Dr. Alice Szczepanikova

Profile

Academic positionPost Doc
Research fieldsEmpirical Social Research,Social and Cultural Anthropology and Ethnology
Keywordsbiographies, gender, identity, migration and refugee movements, Chechnya/Russian Federation

Current contact address

Host during sponsorship

Prof. Dr. Helma LutzFachbereich 03 - Gesellschaftswissenschaften, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main, Frankfurt am Main
Start of initial sponsorship01/02/2010

Programme(s)

2009Humboldt Research Fellowship Programme for Postdocs

Publications (partial selection)

2013Alice Szczepanikova: Between Control and Assistance: The Problem of European Accommodation Centres for Asylum Seekers. In: International Migration , 2013, DOI: 10.1111/imig.12031
2013Alice Szczepanikova: Czech Republic and Slovakia, Modern Era Migrations. In: I. Ness & P. Bellwood The Encyclopedia of Global Human Migration. Wiley-Blackwell, 2013.
2012Alice Szczepanikova: Becoming More Conservative? Contrasting Gender Practices of Two Generations of Chechen Women in Europe. In: European Journal of Women’s Studies , 2012, 475-489
2011Alice Szczepanikova: From the Right of Asylum to Migration Management: The Legal-Political Construction of ‘A Refugee’ in the Post-Communist Czech Republic. In: Europe-Asia Studies, 2011, 798-806
2010Alice Szczepanikova: Performing Refugeeness in the Czech Republic: Gendered Depoliticisation through NGO Assistance. In: Gender, Place & Culture, 2010, 461-477
2009Alice Szczepanikova: Beyond ‘Helping’: Gender and Relations of Power in Non-governmental Assistance to Refugees. In: Journal of International Women’s Studies, 2009, 19-33
2008Alice Szczepanikova: Settlement and (Re)Construction of Gender Relations in Exile: Chechen Refugees in Eastern Europe. In: Alexander Schahbasi, Chechens in the European Union. Austrian Integration Fund, 2008. 93-125
2006Alice Szczepanikova: Bringing Life into the “States of Exception”: Chechen Asylum Seekers in a Czech Refugee Camp. In: Studi Emigrazione, 2006, 323-340
2005Alice Szczepanikova: Gender Relations in a Refugee Camp: A Case of Chechens Seeking Asylum in the Czech Republic. In: Journal of Refugee Studies, 2005, 281-298