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We are delighted to announce that this year’s Dissertation Prize on the MSc in Migration Studies has been awarded to Yan Matusevich for his work on ‘Understanding migrant mobilisation in post-Soviet Russia. Do Existing theoretical models apply?’ The prize is awarded at the discretion of the degree’s Exam Board each year.

The dissertation articulated an intersecting set of problem-questions: 1) why are Central Asian migrant workers in Russia not mobilising, given the oppressive conditions they are exposed to, and 2) are Western conceptual models applicable for thinking about political action in the historically and politically specific context of post-socialist Russia? The questions were contextualised in relevant literature on social movements, and the case made for a Western bias in existing scholarship on migrant mobilisation, which the dissertation set out to correct.

All students on the MSc in Migration Studies receiving a distinction in their dissertations are encouraged to revise their work for simultaneous publication in the COMPAS and IMI Working Paper Series. This year, six candidates in all have been invited to publish.

Read more about the MSc in Migration Studies

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At the end of their course on Migration, Development and Conflict, in which they studied related theories, empirical evidence and policies, course tutor Marieke van Houte asked her MSc in Migration Studies students to come up with constructive recommendations on how to apply their learning to take research and policy on migration and development forward