Professor of International and Multicultural Education
Dr. Monisha Bajaj is Professor of International and Multicultural Education at the University of San Francisco. She is the editor and author of eight books and numerous articles on issues of peace, human rights, migration, and education, and is the editor-in-chief of the International Journal of Human Rights Education. Dr. Bajaj has developed curriculum and teacher training materials—particularly related to human rights, racial justice, ethnic studies, and sustainability—for non-profit and national advocacy organizations as well as inter-governmental organizations, such as UNICEF and...
Professor and Harry & Lillian Hastings Research Chair
Ming Hsu Chen is a Professor of Law and Faculty-Director of the Race, Immigration, Citizenship, and Equality Program. She teaches courses in Constitutional Law, Legislation and Administrative Regulation, Citizenship, and Immigration. Professor Chen brings an interdisciplinary perspective to the study of race, immigration, and the administrative state. Her scholarship is published in leading law reviews and social science journals. She is author of ...
Assistant Professor of Economics at at North Carolina State University
Alejandro Gutierrez-Li is an Assistant Professor at North Carolina State University. His research lies in the areas of labor economics and applied microeconomics, with an emphasis on economics of immigration and entrepreneurship. His recent work has analyzed the role of pre-migration work experience of immigrants in their labor market opportunities in the United States, factors affecting Mexico-U.S. migration, the determinants of the farm labor supply, and the economic outcomes of Hispanics, among others. In addition, he is in charge of a new research and outreach program related to...
Assistant Professor of Law, Politics & Society at Drake University
My research lies at the intersection of law and narrative with topical emphases on immigration and climate change. While my approach is broadly rooted in the law and society tradition, it also benefits from methodological and theoretical contributions from the social sciences, in particular sociology, history, and migration studies. My scholarship consists of two main strands: (1) what I refer to as law’s “possibilities,” where I consider the normative implications of law-making in the face of the climate crisis and its attendant social, political and economic changes; and (2) the...
Ph.D. Student in Latin American History at Complutense University of Madrid
Zetong Xiao is a Ph.D. student in Latin American History at the Complutense University of Madrid. His research project focuses on Chinese immigration to Central America, transnationalism and cultural citizenship. He is currently working on the history of Chinese in Costa Rica between 1900-2010, with an emphasis on the transformation of transnational connections and the construction of migrant networks. To introduce an interdisciplinary perspective, he tries to examine the identity construction and social integration of the Costa Rican Chinese by using ethnographic methods. He...
Dr. Esther Yoona Cho is a former Policy and Communications Fellow at BIMI, former member of the Interdisciplinary Immigration Workshop, and completed her PhD dissertation in the Sociology Department. Dr. Cho is currently a Research Programs Director at Stanford University.
Dr. Esther Cho's research agenda focuses on how intersectional stigmatization affects the lived experiences and identities of those in immigrant and minority communities. Her work investigates the intersections of race and legality among undocumented immigrants of East Asian origin, asking: How do race and...
Erica Cho graduated from UC Berkeley with a degree in DataScience and Applied Mathematics and Modeling. As an Undergraduate research assistant at the Berkeley Interdisciplinary Migration Initiative, Erica Cho has helped creating the BIMI newsletter in 2018-2019 and helped collecting data on immigrant-serving health clinics and legal aid organizations in the Bay Area as part of the Mapping Spatial Inequality Project.
Dr. Carrilo's research lies at the intersection of the fields of immigration, social welfare, and (sub)urban sociology. More specifically, Dr. Carrillo employ qualitative methods to examine how low-income, Latinx immigrants access the private and public safety net in urban and suburban spaces in the Bay Area, and how gender and legal status affect this process. Dr. Carillo is currently Project Director at UCSF and Data Research Expert at Code for America.
Tamara Jafar is a 2018-2019 BIMI Collegium Fellow who contributed to data collection for the Mapping Spatial Inequality Project and helped incorporating research in undergraduate teaching as part of the Collegium Fellowship.
Arnold Foda was a BIMI Collegium Fellow at BIMI who contributed to data collection for the Mapping Spatial Inequality Project and helped incorporating research in undergraduate teaching as part of the 2018-2019 Collegium Fellowship.