Welcome to International visiting professors

Welcome to International visiting professors

International visiting professors SPL
Welcome to Dr. Elise Féron
From November 20th until November 23rd 2017
 
Sciences Po Lille is happy to welcome Dr. Elise Féron for a class on “Tools for Conflict Analysis and Resolution”.
Dr. Elise Féron is researcher at the Tampere Peace Research Centre in Finland. Her research interests go from Diasporas and Conflicts, Gender-Based Violence in Conflict Zones, Gender and Peace Negotiations, Interstate Post-Colonial Relations, The Great Lakes Region of Africa, to Northern Ireland.
 
 
Welcome to professor Guy Spielman
From November 20th until November 25th 2017
 
Sciences Po Lille is happy to welcome Professor Guy Spielman for a class on “Politics as Spectacle from Alcibiades to Trump”.
Guy Spielman’s major area of scholarship covers performing arts in the Early Modern Era, with a particular focus on stagecraft, fairground theater and commedia dell'arte.
His writings on this topic have appeared in a variety of journals—some forty papers to date—, including Revue d'Histoire littéraire de la France, Dix-Septième Siècle, Les Cahiers du Dix-Septième, Papers on Seventeenth-Century French Littérature, Littératures classiques, Texte, Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, as well as in numerous anthologies.
 
 
Welcome to professor Hualin PU
From November 21st until December 1st 2017
 
Sciences Po Lille is happy to welcome Professor Hualin PU for a class on “China’s Economic Reform and Foreign Trade”.
Hualin PU is associate professor at the College of Economics of Jinan University, China.
His research interests include intra-product specialization and trade, global production networks and industry upgrading, regional economic integration, outward FDI of China, economics of higher education.
 
Welcome to professor Roberto Sala
From November 22nd until November 30th 2017
 
Sciences Po Lille is happy to welcome Professor Roberto Sala for a class on “Southern Europe after 1945. Italy, Spain, Portugal and Greece in the Post-War Period”.
Roberto Sala is a researcher at the Department of History, University Basel. He studied Modern History in Milan (Italy) and Bielefeld (Germany). After graduating in 2003, he went on to complete his doctorate at the Free University of Berlin in 2008. He has been a postdoctoral researcher at Max-Weber-Center, University of Erfurt, and at Social Science Research Center Berlin (2009-2012) as well as a visiting scholar at the University of Chicago and the Columbia University (2011). He specializes in migration history, and the history of social sciences, and is currently working on the development of economics and sociology in Germany and the United States.