Professor Majella Kilkey (she/her)
PhD, MA, BSSc (Hons)
School of Sociological Studies, Politics and International Relations
Professor of Social Policy
Director of Research
Director of the CDT in New Horizons in Borders and Bordering


+44 114 222 6459
Full contact details
School of Sociological Studies, Politics and International Relations
The Wave
2 Whitham Road
Sheffield
S10 2AH
- Profile
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Majellas work is in the field of migration studies, with particular focus on the intersections between migration and families / care / gender / ageing / geopolitical transformations, which she approaches from sociological and social policy perspectives. These interests coalesce in different configurations around three key areas: transnational families, transnational political economy of care and migration and transformations. She works with groups traditionally seen as marginalised / excluded / disadvantaged, including older people with a migrant background, young migrants and asylum seekers and migrant care workers. Her research is grounded in partnership working, and she uses creative and participatory approaches to research lived experience with the aims of engendering inclusion, respect and esteem. She has a strong track record in co-producing public engagement events around challenging topics.
Majella has a strong track record in UKRI funding, and is involved in two current initiatives: she is Principal Investigator on the project (2022-2025), funded under the 掘皆檎遺s Inclusive Ageing programme; and Co-Investigator in the 掘皆檎遺s (2021-2026), leading a programme of work on Borders and Care. She also currently holds a number of externally funded international research grants. Currently these include two EU H2020-funded projects on which she is University of Sheffield Principal Investigator: Empowerment through liquid integration of migrant youth in vulnerable conditions [] (202-2023) and Migration, Integration and Governance Research Centre [] (2019-2023). She is a member of the Management Committee of the COST Action (2022-2025).
- Research interests
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Majellas main current research areas are: migration, (transnational) families and care; migration and gender, including masculinities, ageing and migration; family migration policies; the multiple and interconnected crises experienced in Europe in recent years, including the economic crisis, the refugee crisis, Brexit and Covid-19, examining their implications for EU integration, European Free Movement, EU migration governance and migrants lived experiences.
Majella currently holds a number of externally funded research grants in those areas.
- (PI, 2022-2025), funded under the 掘皆檎遺s Inclusive Ageing programme. Its key aim is to interrogate accepted interpretations of social inclusion/exclusion in order to reconceptualise them from the perspective of the Black Asian and Minoritised Ethnic and Refugee (BAMER) population's life courses, and to employ this reconceptualisation as the basis for a new understanding of inclusive ageing and the steps needed to achieve it. The project's interdisciplinary team will research in partnership with BAMER groups and other key local and national stakeholders. These are included variously in the project as Co-investigators, Policy & Practice Partners, Community Researchers, Voice Forum and Stakeholder Platform members. In undertaking impactful co-produced research, we will centre the lived experience of BAMER older people, employing a creative 'storying' approach throughout the project. This will give us a participant-led, inclusive and adaptive way of developing knowledge with those who have experienced exclusion and/or exploitation. Through an innovative combination of quantitative and qualitative methods, we will co-construct a more pluralistic and inclusive knowledge-base and provide a catalyst for change, identifying creative policy and practice steps at micro, meso and macro levels to prevent the risks of exclusion and to promote inclusive ageing.
- 掘皆檎遺s (Co-I, 2021-2026). Majella leads the Care Trajectories and Constraints Research Group, and within that has particular responsibility for a strand of work on Borders and Care. The overarching aim of the work in the Borders and Care research strand is to understand the role of bordering processes in shaping experiences of care depletion within the care convoys of people with migration experiences. In this work we put lived experience centre stage to explore the relational, affective and temporal nature of care in different parts of the care ecosystem. We are committed to using our work to influence care policy and practice and support recognition of care in peoples daily lives. Our research is co-produced with people who require, receive and provide care in participatory and, we hope, empowering ways.
- EMpowerment and Integration of Migrant Youth (). Majella leads the University of Sheffields team work on this European Commission H2020-funded project (2020-2023) composed of twelve partners. The project aims to improve the situation of migrant youth throughout Europe by understanding what enables and constrains integration. It focuses specifically on the situation of migrant young people from outside of the EU who have experienced different conditions of exclusion, vulnerability and inequality. MIMY puts the experiences of young migrants at the centre of its activities by directly involving them as peer researchers through participatory research.
- Migration, Integration and Governance Research Centre (). Majella leads the University of Sheffields team work on this European Commission H2020-funded project (2019-2023). MIGREC is a research-capacity building project in the field of Migration Studies at the University of Belgrade. The project focuses on three inter-related challenges for confronting Serbia migration, demographic ageing and geo-politics.
- (PI, 2022-2025), funded under the 掘皆檎遺s Inclusive Ageing programme. Its key aim is to interrogate accepted interpretations of social inclusion/exclusion in order to reconceptualise them from the perspective of the Black Asian and Minoritised Ethnic and Refugee (BAMER) population's life courses, and to employ this reconceptualisation as the basis for a new understanding of inclusive ageing and the steps needed to achieve it. The project's interdisciplinary team will research in partnership with BAMER groups and other key local and national stakeholders. These are included variously in the project as Co-investigators, Policy & Practice Partners, Community Researchers, Voice Forum and Stakeholder Platform members. In undertaking impactful co-produced research, we will centre the lived experience of BAMER older people, employing a creative 'storying' approach throughout the project. This will give us a participant-led, inclusive and adaptive way of developing knowledge with those who have experienced exclusion and/or exploitation. Through an innovative combination of quantitative and qualitative methods, we will co-construct a more pluralistic and inclusive knowledge-base and provide a catalyst for change, identifying creative policy and practice steps at micro, meso and macro levels to prevent the risks of exclusion and to promote inclusive ageing.
- Publications
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Books
Edited books
Journal articles
Chapters
Book reviews
Reports
Website content
- Research group
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Majella co-founded the Migration Research Group in the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Sheffield, within which she is now Director of the CDT in New Horizons in Borders and Bordering.
- Grants
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2022-2025 Economic and Social Research Council
PI on the project (Funded value = 贈1,114,718)
2021-2026 Economic and Social Research Council
Co-I in the (Funded value = 贈8,219,677)
2020-23 European Commission H2020
Co-I on the EMpowerment and Integration of Migrant Youth () project, leading the University of Sheffield team (Award = 2,999,998; PI = Prof Birte Nienaber, University of Luxembourg)
2019-23 European Commission H2020
Co-I on the Migration, Integration and Governance Research Centre () capacity-building project (Award = 799,919; PI = Prof Natalija Perisic, University of Belgrade).
2019-20 Worldwide Universities Network
PI on the research collaboration Migrants decision-making in the context of shifting migration regimes (Award = 贈31,640).
2017-21 Economic and Social Research Council
Co-I on the , co-leading the work package - Care in and out of place: towards sustainable well-being in mobile and diverse contexts. (Award = 贈2.54 million; PI = Prof Sue Yeandle).
2017-19 Noble Foundation
Co-I on the project (Award = 贈29,760; PI = Prof Louise Ryan).
2016-19 European Commission
University of Sheffield PI on the (Award = 374,371 Euro; Project Co-ordinator = SEERC, Thessaloniki).
2016 British Medical Association
PI on the project Analysis of the BMA Cohort Study of 2006 Medical Graduates (Award = 贈38,720)
2016 World Universities Network
Co-I on the project Hidden Voices: Exploring the health experiences of children who migrate (Award = 贈20,000; PI = Dr Jill Thompson).
2013-14 White Rose University Consortium
PI on the Research Network Migration and Economic Crisis: the experiences of Brits at home and abroad (Award = 贈10724)
2008-9 Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)
PI on the project Situating men within global care chains: the migrant handyman phenomenon (Award = 贈98,000)
2005-7 Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)
Co-I on the Seminar Series Gender, work and life in the new global economy (Award = 贈15,000; PI = Prof. Diane Perrons).
- Teaching activities
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Majella is Director of the Centre for Doctoral Training in New Horizons in Borders and Bordering.
- Postgraduate Supervision
Majella has a strong track record in successful PhD supervision. Topics previously and currently supervised include: transnational care networks, young unaccompanied asylum seekers and transitions to adulthood, Roma and experiences of European citizenship, womens experiences of trafficking, UK asylum and refugee policy, migrant care workers in Saudi Arabia, diaspora engagement in development, rural-urban migration and return migration in China and care workers wellbeing. Majella is interested in supervising PhDs relating to the research areas listed on her Research page.