Frendehl Warner
Position
ACCESS4EU Project Coordinator
Qualifications
- PhD European Studies (pending)
- MA Political Science
Room
National Centre for Research on Europe
Kirkwood Village KD04
Contact Details
Phone: +64 3 364 2987 ext 4908
Fax: +64 3 364 2634
frendehl.warner@canterbury.ac.nz
Postal Address
National Centre for Research on Europe
Kirkwood Village KD04
University of Canterbury
Private Bag 4800
Christchurch
New Zealand
Background
Frendehl completed BA in Linguistics and MA in Political Science at the University of Canterbury. She has worked in the NZ public service, and has held advisory and investigative roles for the Human Rights Commission and Department of Labour respectively. She has also taken part in nationally and internationally funded research projects, including the IPPR & NCRE Return Migration Project, and NZ-funded research projects on alcohol licensing and use of illicit drugs. An advancing doctoral student specialising in burden-sharing efforts in hosting seaborne asylum seekers in the EU, she has also been a recipient of the Jean Monnet Mobility Award for Young Researchers, and as part of her doctoral research, worked as a Parliamentary Intern at the European Parliament in Brussels.
Recent Publications
“Dublin Regulation and Boat Arrivals: What Burden-Sharing Model for the EU?” in Snyder, Francis and Thym, Daniel (eds) Europe: A Continent of Immigration? Legal Challenges in the Construction of European Migration Policy, Bruylant Publishers, 2009/2010 (forthcoming).
Chaban, Natalia, Warner, Frendehl et al. “Crossing Cultural Borders: Analysing Experiences of the NZ Return Migrants from the EU”. Working Paper 12, ISET, London Metropolitan University, May 2009.
“Forth and Back: New Zealand Diaspora to and Return from the EU: A Preliminary Report”. Co-authored with Boyce, Valerie. Paper presented at the Conference on “Europe in the Changing World: Challenges, Priorities and Research Collaborations”, 25-27 September 2008, EUC Network, Christchurch, New Zealand (publication in journal pending).
“Migrant fatalities in the Mediterranean: An examination of EU common policy on irregular migration and its commitments to maritime and refugee law”. Paper presented at the ISA Research Committee on Sociology of Migration Inter-Congress Meeting: “The Mediterranean: between passage, movement, settlement and detention”, 2-8 June 2008,Aix-en-Provence, France.
“Trawling for protection in troubled EU waters: The case of the Francisco y Catalina”. Paper presented at the Conference on “Best Practices for Refugee Status Determination: Principles and Standards for State Responsibility”, 29 & 30 May 2008, Monash Prato Centre, Florence, Italy.
“The search and rescue of refugee rights over troubled Mediterranean waters: An expanding and evolving role for the UNHCR in the EU?” Paper presented at the Fifth EU-NESCA Workshop: Human Rights and Regional Integration, Bangkok and Pattaya, Thailand, 31 January-2 February 2008.
“From Burden-Shifting to Reluctant Burden-Sharing: The Role of Alliances in EU, UNHCR and Member State Cooperation in the Francisco y Catalina Incident of July 2006”. Paper presented at the NZPSA Conference, Victoria University, Wellington, 30-31 August 2007.
“A salvageable relationship? Analysing the EU-UNHCR cooperation in managing the smuggling of seaborne asylum seekers into the EU before, during and after Amsterdam”. Paper presented at the 8th EUROFOR Marie Curie Conference Series, 14-17 December 2006, Berlin, Germany.
“Humanitarianism Criminalised? A Preliminary (Critical) Analysis of the EU’s Response to the Arrival of the Cap Anamur 37”. Paper presented at the New Zealand Political Studies Association Conference, Christchurch, 28August 2006.
Untitled essay by Ludford, Baroness Sarah MEP and Warner, Frendehl Sipaco in Watson, Graham and Durrant, Katherine (eds). Liberal Democracy and Globalisation. Bagehot Publishing, Langport, 2005, pp.117-129.
MA Thesis. A Confederal Consociationalist Approach to Understanding the Rhetoric and Reality of Minority Rights Provision in the EU: The Case of the Roma. University of Canterbury, 2003.
“Why Esperanto is the International Language for the New Millennium”. New Zealand Esperanto Association, 2000, http://www.esperanto.org.nz
