Student
Yichen Wang
Migrations Graduate Fellow
Yichen Wang studies how migrants’ social connections—both offline and online—shape well-being and health in new environments. Her work examines how digital use transfers into emotional fulfillment, the role of social networks, and the protective power of social support. By linking social relationships to mental and physical health, she provides insights into cultivating belonging and resilience in migrant communities.
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Waleska Solorzano
Migrations Graduate Fellow
Waleska Solorzano is a PhD candidate in Latin American studies. Her interdisciplinary research revolves around questions of aesthetics, domestic culture, migration, ontology, oral histories and testimonies, and the politics of representation. She examines how desires for familial belonging and the spatial dynamics of community-building proliferate within Venezuela and the diaspora through contemporary artistic practices and productions.
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Vicente Mata
Migrations Graduate Fellow
Vicente Mata’s research examines how broader geopolitical trends in which humanitarianism is co-opted by state and political interests, has historically and contemporarily, shaped political discourse on immigration and restrictive anti-immigrant policies at the U.S.-Mexico border.
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Trifosa Iin Simamora
Migrations Graduate Fellow
Trifosa Iin Simamora studies the impact of renewable energy development on migratory grassland birds in New York State. Her work assesses how the expansion of solar farms displaces the habitat of vulnerable grassland bird species and develops conservation strategies in collaboration with agencies and NGOs. She connects local conservation to the broader migratory range across the Americas.
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Kathryn Foster
Migrations Graduate Fellow
Kathryn Foster’s research explores climate-driven migration in the U.S., focusing on how flooding prompts relocation. Using mixed methods and case studies in the southern United States, they examine how socioeconomic status, recovery aid access, and demographics shape migration decisions. Their work highlights inequities in post-disaster recovery and seeks pathways to more equitable adaptation to climate change.
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Hamidullah Nikzad
Migrations Graduate Fellow
Hamidullah Nikzad is a researcher and advocate whose work focuses on the intersection of climate change and conflict, intensifying food insecurity, and migration in fragile contexts. Drawing on provincial-level data from 2017 to 2024, his thesis examines how climate variability and conflict incidents contribute to acute food insecurity and influence migration pressures in Afghanistan.
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Danielle Obisie-Orlu
Migrations Graduate Fellow
Danielle investigates migration through the lenses of law, policy, and social advocacy. Her work spans xenophobia and migrants’ rights in South Africa, France, and the EU, as well as collaboration with the African Commission on Human Rights through the Migrants Rights Initiative.
Beyond academia, she mentors migrant youth in public speaking and poetry, amplifying their voices as self-advocates.
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Adolfho Romero
Migrations Graduate Fellow
Adolfho Romero is a PhD researcher in the ILR School who studies how worker centers and allied nonprofits build voice, dignity, and durable power for migrant and low-wage farmworkers.
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Undergraduate Migrations Scholars
Details
Join our team of undergraduate Migrations scholars to think in new ways about global migration challenges and understand our world on the move. As an undergraduate Migrations scholar, you'll play an active role in migration-related scholarship and programming on campus.
With the support of Migrations Program director Katie Fiorella and our cohort of graduate fellows, you will explore key issues in migration studies and build leadership skills alongside a cohort of your peers. In the spring semester, scholars will have a chance to plan an event on a migration theme of their choice.
Last spring, our cohort of Migrations scholars hosted two events featuring panels of migrations faculty and human rights organizers:
- Margins and Mobilization: Migrant Worker Precarity and Power in the Trump-era Economy
- From Colony to Diaspora: Enduring Legacies of U.S. Territorial Rule in Puerto Rico and the Philippines
Eligibility
All undergraduate students who are interested in migration studies are encouraged to apply. Previous Migrations scholars are welcome to apply again.
You should be in good standing academically and have no unresolved disciplinary charges or sanctions, be enrolled in an undergraduate degree program at the time of the fellowship (e.g., not on leave of absence), and be on campus in Ithaca for in-person meetings and mentoring.
Deadline
September 30, 2025
Amount
Students can elect to enroll in a one-credit course or receive $250 upon successful completion of the fellowship in spring.
How to Apply
Fill out the online application. The application requires you to submit a short paragraph (250 words) about why you want to be a Migrations scholar and your resume or CV.
If you have any questions, contact migrations@einaudi.cornell.edu.
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Miriam Frank
Reppy Fellow 2025-26
Miriam Frank is a M.S. student at the ILR school in the Department of Global Labor and Work and is the Emerson Fellow. Her practice and research focuses on the influence of peace processes on institutional social protection for workers.
Frank is interested in labor relations systems and in the intersection of workers’ rights and war, particularly in the government's role in providing social protections to workers in the transition from war to peace.