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Research

Since 2020, we have awarded $1.9 million to 38 faculty-led projects addressing wide-ranging questions around domestic and global migration. View the published work of Migrations-funded projects

With the support of the Migrations initiative, Cornell researchers have visited U.S. immigration detention centers, laid out landmark African migrant rights principles, and tracked anti-immigrant hate speech online. Our work to make an impact in migration studies and the real lives of populations on the move is just getting started. 

Research Spotlights

A woman sits in a leather armchair within a house. A boom mic hovers above her and a camera records her.
Photo by Tao DuFour

Possible Landscapes: Documenting Environmental Experience in Trinidad and Tobago

Researchers Tao DuFour (Architecture, Art, and Planning) and Natalie Melas (College of Arts and Sciences) worked with documentary filmmaker Kannan Arunasalam to produce Possible Landscapes. Based on field research in Trinidad and Tobago, the project documents people's everyday experience of their environments. 

The film's debut is on September 25 at 7 p.m. at Cornell Cinema.

Watch Possible Landscapes


Displaced and Uprooted: Stories of Belonging, Central American TPS Workers' Defiant Struggle for their Right to Stay Home in the U.S.

A girl wearing a patterned American flag dress holds a flag that reads "National TPS Alliance."
Photo by Sol Aramendi.

This project explores the historical struggle of Temporary Protective Status (TPS) migrant workers for union organizing and American citizenship. Led by Patricia Campos-Medina and Ileen DeVault in the School of Industrial and Labor Relations, features field interviews, timelines, photography, and video. It explores the idea of home and whether, after decades of working and contributing to America’s economy, these workers feel like they belong in America.

An exhibition of photographs by Sol Aramendi were displayed in New York City on June 8, 2024. The exhibition will be shown at Cornell in September. 

Stories of Belonging Exhibit


 Refugee and Immigrant Health

Doctor and patient look over informational form

An immigrant and refugee health team, led by Gunisha Kaur (Weill Cornell Medicine) and Stephen Yale-Loehr (Cornell Law School), led a multicampus collaboration to investigating how increasing immigrants’ knowledge about legal rights can help them engage with health care systems. 

Their research, funded by Migrations and the Einaudi Center, is producing new digital tools to inform immigrants of their rights and increase their participation in health systems and public benefits.

Published Paper Rights 4 Health Resource 


Narco-trafficking, Enforcement, and Bird Conservation in the Americas

Amanda Rodewald speaks at a podium, gesturing with her hands. A large slideshow presentation behind her shows maps of bird migration.
Amanda Rodewald presents her work on migratory birds at a 2023 Migrations research forum.

In this study, funded by the Migrations initiative and led by Amanda Rodewald (College of Agriculture and Life Sciences and Lab of Ornithology), researchers found that cocaine trafficking harms the environment and threatens habitats important to dozens of species of migratory birds. 

Published Paper

 


Making Migration Research Accessible

The Migrations initiative made Cornell's expertise in multispecies migration more accessible to the community, educators, and students. Our Migrations lectures, events, and researchers are featured on the Migrations YouTube playlist