This lecture is part of the Doctoral Lecture Series on Cross-Border Labor Mobility 2025-2026
The Doctoral School of Economics, Finance and Management (DSEFM) and the Luxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic Research (LISER) are happy to invite you to the next lecture of the 2025/2026 edition of our Doctoral Lecture series on Cross-Border Labor Mobility.
The lecture “Climate Change and International Immigration” will be given by Cristina Cattaneo from the European Institute, on Economics and the Environment (EIEE).
A lunch will be served at 12.00 upon invitation only (LISER/UNI participants attending onsite are automatically enrolled).
Abstract:
To be communicated soon
About the speaker:
Cristina Cattaneo is Director of the research division on Sustainable Earth Modelling Economics (SEME) at EIEE, where she is also head of the research area on Human Migration.
She holds a DPhil in Economics from the University of Sussex- Brighton (UK), a PhD in Economics from the Università degli Studi in Milan (Italy), and a MA in Development Economics from the University of Sussex. She has been involved in several internationally funded research projects, and she coordinated a H2020 project on Psychological, social and financial barriers to energy efficiency (PENNY). From 2007 to 2018 Cristina has been senior researcher at Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei (FEEM). Cristina is adjunct professor at the Graduate School in Public Economics- DEFAP and previously taught in various universities in Italy and abroad, both at undergraduate and at graduate level.
Her main research interests involve applied econometrics, the economics of migration and energy economics. She published, among others, for International Migration Review, Journal of Development Economics, Journal of International Economics, Journal of Human Resources, Resource and Energy Economics and Review of Environmental Economics and Policy.
Language: English
This is a free lecture. Registration is mandatory.
This is a hybrid event, a Webex link will be shared one week prior to the event.
Contact:
Supported by the Luxembourg National Research Fund (FNR) (PRIDE19/14302992) and (RESCOM/25/19439574)

