Catherine WIHTOL de WENDEN is Director of research at CNRS (CERI). For 30 years she has been a researcher on international migration, from a Political Science and Public Law approach. She studied in Sciences-Po Paris and University Paris I (Panthéon- Sorbonne) She got her Ph D in Political Science in 1986. She has published 20 books, alone or as co-writer and around 150 articles.
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Sen Wang is a Ph. D. candidate at Guanghua Law School, Zhejiang University. His subjects are the law of the sea—specifically, the legal regime in Antarctica and the legal issues concerning the marine scientific research—and the international law.
Fabio Petito is Senior Associate Research Fellow in ISPI and Head of the "Religions and International Relations" Programme promoted by ISPI and the Freedom of Religion or Belief & Foreign Policy Initiative (FoRB&FPI), University of Sussex - UK. He is Senior Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Sussex. He has taught at SOAS in London, the ESCP-EAP in Paris and at ‘L’Orientale’ in Naples.
Plator Avdiu is Researcher at the Kosovar Centre for Security Studies (KCSS), a Kosovo-based think tank specialized in the security area. Since 2014, he is engaged in national and regional projects led by KCSS on the topics of police and defence integrity, Kosovo’s membership into Euro-Atlantic structures and international security organizations as well as on Horizon 2020 projects of the European Commission. He is author and co-author of several publications and research analysis of the KCSS on security and defence related topics.
L’Algeria sta attraversando un momento di relativa stabilità politica ed economica favorita dal sostanziale incremento dei prezzi degli idrocarburi, di cui il paese è un importante esportatore. Nel contesto inflazionistico generato dal conflitto in Ucraina, le maggiori entrate garantite da un mercato globale dell’energia in netta ripresa hanno alleviato la pressione fiscale sulle casse dello stato e consentito alle autorità di mantenere alti livelli di spesa pubblica, mitigando – di fatto – parte del malcontento sociale che era riemerso a partire dal 2019.
Il primo anno del governo guidato dal primo ministro Aziz Akhannouch è stato caratterizzato dalla necessità di far fronte a varie emergenze socioeconomiche, alcune riconducibili agli strascichi della pandemia da Covid-19, altre a fenomeni meteorologici estremi, come l’ondata di siccità che ha colpito il paese all’inizio del 2022, altre ancora alla congiuntura internazionale scaturita dal conflitto russo-ucraino.