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Dr Elise Boyle Espinosa

Elise Boyle Espinosa has an interdisciplinary background which includes international studies and global development, and prior to her time at the University of Aberdeen, she studied and researched at the Universities of Sydney, Cape Town, and Copenhagen.

Her research has primarily concerned education and politics in conflict-affected areas, and she has an interest in sustainable development, political community, rebel governance and education more generally. As part of CISRUL’s POLITICO project, in early 2025 Elise successfully defended her PhD thesis, ‘Diversity of Destinies’: The Impact of Islamic State on Higher Education in Eastern Syria. The research was funded by the EU Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation programme under a Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement, and supervised by Dr Rachel Shanks, Professor Pamela Abbott, and Dr Hanifi Bariş. This built on experience and knowledge gained from previous long-term research and fieldwork on the education system established as part of the ‘Rojava Revolution’ in North and East Syria, and the implications this has had for governance of the region. She is a member of the Education, Peace and Politics in the Middle East network.

During her time at CISRUL, she has co-convened numerous events including the four-day ‘Conceptualising Community’ conference and workshop (2022), related ‘Talking Community’ interview series with keynote speakers and reading group series. She is currently providing media and communications support to CISRUL, and has previously been employed as a Teaching Fellow (2024/2025) in the School of Education, .

Parallel to her research, she is involved in activism and media work related to minority and refugee rights, and environmental and social justice. She also has experience working with various Non-Governmental Organisations, including the Amy Foundation (South Africa) and the Danish Refugee Council.  

Academic Publications and media

Events

Teaching

Contact

elise.boyleespinosa@abdn.ac.uk



This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research & Innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No. 754326.
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