Joni Vainikka
Joni Vainikka is a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Helsinki interested on decarbonisation, identities, attitudes, and time. He is involved in the Decarbon-Home Strategic Research project and is the president for the Geographical Society of Finland. His current work focuses on the spatialities of climate attitudes, sustainable living, socially equitable transitions, and geographies of time. Holding a PhD in Human Geography from the University of Oulu (2015), Joni has lived in nine cities in Finland, England, and Denmark.
Tuuli Lähdesmäki
is Associate Professor of Art History (tenure track) at the University of Jyväskylä, Finland, and has the title of Docent in Art History at the University of Jyväskylä, in Critical Heritage Studies at the University of Turku, and in Area and Cultural Studies at the University of Helsinki, Finland. Lähdesmäki's research interests and publications focus on EU cultural, heritage, and diversity policies, heritage narratives, and reception of cultural phenomena. She is currently leading the HERIDI project (EU Heritage Diplomacy and the Dynamics of Inter-Heritage Dialogue), funded by the Academy of Finland.
Iain Robertson
Iain Robertson is Associate Professor in Historical Geography at the Centre for History, University of the Highlands and Islands and an Adjunct Professor at Curtin University, Perth, Western Australia. His research in critical heritage studies has been built around the formulation and exploration of the concept of heritage from below. First essayed in 2008 and fully developed in Heritage From Below (2012) the concept draws on notions of performativity, affect and the everyday to recognise the counter hegemonic possibilities of the use of the past in the present. His most recent work, ‘“Tracking” working class heritage’ (2019) seeks to extend this exploration to the realm of largely ignored ruination and decay. In so doing it raises the question what is heritage unless it is noticed, put to work, preserved, polished and presented? Robertson answered this by suggesting that ephemerality, transience, decay and destruction perform heritage work as effectively as does any authorised, preserved and conserved heritage icon.
Sofya Shahab
Sofya Shahab is a Research Fellow in Power and Popular Politics at the Institute of Development Studies and a UK Research and Innovation Future Leaders Fellow. Her research employs decolonial feminist approaches to understand the lived experiences of conflict, violence, migration and oppression with a focus on how social and physical landscapes are created and utilised in campaigns of terror and resistance and the consequences this has for people’s sense of place, belonging and security.
Shivan Toma
Shivan Toma is the Head of the Department of Translation at the College of Languages, University of Duhok. He additionally works as a freelance English, Syriac, Kurdish, and Arabic translator and interpreter. He was previously the faculty coordinator supervising the work of 25 Assyrian heritage gatherers as part of the CREID programme with the Institute of Development Studies (IDS) at the University of Sussex in collaboration with the University of Duhok.
Dorte Jagetic Andersen
Dorte Jagetic Andersen is senior researcher in the Centre for Border Region Studies, with a background in European Ethnology and European Continental Philosophy. Her main research interest concerns identity-formation in areas influenced by the presence of geopolitically drawn borders, and she has published extensively and made major theoretical and empirical contributions within the field of border studies. Her recent contributions in the field of border studies and conflict-resolution include research on Northern Ireland and multiple expressions of borderlands resilience more broadly. She also works on expressions of borders and identity express in European civil society.
Elżbieta Opiłowska
Elżbieta Opiłowska, sociologist, is Associate Professor at the Institute of Sociology and Head of the Center for Regional and Borderlands Studies at the University of Wrocław. Her main expertise is in borderlands studies, memory cultures, European integration and German-Polish relations. Guest Professorship at the UniGr-Center for Border Studies, University of Luxembourg (2021) and at the Viadrina Institute of European Studies (2020/2021). Her recent publication is: Poland and Germany in the European Union: The Multi-dimensional Dynamics of Bilateral Relations, Abington: Routledge 2021 (ed. with M. Sus).
Eeva-Kaisa Prokkola
Eeva-Kaisa Prokkola is professor in human geography, specializing in regional development and regional policy. Her research and teaching interest include political geography, regional and border region research, political borders, security and securitization, regional resilience and the politics of mobilities. She has published widely in leading international journals such as Political Geography, Antipode, Environment and Planning, Social and Cultural Geography, Citizenship Studies, ACME, Tourism Geographies, and European Urban and Regional Studies. She leads a research project on Cross-border resilience (Eudaimonia 2022-2025) and a work package on border landscapes as part of Borders shaping perceptions of Europe research consortium (Horizon Europe 2023-2026).
Marjeta Pisk
Marjeta Pisk is a Research Associate at the Institute of Ethnomusicology of the Research Centre of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts (ZRC SAZU) in Ljubljana, Slovenia. She intertwines folkloristic research of marginalised genres and practices with research of heritage-making in border regions.
Špela Ledinek Lozej
Špela Ledinek Lozej is a Research Associate at the Institute of Slovenian Ethnology of the Research Centre of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts (ZRC SAZU) in Ljubljana, Slovenia. Her research focuses on heritage and heritage-making, folk architecture and Alpine husbandry.
Randall H. McGuire
Randall H. McGuire is a SUNY Distinguished Professor at Binghamton University in Binghamton, New York. He received his BA from the University of Texas and his PhD from the University of Arizona. From 1996 to 2007, he and Dean Saitta of the University of Denver directed the Archaeology of the Colorado Coal Field War, 1913-1914. He has worked with Elisa Villalpando of the Centro INAH, Sonora for 38 years investigating the Trincheras Tradition of Sonora, México. More recently he has done contemporary archaeology studying the materiality of the U.S. – México border.
Robert Steele
Robert Steele is a postdoctoral fellow in the Institute of Iranian Studies, Austrian Academy of Sciences. He holds a PhD in Arab and Islamic Studies from the University of Exeter and has held academic positions at the University of California, Los Angeles, and the London School of Economics and Political Science. He has authored or edited four books on the modern history of Iran, most recently Pahlavi Iran’s Relations with Africa: Cultural and Political Connections in the Cold War (Cambridge University Press, 2024).