Associate researchers include emeritus faculty of Paris Diderot, colleagues with teaching positions at other institutions, and recent PhDs who are not yet affiliated with another research center.
Brogan Una
Collomp Catherine
Emerita Professor, American history
Social and political history of the United States
Immigration and labor history
Refugee and asylum policy 1930’s-1940’s
Jewish-American history
Deligny Claire
Recent PhD
Galey-Gambier Celia
Postdoctoral fellow at the Labex "Créations, Arts et Patrimoines"
Contemporary American poetry
Performance art: written forms, documents, performances, and remakes
Politics and aesthetics
Ha Van Véronique
Associate Professor - Université Le Havre Normandie – GRIC (EA 4314); associate member of LARCA
History of forms in public space in the US
American sculpture and displacement
Jaworski Philippe
Professor Emeritus
Jerad Rahma
Assistant Professor, American and British civilization, University of Carthage, Tunisia
American-Cuban relations, 1776-1860
Slavery and abolitionism in the United States, Great Britain and Cuba, early 1800-1860
American and Cuban slave narratives
American photography of Cuba, 1850-1865
Leblond Diane
Recent PhD, Lectrice at Gonville & Caius College, University of Cambridge
Maillet Jacob
PRAG (legal and business English), University of Paris 5
U.S. foreign policy
Cold War
Perception and image
International relations
U.S. constitutional law
Marsoin Édouard
Murail Estelle
Senior Lecturer in British Literature, Institut Catholique de Paris; associate member of LARCA
Victorian Literature / contemporary Literature
Persistence
The city
Networks
Technologies, 19th century-present
Petitjean Lucie
Recent PhD
Prevot Valentine
Recent PhD
Quillay Angélique
Recent PhD
Quinn-Lautrefin Roisin
Recent PhD
Rouquet Camille
Recent PhD, ATER
Serme Jean Marc
Associate Professor, University of Western Brittany; member of LARCA
Regional history of the Old South-west
Native Americans, Euro-Americans, and foreign powers in the lower South from the Revolution to the War of 1812
Social and family relations in the Old South-west