4 June 2025 - 6 June 2025

Warsaw, Poland

Krakowskie Przedmieście 26/28

University of Warsaw, "Old Library" building

Europe and Mobilities. PL Presidency Conference.

BIO's of "Navigating opportunities and challenges: Early Career Researchers in transnational projects" session speakers

Moderator:
Dr Sara Perry leads the cross-European CHANSE Knowledge Exchange Facilitator initiative, and the CHANSE-funded project Transforming Data Reuse in Archaeology. She is Associate Professor at UCL's Institute of Archaeology, an award-winning educator, and former Director of Research and Engagement at Museum of London Archaeology. She specialises in public engagement and leadership, digital theory and practice, archives and data infrastructures, and the relationship between these subjects and the operations of wider museums and cultural institutions.
Luisa Nienhaus is a Research Assistant and Conference Administrator on the CHANSE KEF programme, based at the UCL Institute of Archaeology. 

Speakers:
Monika Gołąb: a psychologist based in Krakow. Currently pursuing a PhD at the Doctoral School of Social Sciences at Jagiellonian University. Involved in the DigiPatch project, where she participates in a range of research activities. Her doctoral research focuses on the application of textual analysis methods to the study of digital microidentities.

Dorota Wójciak: a PhD candidate in Studies in Cultures and Religions at the Doctoral School in the Humanities (Jagiellonian University) and a researcher in DIGITISLAM project. Academic interests centre on religion and religiosity in contemporary Poland. Conducted research on the religious culture of the Podhale region, metaphors in religion, and the relationship between religion and mothering in the experiences of Catholic and Muslim women.

Aneta Pieczka: Her research focuses on the digital workplace and the shaping of working and employment conditions under the influence of digital technologies. She is currently an Assistant Professor and Postdoctoral Researcher in the Department of Management at Kozminski University, where she is involved in the HuLog project.

Theofilos Gkinopoulos: an assistant professor of social psychology at the Behavior in Crisis Lab-Jagiellonian University. Member of the consortium of the project Digipatch. He received his PhD in Social Psychology from the University of Surrey. His research interests fall into the area of intergroup relations and beliefs, especially in times of precarity and uncertainty.