黑料吃瓜资源

Ann Cathrin Corrales-脴verlid

Position

Postdoctoral fellow

Affiliation

Research groups

Short info

Through ethnography, I seek to understand migrants鈥 everyday and working lives 鈥 their experiences, aspirations, and economic actions 鈥 in relation to broader social and historical forces. Geographically my work focuses on Peru, the United States, Norway, Egypt and Sudan.
Research

Currently, I am involved in two research projects

, led by Lena N盲re (University of Helsinki) part of the .

The project 鈥淭ackling Precarious and Informal Work in the Nordic Countries鈥 (PrecaNord) examines the sustainability of the Nordic model by offering an integrated analysis of precarious and informal work in Finland, Norway and Sweden. Precarious jobs include jobs that are associated with uncertainty and wherein the employee bears the risk.

Through a mixed-methods and multi-level research design, we explore the prevalence, trends, drivers, and consequences of precarious and informal work for workers, employers, and society. We further aim to advance conceptual and theoretical approaches to how to study and understand precarious and informal work across the Nordics.

The project runs from 2022-2026. It is funded by the programme Future Challenges in the Nordics and is a collaboration among researchers from The University of Helsinki, Lund University, Stockholm University and The University of Bergen.

 For more information see .

, led by Liv T酶nnessen (Chr. Michelsen Institute) and Tamer Abdelkareem (Khartoum University)

The SNAC project is a collaboration between Sudanese and Norwegian academic institutions. We aim to contribute to high quality research and policy development on current challenges facing Sudan.

Within the SNAC umbrella, I am involved in two smaller research projects:

Gendered and Classed Livelihood Strategies among Recently Displaced Sudanese women in Cairo, co-lead with Randa Gindeel (Ahfad University of Women).

In this project, we explore the experiences of Sudanese women who have fled to Egypt during the ongoing war in Sudan. We focus on middle- and upper-class women who have established businesses in Cairo and explore how they navigate gender and class through business ownership in the context of war and displacement. We find that the women's businesses play an important role in the ways in which they cope with the trauma of war and protracted displacement, and that the business becomes a vehicle to assert class and challenge gender relations. While providing an important focus on non-economic outcomes of immigrant entrepreneurship, we also contribute to an emerging body of research that challenges the notion of refugees and displaced people as poor and class-less.

and

Gendered Trade Transitions in Turbulent Times: Navigating Livelihood Opportunities in the Red Sea State Amidst War and Displacement, led by Randa Gindeel, (Ahfad University of Women).

The main objective is to examine the lived experiences of trade in the corridor between Egypt, Oseif, and Port Sudan in the context of war and displacement. We seek to identify changes in trade patterns and their impact on livelihood opportunities and wellbeing among women and men affected by the ongoing war, some of them also forcibly (internally or transnationally) displaced, or deported back to Sudan. 

I defended my PhD dissertation in 2021:

A complex context of reception shapes culinary business ownership among Peruvian immigrants in Southern California, where xenophobic portrayals of Latinxs exist alongside positive discourses on immigration. Simultaneously, Peruvians encounter a favorable opportunity structure for culinary entrepreneurs, as the recent gastronomic boom in Peru has placed Peruvian cuisine on the top of culinary hierarchies, and Peruvian food has garnered high status internationally. This is the first study to document the development of a growing Peruvian gastronomic scene in Southern California. With a focus on Peruvian immigrant women who have established culinary businesses in the area, it argues that women play an important role in shaping the Peruvian culinary scene, as they establish a variety of food ventures in the formal as well as in the informal economic sector. By elucidating how the women negotiate gender, home, and belonging through culinary entrepreneurship, I extend scholarship on so-called ethnic entrepreneurship and shift the center of attention from economic incorporation and entrepreneurs as mainly economic actors to a focus on spatial practices, non-economic business outcomes, and broader processes of immigrant settlement.

To understand these complex dynamics of immigrant business ventures, I employ qualitative methods, including life-history interviews with Peruvian women entrepreneurs as well as ten months of ethnographic fieldwork comprising the women鈥檚 businesses and the broader Peruvian immigrant communities in the area. By drawing on novel insight on home as a lens to understand immigrant settlement, and bringing this into conversation with the ethnic entrepreneurship literature, the study offers a new and more comprehensive framework鈥攖he nested approach to immigrant and ethnic entrepreneurship. Building on previous theorization that emphasizes how individual-, group-, and macro-level factors facilitate and constrain entrepreneurship, and on recent efforts to employ an intersectional lens to the field, I add important socio-spatial dimensions with an emphasis on how immigrants鈥 entrepreneurial practices are nested within larger life projects and the search for home and belonging. Hence, this study broadens our understanding of the entrepreneur鈥檚 social embeddedness, and by lifting the gaze beyond the economy and the market, I find important intersections between the private/family and the public/work sphere.

Moving beyond comparative male/female frameworks that often emphasize women entrepreneurs鈥 marginalized position relative to men, I find that under certain circumstances women also benefit from their gendered location and bargain with patriarchy as they draw on culinary skills to occupy roles as head of independent and family businesses. By paying attention to life course and to spatial practices, I further demonstrate that motherhood informs entrepreneurial practices. Mothering responsibilities shape how the women navigate informality/formality and how they transgress socially constructed boundaries between the private and the public sphere and contest deeply ingrained gendered inequalities in a capitalist economic system constructed around a male template.

The nested approach emphasizes immigrant home-making and place-making. Through their businesses, Peruvian immigrant culinary entrepreneurs contribute to shaping local environments. Control over a space in culinary markets allows them to reproduce the 鈥渉omeland鈥 and create home-like places in a migrant context. As Peruvians in an area shaped by large-scale Mexican immigration and by xenophobic stereotypes of Latinx immigrants, they draw on the status of Peruvian food to negotiate inclusion through distinction and claim the right to membership of the urban community. The recognition and character of such distinction, however, is negotiated in the encounter with the established population, but also with other immigrant groups, as well as with other Peruvians. Hence, culinary entrepreneurship arises as a powerful tool that immigrants draw on to make sense of who they are in a migrant context.

 

I am a board member of and . I am also an active member of , where I previously led the IMER Bergen junior scholar network.

Outreach

My work has been published in leading journals and reputable academic presses, including Ethnic and Racial Studies, Routledge and De Gruyter Brill. I also engage actively in public debate and have written a range of opinion pieces on migration, gender and precarious work. In addition, I am regularly invited to speak at national and international events organized by public institutions and civil society organizations.

Corrales-脴verlid, Ann Cathrin & Synn酶ve Bendixsen. 2025. 鈥淚kke d氓rlige jobber, men d氓rlige arbeidsvilk氓r.鈥 In Dagsavisen. September 2, 2025.

Corrales-脴verlid, Ann Cathrin & Synn酶ve Bendixsen. 2025. 鈥淒e presses inn i d氓rlige arbeidsforhold.鈥 In Dagsavisen. August 26, 2025.

Gindeel, Randa Hamza Ibrahim & Ann Cathrin Corrales-脴verlid. 2025. 鈥淓ntrepreneurship as Resilience: Sudanese Women, Displacement, and the Remaking of Home in Exile.鈥 In African Arguments: Debating Ideas. June 5, 2025.

Norbakk, Mari, Munzoul Assal & Ann Cathrin Corrales-脴verlid. 2024. 鈥淚ntroduction to migration and forced displacement studies: Global, regional, and Sudanese perspectives.鈥 Chr. Michelsen Institute. (online resource)

Corrales-脴verlid, Ann Cathrin. 2019. 鈥淟酶rdags(u)hygge: N氓r d酶den i Middlehavet skyller inn i stuen.鈥 In Dagsavisen. January 24, 2019. 

Corrales-脴verlid, Ann Cathrin. 2017. 鈥淎lternativ feminisme鈥. In Morgenbladet. October 17, 2017. 

 

Teaching

Teaching at the Department for foreign languages, The University of Bergen:

: Introduction to Spanish and Latin American Studies

: Latin American History

Teaching at the Department of Health Promotion and Development, The University of Bergen:

: Gender Analysis in Global Development - Core Perspectives and Issues

: Development Practice

Teaching at the Department of Social Anthropology:

: Bachelor's Assignment (supervisor)

Guest lectures:

"Immigrant and Ethnic Entrepreneurship" in American Studies 101: Race and Class in Los Angeles. Department of American Studies and Ethnicity. University of Southern California. April 10, 2018.

"Intersectionality: Race, Ethnicity, and Inequality" in : Socio-cultural diversity and social inequalities in social work. Department of Welfare and Participation, Western Norway University of Applied Sciences. April 22, 2022.

Supervision:

I am currently co-supervising a PhD candidate: at centre for Care Research, West, at Western Norway University of Applied Sciences. She is a PhD candidate in the project .

In addition, I have supervised four M.A. theses and 20 bachelor theses.

 

Publications

Academic Articles:

Corrales-脴verlid, Ann Cathrin, Olivia Maury & Rasmus Ahlstrand. n.d. 鈥淐ompounded (dis)embeddedness: Migrants鈥 ambivalent experiences of platform mediated gig-work in the Nordics鈥. Nordic Journal of Working Life Studies. (Under review)

Corrales-脴verlid, Ann Cathrin & Alejandro Miranda Nieto. 2025. 鈥 [Labor Trajectories, Existential Precarity and a Sense of Home among Latin Amerikcan Migrants in Norway].鈥 In Am茅rica Latina en Noruega. Producci贸n ling眉铆stica, literaria y cultural de una comunidad migrante. Roxana Sobrino & Alissa Vik (eds.). De Gruyter Brill.

Corrales-脴verlid, Ann Cathrin. 2024. 鈥淪ensory (Re)enactments of Home: Culinary Heritage-making among Peruvians in Southern California.鈥 In . Eds. Karolina Nikielska-Sekula & Magdalena Banaszkiewicz. Routledge. 

Corrales-脴verlid, Ann Cathrin. 2024. 鈥溾橝lle vet at Norge er best鈥: Kampen mot prek忙re og utnyttende arbeidsforhold i det norske arbeidslivet og velferdssamfunnet.鈥 Norsk Antropologisk Tidsskrift. (35)3-4, 217-235. .

Bendixsen, Synn酶ve & Ann Cathrin Corrales-脴verlid. 2024. 鈥淰elferdsstatens n氓del酶se optimisme鈥. Norsk Antropologisk Tidsskrift. (35)3-4, 129鈥147. .

Corrales-脴verlid, Ann Cathrin. 2023. 鈥淔ood as a Social Weapon: Peruvian Immigrant Entrepreneurs Claiming Home, Belonging, and Distinction in Southern California.鈥 Ethnic and Racial Studies

Conference Presentations and Invited Lectures:

2025

鈥淔orcibly Displaced Sudanese Women in Cairo Navigating Loss, Reconstructing Identity, and Reconfiguring Gender Relations鈥

  • Paper presented at panel 鈥淩eshaping social classes, gender and family relations in exile鈥 at Lives in Displacement: Sudanese Experiences in Egypt since April 2023 (Conference), CEDEJ Khartoum/Institut fran莽ais d'脡gypte, Cairo, Egypt. November 2.

鈥溾橶hen I come in here, I forget everything鈥 Forcibly displaced Sudanese women coping with war, reproducing class status and challenging gender relations through business ownership鈥

  • Paper presented at panel 鈥淪udan: From Revolution Through War, the Complexity of Life on the Edge(s)鈥 at The 13th Nordic Conference on Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies: A new world order 鈥 a new Middle East? (Conference), University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway. September 25.

The Cruel Optimism of the Welfare State: The Paradox of the Norwegian Welfare State and Precarious Labor Conditions鈥

  • Paper presented at panel 鈥淟abour 2鈥 at Symposium on Precarities and Temporalities in Migratory Contexts (Symposium), University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland. August 27.

鈥淧recarious Work, Precarious Lives? How Migrant Workers in Norway Weave Life-narratives and Build a Sense of Home鈥

  • Paper presented at panel 鈥淗ome & Hospitality鈥 at Symposium on Precarities and Temporalities in Migratory Contexts (Symposium), University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland. August 27.

2024

鈥淯tfordringer og perspektiv p氓 migrasjon i dag [Challenges and Perspectives on Migration Today]鈥.

  • Public talk at Migrasjonskonferansen 2024, organized by Vestland innvandrerr氓d, Bergen, Norway, December 18.

鈥淓rfaringer fra praksis [Experiences from the practice field]鈥

  • Panel debate at seminar 鈥淗vorfor klarer migranter i Bergen seg s氓 bra? 鈥 Og hva kan vi l忙re av det? [Why do migrants in Bergen fare so well? 鈥 And what can we learn from it?鈥漖, organized by Vestland krysskulturelle brobyggertjeneste, Bergen, Norway, December 18.

鈥淲ork-related crime鈥 or migrant labour exploitation? EU-migrants鈥 struggles against precarious and exploitative labor relations in Norway鈥

  • Paper presented at Comparative Political Economy Seminar, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway, September 23.

鈥淚nformality within the formal: Informalizing processes and exploitation within highly regulated and protected labor markets.鈥

  • Paper presented with Rasmus Ahlstrand and Olivia Maury at panel 鈥淓xperiencing and Representing Precariousness: Emerging Labour Configurations and Worker Agency鈥 at the 16th European Sociological Association Conference 2024: Tension, Trust and Transformation (Conference); University of Porto, Porto, Portugal. August 30.

鈥淗ow Compounded Precarities Shape the Exploitation of Migrant Workers in the Nordics.鈥

  • Paper presented with Lena N盲re at panel 鈥淢igrant Workers鈥 Multiple Precarities鈥 at Nordic Migration Research Conference 2024: The politics of mobility and precarity 鈥 and the alternatives (Conference); University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway. August 16.

鈥淕endered and Classed Livelihood Strategies among Recently Displaced Sudanese Women in Cairo鈥

  • Paper presented with Randa Gindeel at panel 鈥淣avigating Intersectionality in Displacement: Sudanese Displacement Post-2023 Conflict鈥 at Nordic Migration Research Conference 2024: The politics of mobility and precarity 鈥 and the alternatives (Conference); University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway. August 15.

鈥淣avigating the Precarity Spiral: Migrant workers in Norway seeking 鈥榚mancipatory belonging鈥 and imagining alternative futures.鈥

  • Paper presented at panel 鈥淧recarious lifestyles: underemployment, emotional damage, and relational vulnerability in neoliberal labour markets鈥 at European Anthropological Studies Association Biennal Conference 2024: Doing and Undoing with Anthropology (Conference); University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain. July 23.

鈥淧eruvian Immigrant women in the U.S.: Turning Public Spaces into 鈥極ur Place鈥.鈥

  • Paper presented at panel 鈥淗ome as metaphor: Exploring emotional, material and heuristic dimensions of migration, Part 1鈥 at 21st IMISCOE Annual Conference 2024: Migration as a Social Construction: A Reflexive Turn (Conference); Iscte - University Institute of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal (Online). July 2.

鈥淚ntersectionality: Race, Ethnicity, and Inequality鈥. 

  • Invited Guest Lecturer in undergraduate course aSocio-cultural diversity and societal inequalities in social work (SABV 260), Department of Welfare and Participation, Western Norway University of Applied Sciences; Bergen, Norway. April 10.

鈥淚 randsonen av den nordiske modellen: Prek忙rt og uformelt arbeid i Norge.鈥

  • Paper presented at research seminar 鈥淏忙rekraftig arbeidsinkludering for og med migranter: Hvordan p氓virker ulik arbeidstilknytning migranters helse, tilh酶righet og tillit til samfunnet?鈥; Western Norway University of Applied Sciences - HVL, Bergen, Norway. April 5.

2023

鈥溾楧et brenner litt under den norske modellen鈥, men hvem skal vi 鈥榬edde鈥? Migranters erfaringer p氓 det norske arbeidsmarkedet i lys av tiltak mot sosial dumping og arbeidslivskriminalitet.鈥

  • Paper presented at workshop 鈥淎nthropological perspectives on precarious and informal work鈥 at Antropologikonferansen 2023: Omveltninger (Conference); Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway. November 30.

鈥淯nserious鈥/criminal actors or precarious workers? EU Migrants on the margins of the Nordic Model鈥

  • Paper presented at session 鈥淢igrant and racialised perspectives to precarity鈥 at 鈥淐ritical Perspectives on Precarious and Informal Work鈥 (Conference); The University of Helsinki, Finland, August 25.

鈥淎 Threat or Someone to Protect? EU Migrant Workers in the Shadows of the Nordic Model, the Norwegian Labor Market, and (Welfare) Citizenship鈥.

  • Paper presented at 鈥淢obilities, (welfare) citizenship and the changing nature of work鈥 (Workshop); The University of Reykjavik, Iceland, August 10.

鈥淪imultaneous processes of informalization and formalization: Experiences from platform work in Norway鈥.

  • Paper presented at session 鈥淒ynamics of (In)Formalization Under Platform Capitalism鈥 at 鈥淕lobal Perspectives on Platform, Labor and Social Reproduction鈥 (Conference); The University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands, June 28.

鈥淟abor, Capital, and Borders: Structures of Domination in the Shadows of Freedom of Movement.鈥

  • Paper presented at 鈥淚mmobility and Movements Across Contested Temporalities and Spaces鈥 (Workshop); The University of Bergen, Norway, June 19.

鈥淚ntersectionality: Race, Ethnicity, and Inequality鈥. 

  • Invited Guest Lecturer in undergraduate course aSocio-cultural diversity and societal inequalities in social work (SABV 260), Department of Welfare and Participation, Western Norway University of Applied Sciences; Bergen, Norway. April 12.

鈥淎t the Margins of the Nordic Model? Experiences of Precarious and Informal Work in Norway.鈥

  • Paper presented at session 鈥淧recarious positions, informal work and multiple jobs鈥 at Work and Welfare in the Digital Age (Workshop); Lund University, Sweden. January 10.

2022

"I randsonen av den nordiske modellen? Erfaringer fra prek忙rt og uformelt arbeid i Norge."

  • Paper presented at the network symposium "Integrering av arbeidsinnvandrere i Norge Er det behov for en ny politikk?" at Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO), Oslo, Norway. December 15.

鈥淎t the Margins of the Nordic Model? Experiences of Precarious and Informal Work in Norway鈥.

  • Paper presented at Bergen Anthropology Day; Bergen, Norway. September 29.

"A Home in the Public: Peruvian Women Culinary Entrepreneurs in Southern California".

  • Paper presented at session "Latinxs Sharing Spaces, Sharing Stories 1" at LASA2022 Congress: Polarizaci贸n socioambiental y rivalidad entre grandes potencias; Online. May 6. 

鈥淚ntersectionality: Race, Ethnicity, and Inequality鈥. 

  • Invited Guest Lecturer in undergraduate course aSocio-cultural diversity and societal inequalities in social work (SABV 260), Department of Welfare and Participation, Western Norway University of Applied Sciences; Bergen, Norway. April 22.

2021

鈥淣avigating Media Discourses and Digital Practices: Peruvian Immigrant Women鈥檚 Culinary Entrepreneurship in Southern California鈥.

  • Paper presented at session 鈥淢igrant Digital Food Practices鈥 at Migrant Belongings: Digital Practices and the Everyday; Online. April 23.

鈥淗ome-making in the Public: Peruvian Immigrant Women鈥檚 Culinary Entrepreneurship in Southern California鈥.

  • Paper presented at session 鈥淓xploring Nordic Migrant Entrepreneurship: Intersectional Understandings of Place and Context鈥 at the 20th Nordic Migration Research Conference and 17th ETMU Conference; Online. January 12.

2020

鈥淗ome-making in the Public: Peruvian Immigrant Women鈥檚 Culinary Entrepreneurship in Southern California鈥.

  • Paper presented at session 鈥淭he Liminal State of Home鈥 at the Hjem 2020 Conference; University of Bergen, Norway. September 24-25. 

2019

鈥淎 Culinary Quest: Peruvian Women Entrepreneurs in Southern California Negotiating Home and Belonging鈥. 

  • Paper presented at session 鈥淗ome and the Senses鈥, at the 鈥淗OMinG symposium 鈥 HOMinG: Displacement, suspension, projections and achievements in making home on the move鈥; Trento, Italy. June 3-4.
  • Paper presented at session 鈥淕endered Migration and Displacement鈥, at the 鈥淟ASA2019 鈥 Nuestra Am茅rica: Justice & Inclusion鈥 Conference; Boston, USA. May 24-27.

2018

鈥淎 Culinary Quest: Peruvian Women Entrepreneurs Negotiating Home and Belonging."

  • Paper presented at session 鈥淕ender, inequality, spatial mobility and social change鈥, at the 鈥淣OLAN2018: Epochal shifts in current Latin America?鈥 Conference; Oslo, Norway. October 25-26.

鈥淎 Culinary Quest: Peruvian Women Entrepreneurs Negotiating Gender and Home. 

  • Paper presented at workshop 鈥淓veryday strategies of citizenship and belonging鈥, at the 10th Nordic Migration Research Conference 鈥淣ew (Im)mobilities: Migration and Race in the Era of Authoritarianism鈥; Norrk枚ping, Sweden. August 15-17.
  • Paper presented at Formal Paper session 鈥淚mmigration and Women鈥, at the Annual Conference of the Pacific Sociological Association; Long Beach, USA. March 28-31.

2017

鈥淚mmigrant Entrepreneurship: An Intersectionality Approach鈥. 

  • Invited Guest Lecturer in undergraduate course Race and Class in Los Angeles (AMST 101), Department of American Studies and Ethnicity, University of Southern California; Los Angeles, USA. November 9.

PhD Dissertation:

Corrales-脴verlid, Ann Cathrin, 2021. "A Culinary Quest: Peruvian Women Entrepreneurs in Southern California Negotiating Gender, Home, and Belonging." Doctoral degree Monograph, Department of Foreign Languages, The University of Bergen. https://bora.uib.no/bora-xmlui/handle/11250/2754557. 

Master's thesis:

Corrales-脴verlid, Ann Cathrin. 2009. "El impacto econ贸mico y social del microcr茅dito: Un estudio de caso de las prestatarias de la ONG MIDE 麓la Ch麓uspa麓en Santa Cruz de Sallac, Peru." Master's degree Thesis, Department of Foreign Languages, The University of Bergen. https://bora.uib.no/bora-xmlui/handle/1956/3829.

Projects

Tackling Precarious and Informal Work in the Nordic Countries

Sudan-Norway Academic Cooperation (SNAC), including two smaller research projects:

  • Gendered and Classed Livelihood Strategies among Recently Displaced Sudanese women in Cairo.
  • Gendered Trade Transitions in Turbulent Times: Navigating Livelihood Opportunities in the Red Sea State Amidst War and Displacement.

Ph.D.project: A Culinary Quest: Peruvian Women Entrepreneurs in Southern California Negotiating Gender, Home, and Belonging