GRIP publishes the new winners of the 2024 call for projects.
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Here are the new GRIP project leaders for this year!
Participatory formulation of a research project on health promotion strategies in a monolingual aboriginal context in the midst of a mining development project.
This research project proposes to respond to the gaps in the health attention of the E’ñapa people, probably aggravated by the mining exploitation of the Orinoco Mining Arc project launched in February 2016 in Venezuela. By formulating a research program enabling health promotion strategies to be adapted to the E’ñapa context, this project aims to recognize the traditional specificities of this people while taking into account exposure to risks linked to the development dynamics of exogenous economic activities .
Principal investigator : Natalia Cáceres Arandia, linguiste et postdoctorante, Jeyni González Tabarez, anthropologue et doctorante du programme d’Études du Discours de l’Université Centrale du Venezuela et Victor Conejero et Adrián Blanco représentants de l’Association Assemblée Peuple E’ñapa (ASOCAPE).
Partner institutions: SedyL, Institut Vénézuélien de Recherche Scientifique (IVIC) et ASOCAPE
Budget: 9 960 eur
Corporations, standards and territories in globalization: a critical examination of the CSR movement based on experiences in the South
This research project is the continuation of a first phase funded by GRIP in 2022. The aim of this new proposal is twofold: 1) to deepen the analysis of the results obtained in the project “Companies, standards and territories in globalisation: a critical examination of the CSR movement based on experiences from the South” – phase 1 and 2) to open up new avenues for reflection and action, drawing on cooperation and networking arrangements between universities at international level.
Principal Investigators: Petia Koleva, Amel Ben Rhouma et Jouhaina Gherib
Partner institutions: LADYSS, CEDAG et Université de la Manouba – Tunisie
Budget: 15 000 eur
‘Going for Broke?’ A Study of Credit Boom, Risk and Debt-Financed (il)legal Migration in Vietnam
This research project proposes an original, multi-sited socio-economic study of credit risk in two provinces of central Vietnam, Nghe An and Ha Tinh, from which regular migrants to North-East Asia and irregular migrants to Europe depart, and two European host countries for Vietnamese irregular migrants: Germany and the UK. Credit risk is the conceptual device that highlights the co-constitutive nature of financialization and debt-financed migration.
Principal investigator: Nicolas Lainez
Budget: 14 970 eur
History of the global: an entry through the sensitive - international symposium
Partner institutions: CESSMA et ICT
Budget: 5000 eur
Religious dynamics in Africa - DYNRELAF
This proposal is part of the DYNRELAF phase 1 project funded in 2023 by GRIP. It aims to complete the work in progress by organizing a meeting in Paris with all the partners involved in order to work on a collective publication of a special issue of the Archives de Sciences Sociales des Religions or the Journal of Religion in Africa.
Principal investiagtor: Marc Antoine Pérouse de Montclos
Partner institutions: CEPED et ZMO (Berlin), Université de Mainz, Université protestante de Bruxelles, Université de Gand, Université de Belfast.
Budget: 5 000 eur
Territories crossed between global and local.TETRAGLOB: Multi-sited approaches to migration and micro-spaces of work for a decentering of urban knowledge
Partner institutions: CESSMA et CEPED
Budget: 15 000 eur
Cancer and mobility: a global health issue
This multidisciplinary and intersectoral study day will feature the Beninese women’s theater troupe “J’aime Santé” on women’s cancers, and will mobilize researchers (including young researchers) and healthcare professionals from Benin, Mali and France, to address the issue of the mobility of people, knowledge and objects in oncology in West Africa.
Principal investigator: Clémence Schantz et Freddy Gnagnon
Partner institutions: CEPED et CNHU Benin
Budget: 10 000 eur
Summer school in global history
Support for the organization of the Global History Summer School in Sandjberg (Denmark) for the second year running. The project aims to develop student mobility and academic collaboration between global history specialists from the Circle U and The Guild networks of six leading European universities. The aim is to create a network of excellence of junior and senior researchers in global history for doctoral students in history, with a view to interdisciplinary debates in the social sciences on a European scale. And beyond, since a collaboration with the African Research Universities Alliance aims to invite African doctoral students enrolled at partner universities.
Principal investigator: Claire Tran et Sophie Coeuré
Partner institutions: CESSMA et Aarhus University
Budget: 4 000 eur
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