Aude Bernard
University of Queensland
a.bernard@uq.edu.au
Dr Aude Bernard is Associate Professor of Demography at the Queensland Centre for Population and School of the Environment at the University of Queensland, Australia. Her research focuses on understanding internal migration processes and their consequences for individuals, regions and nations. Her contributions to formal demography include the development of measurement and estimation techniques that facilitate large-scale international comparisons of migration levels, patterns and selectivity. Building on the life-course perspective, her theoretical contributions include the concept of migration capital and the intergenerational transmission of migration. She has secured research funding from the Australian Research Council, the UNESCO, the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, the Department of Treasury, the Department of Education and the Australian Bureau of Statistics. She co-chairs the IUSSP scientific panel on lifetime migration, is Associate Editor of the European Journal of Population and sits on the editorial board of Population Space and Place.
Bernard, A., Perales, F., Charles-Edwards, E., & Bacquet-Carlier, S. (2024). Residential mobility responses to home damage caused by floods, cyclones and bushfires in Australia. Population and Environment, 46(4), 1-30.
Bernard, A., & Perales, F. (2024). The intergenerational transmission of migration capital: The role of family migration history and lived migration experiences. Demographic Research, 50, 827-870.
Bernard, A., & Vidal, S. (2023). Linking internal and international migration over the life course: A sequence analysis of individual migration trajectories in Europe. Population studies, 77(3), 515-537.
Bernard, A. (2023). Does internal migration contribute to the intergenerational transmission of socioeconomic inequalities? The role of childhood migration. Demography, 60(4), 1059-1088.
Bernard, A., Kalemba, S., & Nguyen, T. (2022). Do internal migration experiences facilitate migration intentions and behavior? Demography, 59(4), 1249-1274.