switzerland
    • – Umfrage zum Leben als Migrant*in in der Schweiz
    • – Vivre en tant que migrant·e en Suisse
    • – Migration-Mobility Survey Results
    • – Resultate des «Migration-Mobility Surveys»
    • – Des résultats du « Migration-Mobility Survey »
  • Migration-Mobility Indicators
  • Education + Careers
    • – Doctoral Program
    • – PostDoc Training
    • – Research + Career Support
    • – Summer School 2017
    • – Summer School 2016
  • Equal Opportunities
    • – Code of Conduct
    • – Institutional Anchoring
    • – Parents’ Support
    • – Support for Female Researchers
  • Publications
    • – Search in all Publications
    • – Working Papers
      • – Discrimination
      • – Labor Market
      • – Citizenship
      • – Asylum
    • – Policy Briefs
    • – E-Magazine
      • – highlights #1
        • – highlights #1.1
        • – highlights #1.1 FR
        • – highlights #1.1 DE
        • – highlights #1.2
        • – highlights #1.3
        • – highlights #1.4
        • – highlights #1.5
        • – highlights #1.6
      • – highlights #2
        • – highlights #2.1
        • – highlights #2.1 DE
        • – highlights #2.1 FR
        • – highlights #2.2
        • – highlights #2.3
        • – highlights #2.4
        • – highlights #2.5
        • – highlights #2.6
  • Blog
  • Videos and Podcasts
    • – Clips Preconceptions
  • Media Relations
    • – Media Contact
    • – Media Workshops
    • – Press Releases
    • – Press Clippings
ReadMore
  • About Us
    • – Facts + Figures
    • – Migration-Mobility Nexus
    • – Crisis Research
      • – CrisisMigRef – The Database on Crisis and Migration
    • – Main Research Results
    • – Interdisciplinarity
    • – Who is Who
      • – People
      • – Management Board
      • – Directors
      • – Network Office
      • – Project Leaders
      • – PostDocs
      • – Doctoral Students
      • – Associated Researchers
      • – Committees
      • – Advisory Board
      • – Alumnae + Alumni + Emeritae + Emeriti
      • – Visiting Fellows
    • – Contact
    • – Jobs
  • News + Events
    • – Calendar
    • – E-News
    • – Archive
      • – COVID-19 + Mobility
        • – COVID-19 + Mobilité
  • Research
    • – Projects Phase III
    • – Projects Phase II
    • – Projects Phase I
    • – Data Management
      • – OPENMIN
    • – Research Institutions
  • Knowledge Transfer
    • – Policy Briefs
    • – Administrative Detention of Foreign Nationals in Figures
    • – Do Inclusive Labor Market Access Regulations Increase the Employment Rate of Asylum Seekers?
    • – International Students: Switzerland’s Ideal Highly Skilled Migrants?
    • – What Are the Barriers for Asylum Seekers and Refugees Who Want to Enroll at a Swiss University?
    • – Migratory Trajectories of Foreign Nationals in Switzerland: A State of Constant Mobility?
    • – Are Labor Market Programs Always Useful?
    • – Is Control over Migration an Asset? And If It Is, Who Can Make the Most of It?
    • – Naturalization and Prejudice: What We Know, and What Is Uncertain
    • – Language Roulette? Refugee Placement and its Effect on Labor Market Integration
    • – So How Do You Feel about Religion? The Integration of Religious Communities
    • – Why Are so Many Asylum Seekers Male?
    • – The Economic Impact of the Free Movement Agreement in Switzerland
    • – Policy Briefs «kurz und bündig»
    • – Die ausländerrechtliche Administrativhaft in Zahlen
    • – Erhöht ein offener Arbeitsmarktzugang die Erwerbsquote von Asylsuchenden?
    • – Ausländische Studierende mit Schweizer Hochschulabschluss – die idealen Migrant*innen?
    • – Auf welche Hindernisse treffen Asylsuchende und Geflüchtete, die studieren möchten?
    • – Sind Arbeitsmarktprogramme immer nützlich?
    • – Ist die Kontrolle über Migration ein Gut? Und wenn ja, wer kann den grössten Nutzen daraus ziehen?
    • – Einbürgerungen und Voreingenommenheit: Was wir wissen – was unklar ist
    • – Sprachen-Roulette? Die Platzierung von Flüchtlingen und ihre Auswirkung auf die Arbeitsmarktintegration
    • – Nun sag, wie hast du’s mit der Religion? Die Einbindung von Religionsgemeinschaften 
    • – Warum ist die Mehrheit der Asylsuchenden männlich?
    • – Wirtschaftliche Auswirkungen der Personenfreizügigkeit in der Schweiz
    • – Policy Briefs « en bref »
    • – La détention administrative de personnes étrangères en chiffres
    • – L’accès ouvert au marché du travail augmente-t-il le taux d’emploi des requérant·e·s d’asile ?
    • – Etudiants étrangers diplômés d’une haute école suisse : migrants idéals pour la Suisse ?
    • – Quels obstacles rendent les études aux personnes en fuite et en requête d’asile difficiles ?
    • – Les mesures de réinsertion professionnelle sont-elles toujours utiles ?
    • – Trajectoires migratoires des étranger·ère·s en Suisse : une perpétuelle mobilité ?
    • – Le contrôle des mouvements migratoires est-il un bien ? Et si oui, qui peut en tirer le meilleur parti ?
    • – Naturalisations et préjugés : ce qu’on sait – ce qui n’est pas clair
    • – Roulette linguistique ? Le placement des réfugié·e·s et son incidence sur l’intégration sur le marché du travail
    • – Dis-moi donc, que penses-tu de la religion ? L’intégration des communautés religieuses 
    • – Des requérants d’asile de sexe masculin : combien, et pourquoi ?
    • – L’impact économique de l’accord sur la libre circulation des personnes en Suisse
    • – Neuchatel Graduate Conference of Migration and Mobility Studies 
    • – Public Events + Exchanges
    • – Academic Events
      • – Public Lectures
      • – Annual Conferences
      • – Graduate Conference
      • – Academic Workshops
    • – Resources
    • – Cantonal Portraits
    • – Cantonal Portraits
  • Migration-Mobility Survey
    • – Survey on Living as a Migrant in Switzerland
    • – Umfrage zum Leben als Migrant*in in der Schweiz
    • – Vivre en tant que migrant·e en Suisse
    • – Migration-Mobility Survey Results
    • – Resultate des «Migration-Mobility Surveys»
    • – Des résultats du « Migration-Mobility Survey »
  • Migration-Mobility Indicators
  • Education + Careers
    • – Doctoral Program
    • – PostDoc Training
    • – Research + Career Support
    • – Summer School 2017
    • – Summer School 2016
  • Equal Opportunities
    • – Code of Conduct
    • – Institutional Anchoring
    • – Parents’ Support
    • – Support for Female Researchers
  • Publications
    • – Search in all Publications
    • – Working Papers
      • – Discrimination
      • – Labor Market
      • – Citizenship
      • – Asylum
    • – Policy Briefs
    • – E-Magazine
      • – highlights #1
        • – highlights #1.1
        • – highlights #1.1 FR
        • – highlights #1.1 DE
        • – highlights #1.2
        • – highlights #1.3
        • – highlights #1.4
        • – highlights #1.5
        • – highlights #1.6
      • – highlights #2
        • – highlights #2.1
        • – highlights #2.1 DE
        • – highlights #2.1 FR
        • – highlights #2.2
        • – highlights #2.3
        • – highlights #2.4
        • – highlights #2.5
        • – highlights #2.6
  • Blog
  • Videos and Podcasts
    • – Clips Preconceptions
  • Media Relations
    • – Media Contact
    • – Media Workshops
    • – Press Releases
    • – Press Clippings

Bruno Lanz

Former Affiliated Professor

Bruno Lanz is an assistant professor of applied economics at the University of Neuchâtel and an associate researcher at ETH Zürich and MIT. His work focuses on the design and evaluation of public policies, with particular interests in sustainable development and the energy transition. Bruno notably holds a SNSF grant to study the linkages between climate change, food security and migration decisions, for which he collaborates with Prof. Etienne Piguet. He received his PhD in economics from ETH Zürich and master’s degrees from the University of Lausanne and University College London.

Homepage

Project
Overcoming Inequalities with Education

Contact
Email, T + 41 32 718 14 55

Faculty of Economics and Business
University of Neuchâtel
Rue Abram-Louis-Breguet 2
2000 Neuchâtel
Switzerland

Bruno Lanz

Former Affiliated Professor

Bruno Lanz is an assistant professor of applied economics at the University of Neuchâtel and an associate researcher at ETH Zürich and MIT. His work focuses on the design and evaluation of public policies, with particular interests in sustainable development and the energy transition. Bruno notably holds a SNSF grant to study the linkages between climate change, food security and migration decisions, for which he collaborates with Prof. Etienne Piguet. He received his PhD in economics from ETH Zürich and master’s degrees from the University of Lausanne and University College London.

Homepage

Project
Overcoming Inequalities with Education

Contact
Email, T + 41 32 718 14 55

Faculty of Economics and Business
University of Neuchâtel
Rue Abram-Louis-Breguet 2
2000 Neuchâtel
Switzerland

Inactive

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Julie Lacroix
Julie Lacroix
Aljoscha Landös
Bruno Lanz
Alessandro Lazzari
Taehoon Lee
Mathias Lerch
Déborah Levitan
Didier Leyvraz
Qingyang Lin
Annique Lombard
Annique Lombard
Alexis Lubow
Sarah M. Ludwig-Dehm

 

 


The National Centres of Competence in Research (NCCRs)
are a funding scheme of the Swiss National Science Foundation

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