Petya Alexandrova is Lecturer in European Politics at the University of Oxford, Department of Politics and International Relations. Previously she was a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Institute for Political Science, Leibniz University Hannover (DE) and a visiting lecturer at Jacobs University Bremen (DE). Petya is also a Fellow at the Montesquieu Institute in The Hague (NL). She holds a PhD from Leiden University (2014). Her research focuses on policy and institutions in the European Union (EU).
Petya is the coordinator for the EU Policy Agendas Project.
petya.alexandrova@politics.ox.ac.uk
Sebastiaan Princen is Professor of Governance and Policymaking in the European Union at Utrecht University's School of Governance. Since 2010 he is also a fellow at the Montesquieu Institute in The Hague. Sebastiaan teaches courses on policy processes, public law, policy implementation, and European integration in USG’s bachelor’s, master’s and executive programmes. His research focuses on issues of international and European governance, more specifically policy-making in the European Union. In recent years he has published extensively on processes of agenda-setting in the EU. In addition, Sebastiaan has participated in studies on the Europeanisation of the Dutch civil service, the role of interest groups in the EU, and cross-border cooperation between local governments.
S.B.M.Princen@uu.nl
Marcello Carammia is Senior Lecturer in European politics at the Institute for European Studies of the University of Malta, that he joined in October 2011. He received a Ph.D in Comparative and European Politics at the University of Siena in 2008, and between 2009 and 2011 was a post-doctoral fellow and an adjunct professor at the University of Catania. He has been a visiting scholar at the Universities of Sheffield, Zaragoza, and at the Center for European Studies of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. His research focuses on comparative and EU politics and public policy. He is particularly interested in immigration policy, political parties, and the relationship between institutional and political change. He is also a member of the Italian Policy Agendas Project and Fellow at the Montesquieu Institute.
marcello.carammia@um.edu.mt