ISA XVI International Laboratory for PhD Students in Sociology Santiago de Compostela/A Coruña () 9th– 13thSeptember 2019 “Mobility and Social Inequalities in a Globalized World”

Globalisation has been accompanied by a growing interest in the study of mobilities, understood in its broadest sense (bodies, objects, virtual, communicative and imaginative), with some scholars referring to the Mobility Turn (Urry, 2007). These mobilities – their causes and consequences, as well as their meanings, constructs and regulations, lie at the centre of the configuration of societies on a world scale. Furthermore, globalization has sparked a debate into the emergence and increase in new forms of inequalities among societies (gender, race, class, age, ethnicity, and nationality), due to the supranational spatial integration of economies and societies and unequal market flows. The PhD lab will focus on the intersection between mobilities and social inequalities in a globalized world.

The Laboratory includes a series of lectures delivered by leading sociologists from Spain and the international community. However, the core of the programme are presentations by the students of their own work and subsequent discussion by students and faculty of the work. The theme for this Laboratory has been conceived in broad terms, and students’ research may focus on or be related in a variety of ways.

The XVIth ISA International Laboratory for PhD Students in Sociology is organised jointly by ISA, the Spanish Federation of Sociology (FES) and the International Migration Sociology Team at the University of A Coruña (ESOMI), with the collaboration of the Sociology Department at the University of Santiago de Compostela, as well as the Department of Sociology and Communication Sciences, the Faculty of Sociology and the PHD Programme on Social and Behavioral Sciences at the University of A Coruña (UDC). Pre-arrival

Welcome to Santiago de Compostela! Here a few things to keep in mind:

Galicia is known by its impredictable weather. Temperatures in September usually range between 12 and 23 Celsius degrees (53-77 Farenheit), so you should expect chilly nights and warm afternoons. Rain is considered a form of art in Santiago, so get ready for it! Bring comfortable clothing and shoes! There will be some walking around the city. If you have any questions about what to bring, do not hesitate to ask us! We'll gladly help you getting ready for the visit. PACKING TIPS

Umbrella and/or raincoat, rain-adapted footwear.

In Spain the two-pin continental plugs are used, as elsewhere in Europe. Bring an adapter if you need it!

We reccommend bringing only the medication that you need. Common medicines such as analgesics or flu tablets are easy to get in Spain, and there are many pharmacies around our city.

Comfortable shoes: we'll do some walking tours, and once you get here you'll want to walk around the city!

Sunscreen lotion. When the rain passes it gets pretty sunny!

LANGUAGES

Galicia is culturally diverse. You will hear two languages TO GO when walking around: Spanish and Galician. Learn some words before you arrive to communicate with the locals!

English Galician Spanish

Hello Ola Hola Good Bye Ata logo Hasta luego

Please Por favor Por favor Thanks Grazas Gracias You are welcome De nada De nada

How much is this? Canto custa isto? ¿Cuánto cuesta esto? Where is...? Onde está...? ¿Dónde está...?

Sorry Desculpe Perdón GETTING HERE

B Y B U S

Santiago de Compostela Airport (SCQ) You will land in Santiago de Compostela Airport the 8th of September. Every half hour a bus (Empresa Freire) departs from Santiago de Compostela Airport to ‘Plaza de Galicia’ in the inner city and vice versa. Buses run every day of the week from 6 am til 1 am. They make several stops, including bus station 'Estación de Autobuses’ northeast of the city centre. Thats your stop! Tickets will cost you 3€ one way, or 5.10€ for a round ticket, a nd it will take around 20 minutes to get to the Estación de Autobuses. From there, it takes about 15 minutes walking to your accommodation, the Burgo das Nacións Hall, as you can see in the map.

B Y T A X I

Alternatively, you could just take a taxi. The ride has a fixed price of 21€, and if you arrive with other participants you can always split the cost of it. Accommodation

Burgo das Nacións Hall [Av. do Burgo das Nacións, s/n, 15782 Santiago de Compostela, A Coruña]

This Hall is located at the North Campus (Campus Norte) about 500 metres from the historical centre. It will take you around 17 minutes to walk from your accommodation (A) to the venue where we'll conduct the PhD Lab (B).

In the surrounding area you will find the faculties of Philology, Economics and Business Administration, and Communication Sciences, and also the Auditorium of Galicia. The building occupies part of the so called "Burgo das Nacións" university complex, which was built provisionally in 1965 to provide shelter to pilgrims coming to Compostela during that Holy Jacobean year.

+34 881 81 19 52 T H E V E N U E

Consello da Cultura Galega The PhD Lab will be conducted at the Consello da Cultura Galega, the Council (CCG). The Consello da Cultura Galega is a public institution dependent on the Autonomous Government of Galicia, founded to promote and hold academic, research and cultural activities (as well as the dissemination of Galician cultural values). Since its creation in 1983, it has hosted numerous congresses, seminars, conferences and exhibitions of a very varied nature, providing it with an immense capacity and potential as a space for sharing know-how and knowledge. It has organised events in various fields, such as history, art, anthropology, philosophy, sociology and literature. The Consello da Cultura Galega also edits journals, working documents and reports and has a large documentary collection. It also plays a key role in promoting the events and activities it hosts.

FACILITIES

Auditorium Library Capacity: 30 people. It is the place where Capacity: 100 people. The facilities most of the sessions will take place. The include a PA system, audio and facilities include a PA system with audio audiovisual recording amenities, recording, projector and computer with projector and computer with Internet Internet connection. connection.

+34 981 95 72 02 T H E V E N U E

The Consello da Cultura Galega is housed in the historic Pazo de Raxoi, (Plaza do Obradoiro), the city’s most emblematic site, as the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela is just opposite. The library and the auditorium overlook this monument. SANTIAGO DE COMPOSTELA

Santiago de Compostela (included on the UNESCO World Heritage List since 1985) is synonymous to mobility and exchange. The city’s sociological interest is unquestionable, because of its idiosyncrasy as a hospitable pilgrimage city, overflowing with culture and knowledge. Its monasteries, temples, palaces, ancient streets and traditional popular architecture, together with its cultural significance, make it a unique city to host the ISA XVI International Laboratory for PhD Students in Sociology.

Compostela has been called the ‘Cosmopolitan City of the Middle Ages’. The discovery of the tomb of the Apostle Santiago, at the beginning of the 9th century, gave rise to a place of worship in the confines of the Iberian Peninsula. For more than a thousand years it has been a crossroad, an arrival and meeting point, marking the end of a pilgrimage route that dates back a thousand years: the Camino de Santiago, which since the 9th century has transformed this "Finisterrae" or ‘Land’s End’ into a meeting place for western thought. A primitive route, which followed in the wake of the Milky Way, connecting the Iberian Peninsula with the rest of the continent. Much of the significance of this city stems from the movement of thousands of pilgrims that visit the city during the course of the year (in 2017 the number stood at 301,000), driven by spiritual, religious or cultural reasons. WH A T T O SEE

Santiago is an incredibly beautiful city. Just wandering around the Historical Center is enough to spend a few hours in awe. We'll give you some ideas about places to visit in case you don't know where to start: The Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela Cathedral Museum Alameda park Bonaval Gardens San Francisco Convent San Martiño Pinario Museo do pobo Galego

Or even the tiny Salomé Church, where you'll find one of the few existent pregnant Virgin Marys, an angel wearing glasses and other peculiarities. Santiago de Compostela is also known as home to one of the oldest universities in Europe, founded in 1495. The facilities at the University of Santiago de Compostela (USC) – which include research institutes, university residences, sports fields, cultural spaces and libraries- are resources for more than 30,000 students and many of them continue to be housed in historical buildings, such as the History Library or the Faculty of Medicine. EATING DURING T H E L A B Vegetarian options will Breakfast be available for lunch Every morning, a yummy breakfast will be served at the and dinner, please remind us if you have Burgo das Nacións cafetería. any special needs! Lunch We'll provide all the participants with lunch packs, kindly elaborated by a small family owned business in Santiago. You'll be able to walk around the city and decide where do you want to seat to eat, maybe in the company of dozens of pilgrims sitting at the Praza do Obradoiro or in Bonaval Gardens. Your pack which will include the following: One sandwich, pizza or empanada (traditional Galician pie) One dessert One piece of fruit One bottle of water

Dinner After finishing each day's session, you'll have dinner at the restaurant, Garum Bistró (B), [Garum Bistró, Praza das Penas, Santiago de Compostela] where you'll enjoy a full menu. It's a 10 minutes walk from the Consello da Cultura Galega (A). Galicia is internationally famous for its gastronomy. We didn't L O C A L know what to choose between all our different delicious options, P RODU C T S so we inspired ourselves in this blog (https:// spanishsabores.com/2017/03/09/typical-food-in-galicia/) to give you some food recommendations you could try once you are here:

1. Pulpo á Feira (Market-Style Octopus) 2. Mexillóns ao Vapor (Steamed Mussels) 3. Pementos de Padrón (Padron Peppers) 4. Cocido Galego (Galician Stew) 5. Queixo de Tetilla (Tetilla Cheese) 6. (Galician Broth) 7. Empanada Galega (Galician-Style Empanada) 8. Chuletón de Tenreira (T-Bone Steak) 9. Leite Frita (Fried Milk) 10. (Santiago Cake) NIGHTLIFE A N D B A R S

If you want to try the world-famous and best tortilla in the city, visit MOHA or La Tita in Rúa Nova.

For a nice coffee in one of your breaks, any bar will do but you'll love the amazing garden of Hotel Costa Vella, just a few minutes walking from our venue.

However, if you are a "juice person", I'd go to Camalea Bar or Blu Café.

If you want to go for drinks after a session, the MOMO pub is the place, with a great atmosphere and a huge terrace if the weather is nice! Other places to check would be the Modus Vivendi, Medusa Pub or Atlántico Pub.

Something you may want to keep in mind is opening times in Spain: shops will be open usually from 9 or 10 in the morning til 14:00 (lunch time break), and then again from 16:30 til 20:00 usually. On the other hand, dinner time starts after 20:30- 21:00, and although restaurants and cafés will close around 23:00, bars and pubs will be open at least until midnight. Participants

List of the selected participants and topics of their PhD dissertations (in alphabetic order):

Mr. Theophilus Chiedoziem AKUJOBI (Nigeria), University of Port-Harcourt, Nigeria

Indigenous knowledge and eroon control in the South-Eastern Nigeria and topics of their PhD Mr. Oluwatobi ALABI (Nigeria), Landmark University, Nigeria / University of Johannesburg, South Africa Women’s sexual agency and the use of traditional aphrodisiac in Ilorin, Nigeria Ms. Adrienne Lee ATTERBERRY (USA), Syracuse University, USA Cultivating India’s new transnational elite: Parenting, schooling, and belonging in the age of global IT Ms. Soulit CHACKO (India), Loyola University Chicago, USA Immigrant women in ethnic beauty salon business Ms. Veronica GREGORIO (Philippines), National University of Singapore, Singapore Contemporary gender ideologies and intra-household relationships of farming families in Malaysia and Philippines Ms. Erika HERRERA ROSALES (Mexico), University of Warwick, United Kingdom The role of non-governmental organisations with Central American migration in the context of Mexico Mr. Ali KASSEM (Lebanon), University of Sussex, United Kingdom Discrimination, exclusion and erasure: Islamic dress in Lebanon under coloniality Mr Jan Bazyli KLAKLA (Poland), Jagiellonian University, Poland The role of institutional and legal factors on the selection of the acculturation strategies among foreigners in Poland. Socio-legal study of migrants from former Yugoslavia and Albania Ms. Yifei LU (China), Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain Fair competition? The constructed inequality of educational condition and opportunity between rural and urban in China Mr. Derrace Garfield MCCALLUM (Jamaica), Nagoya University, Japan Negotiating care across borders & generations: An analysis of Filipino transnational families in the Chubu region of Japan Ms. Ilana Andrea NUSSBAUM BITRAN (Chile), Duisburg-Essen University, Germany Highly skilled Latin American migrants. Institutional contexts and the negotiation of cultural capital in Germany and Chile Mr. Pei PALMGREN (USA), University of California Los Angeles, USA Remaking regimes of labor migration: Thailand guestworker governance amid Southeast Asian economic integration.

Some local PhD students from University of Coruña and University of Santiago de Compostela will also participate at the PhD Lab, presenting their research and taking part in round tables, in the framework of the collaboration with the FES (Spanish Sociology Federation) PHD School: Iria Dopazo (UDC), Rocío Toxo (USC), Leticia Santaballa (UDC). Lecturers List of lecturers in alphabetic order:

Dr. Filomin C. Gutierrez, Professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of the Philippines Diliman, Vice-President of National Associations at the ISA. She has served as former President of Philippine Sociological Society and Editor of the Philippine Sociological Review. She has published journal articles on issues such as youth delinquency, history of criminology, and prison gangs. Her research interests include social deviance, masculine organizations, and fraternity violence.

Keina Espiñeira is postdoc researcher at ESOMI, University of A Coruña. Her PhD dissertation is entitled “Migrant landscapes in the stretched border. The postcolonial condition of the Spanish-Moroccan Border”. She is interested on politics of visuality, postcolonial academic activism, political and cultural geographies, border-art, Morocco and the Mediterranean region.

Dr. Monica Ferrin is a postdoctoral researcher at the University of A Coruña and member of the ESOMI (International Migration Sociology Research Team). She holds a PhD in Social and Political Science from the European University Institute (EUI) in Florence. She is mostly interested in what citizens think and do. Her main research fields are gender inequality, European’s attitudes to democracy, citizenship and immigration.

Dr. Sarah Neal, Professor at the Department of Sociological Studies. She is Co-Editor of the ISA journal Current Sociology and she is a member of the Editorial Board of Ethnic and Racial Studies. Her research interests and publications are focused on: ethnicity, race and multiculture; community, belonging and in/exclusion; rural and urban spaces; quotidian social life; sociology of policy processes and qualitative methods.

Dr. Laura Oso, University Senior Lecturer in Sociology at the University of A Coruña. Vice-president for International Affairs of the Spanish Federation of Sociology (FES) and Member of the Executive Committee at the ISA. Coordinator of the ESOMI. Phd in Sociology by the Université de Paris I- PanthéonSorbonne, her research focus on the study of gender and migration and, particularly, on the integration of female migrants into the labour market.

Dr. Antía Pérez Caramés, Professor in the Sociology Departament at the University of A Coruña, and Coordinator of the Oficial Master in Social Policies and Socio-community Intervention. Her focus fields and research range from care and gender relations to the demographic ageing process and also in international migration.

Dr. Mounir Saidani, Professor of Sociology at the High Institute of Human Sciences, Tunis AL MANAR University, Tunisia. He is interested in Socio- anthropology of Culture, Knowledge and Art, Socio-cultural Change in contemporary Tunisia and the Arab World. He is leading a multidisciplinary research unit working on “Knowledges, Cultures and Social Change”. PROGRAMME

SUNDAY, 8TH SEPTEMBER Arrival in Santiago de Compostela. 2 0 1 9

MONDAY, 9TH SEPTEMBER 2 0 1 9 GALICIAN C O U N C I L 9:00 - 9:30 Welcome and Introduction to the 2019 ISA PhD Lab. [Library] 9:30 - 11:00 Mobilities and Social Inequalities in a globalized World: Laura Oso (University of A Coruña, Spain) [Library] 11:00 - 11:30 Break 11:30 - 13:30 Workshop 1 [Library]:

- Highly skilled Latin American migrants. Institutional contexts and the negotiation of cultural capital in Germany and Chile.IlanaAndrea NUSSBAUM BITRAN(Chile), Duisburg-Essen University, Germany. Discussants: Antía Pérez-Caramés (UDC) and Adrienne Lee ATTERBERRY (Syracuse University). - Remaking regimes of labor migration: Thailand guestworker governance amid Southeast Asian Economic Integration. Pei PALMGREN(USA), University of California Los Angeles, USA. Discussants: Antía Pérez Caramés (UDC)and Jan Bazyli KLAKLA (Jagiellonian University).

13:30 - 14:30 Lunch break (lunch packs will be distributed) 14:30 - 16:30 Round Table on Galicia as a Migratory Land (Library): Antía Pérez-Caramés (UDC) and Rocío Toxo (USC) 18:00 - 20:00 Guided tour of Santiago de Compostela: Sociology of the Camino de Santiago. [Meeting point: Plaza del Obradoiro, in front of the Hostal Parador de los Reyes Católicos] 20:30 Dinner [Garum Bistrot, Praza das Penas, 1, Santiago de Compostela] PROGRAMME

TUESDAY, 10TH SEPTEMBER 2 0 1 9 GALICIAN C O U N C I L

9:00 - 10:30 (Un)Mobility of Middle Classes in Tunisia. The effects of 2010-2011 Revolution. Mounir SAIDANI, Professor of Sociology, Tunis El Manar University (Tunisia) [Library] 10:30 - 11:00 Break 11:00 - 13:00 Workshop 2 [Library] - Indigenous knowledge and erosion control in the South-Eastern Nigeria. Theophilus Chiedoziem AKUJOBI(Nigeria), University of Port-Harcourt, Nigeria. Discussants: Mounir Saidani (Tunis El Manar University) and Yifei LU (Autonomous University of Barcelona). - Cultivating India’s new transnational elite: Parenting, schooling, and belonging in the age of global IT. Adrienne Lee ATTERBERRY(USA), Syracuse University, USA. Discussants: Mounir Saidani (Tunis El Manar University) and Ilana Andrea NUSSBAUM BITRAN (Duisburg-Essen University). 13:00 - 14:00 Lunch (you will be provided with lunch packs) 14:00 - 16:00 Workshop 3 [Library]: - The role of non-governmental organisations with Central American migration in the context of Mexico. Erika HERRERA ROSALES(Mexico), University of Warwick, United Kingdom. Discussants: Keina Espiñeira (UDC) and Soulit CHACKO (Loyola University Chicago). - Discrimination, exclusion and erasure: Islamic dress in Lebanon under coloniality. Ali KASSEM(Lebanon), University of Sussex, United Kingdom. Discussants: Keina Espiñeira (UDC) and Oluwatobi ALABI (Landmark University) 18:00 - 20:00 Refugee policies and border experiences [Libraría Lila de Lilith, Rúa Travesa, 7, Santiago de Compostela] - Presentation by Leticia Santaballa - Screening and conversation with the director “The colour of the sea. A border filmic experience in Ceuta” (Keina Espiñeira, Spain 2015). The film explores the experience of exile in a hybrid documentary intermingling reality and fiction. Taking the perspective of a group of refugees stuck in-between borders, director Keina Espiñeira delves into a place where human trajectories are spatially and temporally suspended. Myths from the colonial past intertwine with mundane conversations, while hypnotic images of the sea give an air of poetic unreality to an all too real border experience. 20:30 Dinner [Garum Bistrot, Praza das Penas, 1, Santiago de Compostela] PROGRAMME

WEDNESDAY, 11TH SEPTEMBER 2019 GALICIAN C O U N C I L

9:00 - 10:30 University Fraternity Violence and Hypermasculinity. Filomin Gutierrez, Professor at the Department of Sociology , University of the Philippines Diliman, Philippines. [Library] 10:30 - 11:00 Break 11:00 - 13:00 Workshop 4 [Library] - Contemporary gender ideologies and intra-household relationships of farming families in Malaysia and Philippines. Veronica GREGORIO(Philippines), National University of Singapore, Singapore. Discussants: Laura Oso (UDC) and Derrace Garfield MCCALLUM (Nagoya University). - Women’s sexual agency and the use of traditional aphrodisiac in Ilorin, Nigeria. Oluwatobi ALABI(Nigeria), Landmark University, Nigeria / University of Johannesburg, South Africa. Discussants: Filomin Gutierrez (University of the Phillippines Diliman) and Ali KASSEM (University of Sussex). 13:00 - 14:00 Lunch (you will be provided with lunch packs) 14:00 - 17:00 Workshop 5 [Library]

- Fair competition? The constructed inequality of educational condition and opportunity between rural and urban in China. Yifei LU(China), Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain. Discussants: Mónica Ferrín (Universidade da Coruña) and Theophilus Chiedoziem AKUJOBI (University of Port-Harcourt) - The role of institutional and legal factors on the selection of the acculturation strategies among foreigners in Poland. Socio-legal study of migrants from former Yugoslavia and Albania. Jan Bazyli KLAKLA (Poland), Jagiellonian University, Poland. Discussants: Mónica Ferrin (Universidade da Coruña) and Pei PALMGREN (University of California Los Angeles). - The role of social capital on adolescents’ school adjustment and risky behaviours in Galicia, Iria Dopazo(Universidade da Coruña). Discussants: Monica Ferrín (Universidade da Coruña) and Rocío Toxo (Universidad de Santiago de Compostela).

17:30- 19:30 Visit to the Museum of Pilgrimages, Santiago de Compostela. [Departure: we will go together from Consello da Cultura Galega, PHD Lab venue] 20:30 Dinner [Garum Bistrot, Praza das Penas, 1, Santiago de Compostela] PROGRAMME

THURSDAY, 12TH SEPTEMBER 2 0 1 9 GALICIAN C O U N C I L

9:00 - 10:30 “Mobile belongings, changing places and everyday borders”. Sarah Neal, Professor of Sociologyat the Department of Sociological Studies, The University of Sheffield(UK) [Library] 10:30 - 11:00 Break 11:00 - 13:00 Workshop 6 [Library]: - Negotiating care across borders & generations: An analysis of Filipino transnational families in the Chubu region of Japan. Derrace Garfield MCCALLUM(Jamaica), Nagoya University, Japan. Discussants: Filomin Gutierrez (University of the Phillippines Diliman) and Veronica GREGORIO (National University of Singapore). - Immigrant women in ethnic beauty salon business. Soulit CHACKO(India), Loyola University Chicago, USA. Discussants: Laura Oso (UDC) and Erika HERRERA ROSALES (University of Warwick). 13:00 Lunch Free Half Day 20:30 Dinner [Garum Bistrot, Praza das Penas, 1, Santiago de Compostela] PROGRAMME

FRIDAY, 13TH SEPTEMBER 2 0 1 9 T R I P T O A CORUÑA!

One of the Laboratory sessions will be held in A Coruña, the province’s biggest city. This coastal city, situated 70 km from Santiago de Compostela, is famous for being the site of the world’s oldest working lighthouse, the Tower This double session consisting in the of Hercules, built by the Romans and included seminar "Social Inequalities in a on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 2009. Globalized World" and followed by the The one-day session of the Laboratory in A workshop "How to Publish in an Coruña will be held in the Faculty of Sociology, International Journal" has been jointly where ESOMI (Research Team in Sociology of organised with the FES Phd School and International Migrations) is based. As with the PHD Programme on Social and the sessions held in the Consello da Behavioral Sciences at the University Cultura Galega, the facilities include all of A Coruña (UDC). This is an open necessary technologies and materials. session, so members from the University of Coruña, the University of Santiago de Compostela and other Spanish Universities will actively participate on it. PROGRAMME

F R I DA Y , 1 3 T H S E P T EMB E R Organised jointly with the FES PHD 2 0 1 9 T R I P T O A School and the UDC PHD Programme CORUÑA! on Social and Behavioral Sciences.

VENUE: FACULTY OF SOCIOLOGY. UNIVERSITY OF A CORUÑA. A CORUÑA (SALÓN DE GRADOS)

08:00 Pick-up and departure for A Coruña [Meeting point: Auditorio de Galicia] 09:30 - 11:00 Round table on Mobilities and Social Inequalities in a Globalized World: - "Making Sociological Sense of the Philippine War on Drugs: Narratives of Arrested Persons", Filomin Gutierrez (University of the Phillippines Diliman). - Youth and Social Inequalities in Post Revolutionary Tunisia: Fears, Hope and Agency, Mounir Saidani (Tunis El Manar University). 11:00 - 11:30 Break. 11:30 - 13:30 Workshop on “How to Publish in an International Journal” (I) by Sarah Neal, Co-Editor of the International Sociological Association journal Current Sociology. 13:30 - 14:30 Lunch [Facultad de Ciencias de la Educación, Campus Elviña] Workshop on 14:30 - 16:30 “How to Publish in an International Journal” (II), by Sarah Neal, Co- Editor of the International Sociological Association journal Current Sociology. 17:00 Sociological guided tour of A Coruña [Departure by bus at the Faculty of Sociology entrance] 19:30 Dinner [El Sauce Restaurant, Sinagoga Str, 8. +34-981.22.09.20] 22:00 Return to Santiago de Compostela [Departure point: Puerta Real]

Where are we...? 1 1. María Pita Square

2. El Sauce Restaurant 3 2 [8, Sinagoga street]

3. Puerta Real/ Departure point to Santiago de Compostela Do not get lost!

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Where are we...? Santiago de Compostela is perfect to walk 1. Burgo das Nacións[Avenida Burgo das Nacións, s/n] around: it is the city of 2. Auditorio de Galicia [Bus to A Coruña, Avenida Burgo das Nacións] pilgrims! 3. Bus Stop from-to the Airport [Bus Station. Praza de Camilo Díaz Baliño] Here you can find the 4. [Parque Vista Alegre, Rúa Salvadas s/n] Casa Europa most useful points when 5. Garum Bistro Restaurant [Praza das Penas, 1] attending the Phd Lab 6. Lila de Lilith library [Rúa Travesa, 7] where the activities, food 7. Starting point for guided tour [Praza do Obradoiro] or accommodation will 8. Consello da Cultura Galega [Praza do Obradoiro] take place. 9. Museo das peregrinacións [Praza das Praterías, 2] Meet the team

COORDINATION OF THE PHD LAB: LAURA OSO, Vice-president for

International Activies, Spanish Federal Association of Sociology (FES)

Paula Iria María Alonso Dopazo González (PHD Student, UDC) (PHD Student, UDC) (PHD Student, UDC) Hello! We are the organizing team, happy to help you out whenever you have questions. Feel free to ask!

Luciana Leticia Rocío Sánchez Santaballa Toxo (Master Student, USC) (PHD Student, UDC) (PHD Student, USC)

If you have any further doubts, special needs or suggestions please

feel free to contact us: [email protected] +34.667.89.93.41/+34.607.47.83.44/ +34.695.79.84.84 Rocío Toxo Laura Oso Luciana Sánchez Just a few more things: Just in case you need them, here are some emergency numbers:

General emergency: 112

Local police: 981 542 323 or 092

We are looking forward to meeting you!