Experts

PCNS Experts
Francisco Alba
Member, COMEXI

This individual is not a direct affiliate of the Policy Center for the New South. They have contributed to one or more of our events, publications, or projects. Please contact the individual at their home institution.

Francisco Alba is an economist and demographer; he is profesor and researcher at El Colegio de México, in Mexico.

He has served as member of the Board of Governors of El Colegio de México (2008-2013).

In Mexico, he has been member of the Advisory Council on Migration Policy,  at the Mexican Ministry of Interior (2014-2015); and member of the Advisory Council of the Mexican National Institute of Migration (2001-2012). Bilaterally, member of the U.S.-Mexico Binational Study on Migration (1995-1997).

Internationally, he was member of the United Nations Committee on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers (2004-2011); and member of the Global Commission on International Migration (2003-2005).

At the U.S., he has been member of the Governing Council of the Population Reference Bureau (1996-2002); and member of the Committee on Population at the National Research Council of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences (1985-1990).

He has also been member of various academic and professional committees and associations.

He holds a degree in Philosophy from the Gregorian University, Rome, Italy; and in Economics from the Universidad Autónoma de San Luis Potosí. He has postgraduate studies in demography, from El Colegio de México; in social sciences, from the Institute of Political Studies in Paris, France; and from the University of Texas at Austin.

His areas of research are the governance of international migration; migration policies of Mexico and of the United States; implications of demographic changes on economic and social development; regional integration processes, particularly in North America.

His current projects include. Nation-states in the face of increasing human mobility: opportunities and challenges; rights and obligations. Economic and social implications in Mexico's future of demographic aging and contexts of low demographic dynamism.

 

Publications