CCSR home page

Migration, race and population dynamics

Home

Research

News and Events

Resources

Contact/Getting Involved

CCSR


University of Manchester

Research theme of the POPLA research group at CCSR.

Liverpool Conference 08

Ludi, Gemma and Nissa at the 'Intercultural Cities' Conference in Liverpool, May 2008

 

Contact Us

 

Prof. Ludi Simpson

Project Director

Tel: 01274 642838
Email: ludi.simpson@manchester.ac.uk

Personal webpage  

 

Dr Gemma Catney

Research Associate

Tel: 0161 275 0272

Email: gemma.catney@manchester.ac.uk

Personal webpage

 

Susan Lomax

Computing and Research Support

Email: susan.lomax@manchester.ac.uk

Personal webpage

 

Address:

CCSR

School of Social Sciences
Kantorovich Building,
Humanities Bridgeford Street
University of Manchester
Manchester
M13 9PL

 Get involved

 

Send us your views on the project website, or any aspect of the research. We’ll be keeping you up to date with forthcoming News and Events

Let’s collaborate! If you’re interested in collaborating on research to extend the Migration, Race and Population Dynamics project, we’re eager to hear from you. Also, if you’re working on a similar or related project, tell us about it! See the research page.

 

Associated projects

Nissa Finney was previously employed on the MRPD project, and has now taken up an ESRC Research Fellowship, investigating how natural change and migration are changing the geography of ethnic group populations in Britain; and the links between spatial, structural and social dimensions of ethnic integration.

 

Albert Sabater recently completed an ESRC Postdoctoral Fellowship, estimating segregation and diversity of ethnic groups over time in England and Wales, 1991-2001.

 

See also PhD projects by members of the Population and Places (POPLA) Research Group, including Nisha Kapoor’s work on socio-economic inequalities for South Asian groups in the UK at the neighbourhood level, research by Naomi Marquis on ‘Local Population and Housing Change: The Ethnic and Social Dimensions’, and Stephen Jivraj’s work on 'The effect of migration on the social composition of neighbourhoods' .

 

Top of the page