Folgen von Migration (für MigrantInnen, Herkunfts- und Zielregionen)

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Who Is an Immigrant and Who Requires Integration? Categorizing in European Policies

Authors Marleen van der Haar, Liza Mügge
Book Title Integration Processes and Policies in Europe
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1 Book Chapter

From a Migrant Integration of Distinction to a Multiculturalism of Inclusion

Authors In-Jin Yoon
Book Title Global Migration Issues
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2 Book Chapter

Migration of Ukrainian Nationals to Italy: Women on the Move

Authors Francesca Alice Vianello
Book Title Ukrainian Migration to the European Union
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3 Book Chapter

Immigrant Children, Educational Performance and Public Policy: a Capability Approach

Authors Abdirashid A. Ismail, Abdirashid A. Ismail
Year 2019
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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4 Journal Article

Differences in Subjective Well-being Between Older Migrants and Natives in Europe

Authors Gregor Sand, Stefan Gruber
Year 2018
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
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5 Journal Article

Return Imaginaries and Political Climate: Comparing Thinking About Return Mobilities Among Pakistani Origin Migrants and Descendants in Norway and the UK

Authors Marta Bolognani, Marta Bivand Erdal
Year 2017
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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6 Journal Article

Socio-Cultural Determinants of Labour-Market Integration of Immigrants

Principal investigator Ruud Koopmans (Principal Investigator), Jutta Höhne (Principal Investigator)
Description
"Theoretical background and objectives Economic participation of migrants has been a major problem in many European countries for the last decades. There is overwhelming statistical evidence for the problematic labour market status of migrants, but data also show that not all migrant groups are affected to the same extent. Previous studies have revealed that differences in socio-economic integration are strongly related to ethnic origin. However, this research does not allow us to firmly establish to what extent cultural and religious factors are responsible for the differential socio-economic position of ethnic groups. Therefore, we investigate the effects of host-country orientation and cultural difference of migrants on their socio-economic integration in Germany, analysing unemployment and employment durations of male and female migrants, as well as transitions from domestic work to employment for female migrants from Turkey, Former Yugoslavia, Greece, Spain and Italy. Given the large gap in unemployment and employment rates not only between natives and migrants, but also between groups of migrants, we look at several economic, human capital and cultural factors in order to test whether migrant-specific characteristics can help to explain ethnic group differences in labour market outcomes. The migrant-specific cultural variables we investigate include host-country language proficiency, interethnic contacts, host-country media consumption, and religiosity. In the case of married female migrants, the analysis moreover takes relevant characteristics of their husbands into account, which have not received attention in earlier studies. Research design and methodology The German Socio-Economic Panel provides reliable longitudinal data, allowing us to conduct analyses over a period of nearly 20 years (1988-2006). We use duration data to analyse the hazard of labour market status transitions by estimating Cox regression models with a random frailty term to account for unobserved heterogeneity. Individual longitudinal data on employment trajectories of migrants have been combined with labour market context data and relevant human capital and cultural factors. A longitudinal approach is crucial for addressing this research question, since the relationship between socio-cultural factors such as host-country language proficiency and interethnic contacts and labour market integration is likely to be recursive. Our samples cover not only persons born outside Germany, but also their 2nd generation offspring. Findings The results indicate that although labour market transitions of migrants strongly depend on the labour market context, host-country orientation and religiosity also have a certain impact on the labour market integration of individual migrants, especially on transitions into employment of male migrants and married migrant housewives. However, while for most of our cultural variables we find significant effects on the individual level, these factors do not help to clarify the differences among the different migrant groups, which persist at a similar level even after controlling for labour market, general human capital, as well as cultural variables."
Year 2009
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7 Project

Depression in Europe: does migrant integration have mental health payoffs? A cross-national comparison of 20 European countries

Authors Katia Levecque, Ronan Van Rossem
Year 2015
Journal Name Ethnicity & Health
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8 Journal Article

Sending Country Policies

Authors Eva Østergaard-Nielsen
Book Title Integration Processes and Policies in Europe
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9 Book Chapter

National Immigration and Integration Policies in Europe Since 1973

Authors María Bruquetas-Callejo, Jeroen Doomernik
Book Title Integration Processes and Policies in Europe
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10 Book Chapter

Research-Policy Dialogues in Austria

Authors Maren Borkert
Book Title Integrating Immigrants in Europe
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11 Book Chapter

Between Choice and Stigma: Identifications of Economically Successful Migrants

Authors Jack Burgers, Marianne van Bochove
Book Title Coming to Terms with Superdiversity
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12 Book Chapter

Displacing Deviance: Second-Generation Migrant Youth, Disciplinary Return, and Transnational Social Fields of Inclusion and Exclusion return

Description
‘Displacing Deviance…’ is a state-of-the-art research project into transnational family practices. It examines ‘disciplinary return’ - young second-generation migrants sent ‘home’ to their countries of heritage by their parents as a disciplinary measure – a widespread practice which has not yet been the focus of direct research. Second-generation ties to the homeland are critical to issues of integration, yet understanding of second-generation transnationalism is thin. Examining ‘disiplinary return’ within the Nigerian diaspora will establish new, in-depth understanding of how migrants navigate transnational structures of opportunity and constraint through their family practice. This will shed light on the relationship between socio-economic challenges faced in ‘host’ countries, and how migrants build loyalties and identities in a transnational context. It will produce findings of relevance to policy concerns about societal challenges around multicultural integration and minority youth in the education and criminal justice sectors. The research approach is innovative, answering calls for youth-centric, multi-sited, and intergenerational research into transnational families, thus far mostly studied via first-generation migrant parents in single locations. Qualitative research with migrant parents and youth, and participatory research with migrant youth, will be undertaken in the USA, Nigeria and the UK. Supervision by a world expert, Dr Coe at Rutgers, in the outgoing phase will provide a unique training opportunity for the researcher and excellent means to build networks. Expertise gained will be transferred back into Europe in the incoming phase by working with Dr Dwyer, co-director of the Migration Research Unit (Geography Department) at UCL, a hub for migration research with Europe-wide networks. This will maximise output which advance theoretical debates around migration and transnationalism, speak to policy debates, and capture public audiences.
Year 2018
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14 Project

The ‘Integration’ of People of Dutch Descent in Superdiverse Neighbourhoods

Authors Frans Lelie, Maurice Crul
Book Title Coming to Terms with Superdiversity
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15 Book Chapter

Ukrainian Migration to Greece: from Irregular Work to Settlement, Family Reunification and Return

Authors Marina Nikolova, Michaela Maroufof
Year 2016
Book Title Ukrainian Migration to the European Union
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16 Book Chapter

Female Migrant Entrepreneurs in Vienna: Mobility and its Embeddedness

Authors Petra Dannecker, Alev Cakir
Year 2016
Journal Name Österreichische Zeitschrift für Soziologie
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17 Journal Article

Ukrainians in the Czech Republic: On the Pathway from Temporary Foreign Workers to One of the Largest Minority Groups

Authors Yana Leontiyeva
Book Title Ukrainian Migration to the European Union
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18 Book Chapter

The Concept of Integration as an Analytical Tool and as a Policy Concept

Authors Blanca Garcés-Mascareñas, Rinus Penninx
Book Title Integration Processes and Policies in Europe
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19 Book Chapter

Migration from a gender-critical, postcolonial and interdisciplinary perspective

Authors Sabine Gatt, Kerstin Hazibar, Verena Sauermann, ...
Year 2016
Journal Name Österreichische Zeitschrift für Soziologie
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20 Journal Article

“We Are Here to Stay” – Refugee Struggles in Germany Between Unity and Division

Authors Helge Schwiertz, Abimbola Odugbesan
Book Title Protest Movements in Asylum and Deportation
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21 Book Chapter

Research-Policy Dialogues in the United Kingdom

Authors Christina Boswell, Alistair Hunter
Book Title Integrating Immigrants in Europe
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22 Book Chapter

The Adaptation of Migrant Children

Authors A Portes, Alejandro Rivas
Year 2011
Journal Name FUTURE OF CHILDREN
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23 Journal Article

Solidarisierung in Europa: Migrant*innen und Osteuropäer*innen und deren Engagement für Geflüchtete

Principal investigator Madalena Nowicka (Principal Investigator)
Description
"Das Teilprojekt wird im Rahmen des BIM-Forschungs-Interventions-Cluster ""Solidarität im Wandel?"" durchgeführt, das durch die Beauftragte der Bundesregierung für Migration, Flüchtlinge und Integration gefördert wird. Das Projekt untersucht exemplarisch am Beispiel polnischstämmiger, in Deutschland lebender Frauen, wie sich Migrant*innen aus Osteuropa für Geflüchtete engagieren, was sie dazu motiviert und welche Werteeinstellungen diesem Engagement zugrunde liegen. Diese Fragen interessieren vor allem im Kontext der Solidarisierung in Europa und der kontrastierenden Positionen osteuropäischer EU-Mitgliedstaaten, die sich gegen die Aufnahme von Geflüchteten aussprechen. Diese Positionen gehen mit einer vergleichsweise hohen Fremdenfeindlichkeit und Nationalisierung der Bevölkerung in Osteuropa einher. Bisherige Forschungsergebnisse zeigen diesbezüglich, dass Migrantinnen aus Polen häufig in der Arbeit mit Geflüchteten in Deutschland engagiert sind, obwohl sie in Polen nie aktiv gewesen sind. Diese Einstellung „erlernen“ sie vielmehr nach der Migration. Durch den Vergleich der Ergebnisse dieser Studie mit Umfragen in Polen sollen die Auswirkungen der Migration auf ehrenamtliches Engagement nun bestimmt werden. Da die Migrant*innen soziale Netzwerke in das Herkunftsland pflegen, kann eine Änderung von Werten und Einstellungen auch auf Nicht-Migrant*innen wirken. Auch durch ihr Wahlverhalten in Deutschland und Polen können Migrant*innen die Prozesse der Solidarisierung in Europa beeinflussen."
Year 2016
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24 Project

Theorizing the Ukrainian Case: Pushing the Boundaries of Migration Studies Through a Europe–US Comparison

Authors Cinzia D. Solari
Book Title Ukrainian Migration to the European Union
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25 Book Chapter

Migration, Organizations and Transnational Ties

Authors Zeynep Sezgin, Ludger Pries
Book Title Cross Border Migrant Organizations in Comparative Perspective
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26 Book Chapter

Research-Policy Dialogues in the Netherlands

Authors Han Entzinger, Stijn Verbeek, Peter Scholten
Book Title Integrating Immigrants in Europe
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27 Book Chapter

The Second and Third Generation in Rotterdam: Increasing Diversity Within Diversity

Authors Frans Lelie, Maurice Crul, Elif Keskiner
Book Title Coming to Terms with Superdiversity
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28 Book Chapter

Strengthening Social Capital through Bilingual Competence in a Transnational Migrant Community: Mexicans in Upstate New York

Authors Kate Grim-Feinberg, Kate Grim-Feinberg
Year 2007
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 6
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29 Journal Article

Ukrainian Migration to Poland: A “Local” Mobility?

Authors Marta Kindler, Zuzanna Brunarska, Monika Szulecka, ...
Book Title Ukrainian Migration to the European Union
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30 Book Chapter

From Parent to Child? Transmission of Educational Attainment Within Immigrant Families: Methodological Considerations

Authors Renee Reichl Luthra, Thomas Soehl
Year 2015
Journal Name Demography
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31 Journal Article

God Bless Our Children? The Role of Generation, Discrimination and Religious Context for Migrants in Europe

Authors Koen Van der Bracht, Pieter-Paul Verhaeghe, Bart Van de Putte
Year 2013
Journal Name International Migration
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32 Journal Article

Learning language that matters

Authors Christa Nieuwboer, Rogier van't Rood
Year 2016
Journal Name International Journal of Intercultural Relations
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33 Journal Article

Introduction

Authors Maurice Crul, Peter Scholten, Paul van de Laar
Book Title Coming to Terms with Superdiversity
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34 Book Chapter

A social network analysis of substance use among immigrant adolescents in six European cities

Year 2016
Journal Name Social Science & Medicine
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35 Journal Article

Research-Policy Dialogues in Italy

Authors Tiziana Caponio
Book Title Integrating Immigrants in Europe
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36 Book Chapter

Reversal of the Gender Order? Male Marriage Migration to Germany by North African and Turkish Men: Consequences for Family Life, Work, and the Socialization of the Next Generation

Principal investigator Ursula Apitzsch (Principal Investigator)
Description
The planned study aims at the investigation of the phenomenon what is known as marriage migration (also called transnational marriage) to Germany by male Muslim migrants. By means of biographical narrative interviews with male migrants from North Africa and Turkey, the research project aims at dealing with the multidimensional and multifaceted character of male marriage migration to Germany. The subject male marriage migration can be approached from different perspectives and related aspects. In the frame of this research project, through a sampling which consists of married couples composed of a male migrant from one of the countries mentioned above and a female descendant of a migrant family with a residence permit in Germany, we want to consider this issue in all its complexity and implications regarding the debates on integration of the migrants, integration of male migrants into the labour market, gender relations and dynamics within the migrant family, and (un) chancing conceptions and visions of manhood in migration processes and the contestation/ negotiation of migrant masculinities. Regarding the studies of the last years it is noteworthy that all marriage migration studies are rather focussing on women as migrating subjects. Although it is noticed, too, that there are men as well migrating to their wives, there is no study focussing exclusively on migrating men in context of marriage. This fact may be - especially in Germany - an expression of the emotional public discussion concerning forced marriages. Nevertheless, the marriage migration of men is the desideratum of past and current marriage migration studies. This gap will be filled with the following research proposal. Our hypothesis is that women of the second or third generation of migrant families might be hoping for a realistic chance of founding a family and bringing up children through marrying a partner from the country of origin while they continue to work and remain the bread winners in the country of immigration and thus strengthen their autonomy (while their husbands are waiting for working permits and/or job opportunities and meanwhile have to take over care obligations within the family). In general, we want to show that male marriage migration can be seen both as "cause and the effect" of changing gender orders.
Year 2012
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37 Project

Healthy Migrants in an Unhealthy City? The Effects of Time on the Health of Migrants Living in Deprived Areas of Glasgow

Authors Ade Kearns, Carol Tannahill, Elise Whitley, ...
Year 2017
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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38 Journal Article

Conclusions: Coming to Terms with Superdiversity?

Authors Peter Scholten, Maurice Crul, Paul van de Laar
Book Title Coming to Terms with Superdiversity
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39 Book Chapter

Consequences of Intra-European Movement for CEE Migrants in European Urban Regions

Authors Ursula Reeger
Book Title Between Mobility and Migration
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40 Book Chapter

Young People of Migrant Origin in Sweden

Authors Charles Westin, C Westin
Year 2003
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 38
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41 Journal Article

Speaking Truth to Power? Why Civil Society, Beyond Academia, Remains Marginal in EU Migration Policy

Authors Ann Singleton
Book Title Integrating Immigrants in Europe
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42 Book Chapter

Dimensions of Migrant Integration in Western Europe

Authors Anthony F. Heath, Silke L. Schneider
Year 2021
Journal Name Frontiers in Sociology
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43 Journal Article

From welcome culture to welcome limits? Uncovering preference changes over time for sheltering refugees in Germany

Authors Ulf Liebe, Juergen Meyerhoff, Caspar Chorus, ...
Year 2018
Journal Name PLOS ONE
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45 Journal Article

Conclusion

Authors Joëlle Moret
Book Title European Somalis' Post-Migration Movements
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46 Book Chapter

Migration from Central and Eastern Europe to Turkey

Authors Tuğba Acar, Deniz Karcı Korfalı
Book Title Between Mobility and Migration
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47 Book Chapter

Migration of Ukrainian Nationals to Portugal: The Visibility of a New Migration Landscape

Authors Sónia Pereira, Maria Lucinda Fonseca
Book Title Ukrainian Migration to the European Union
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48 Book Chapter

Shifts in Intergenerational Mobility of Indian Immigrant Entrepreneurs

Authors Meena Chavan, Lucy Taksa
Year 2017
Journal Name International Migration
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49 Journal Article

Incorporation, development, migrant organizations and state responsibility across borders

Authors Alexandra Délano Alonso, Alexandra Delano Alonso
Year 2017
Journal Name Ethnic and Racial Studies
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50 Journal Article

Immigrant Newcomers and the Old Politics of Nationalism

Authors Fiona Barker
Book Title Nationalism, Identity and the Governance of Diversity
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51 Book Chapter

A Transnational Approach to Understanding Indicators of Mental Health, Alcohol Use and Reproductive Health Among Indigenous Mexican Migrants

Authors Maria Luisa Zuniga, Shira Goldenberg, Wayne Cornelius, ...
Year 2014
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
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52 Journal Article

Beyond the ‘Migrant Network’? Exploring Assistance Received in the Migration of Brazilians to Portugal and the Netherlands

Authors Masja van Meeteren, Sonia Pereira
Year 2018
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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53 Journal Article

Migrant Organisations: Embodied Community Capital?

Authors Alessio D’Angelo
Book Title Migrant Capital
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54 Book Chapter

Cities as Providers of Services to Migrant Populations

Authors Alexander Wolffhardt, Migration Policy Group (MPG)
Year 2018
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55 Policy Brief

Transnational contention, domestic integration: assimilating into the hostland polity through homeland activism

Authors Sharon Madriaga Quinsaat
Year 2019
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
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56 Journal Article

When Policy Meets Practice: A Study of Ethnic Community-Based Organizations for Children and Youth

Authors Guro Ødegård, Marianne Takle
Book Title Contested Childhoods: Growing up in Migrancy
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57 Book Chapter

The online migrant communities and the digital transnational communication networks

Authors Ivana Matteucci
Year 2020
Journal Name AGATHOS-AN INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF THE HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES
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58 Journal Article

"Beyond Ethnic Economy": Religiosity, Social Entrepreneurship, and Solidarity Formation of Indonesian Migrants in Taiwan

Authors Rudolf Yuniarto
Year 2016
Journal Name MAKARA HUMAN BEHAVIOUR STUDIES IN ASIA
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59 Journal Article

Between National Models and Multi-Level Decoupling: The Pursuit of Multi-Level Governance in Dutch and UK Policies Towards Migrant Incorporation

Authors Peter Scholten
Year 2016
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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60 Journal Article

Between National Models and Multi-Level Decoupling: The Pursuit of Multi-Level Governance in Dutch and UK Policies Towards Migrant Incorporation

Authors Peter Scholten
Year 2016
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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61 Journal Article

Skills and Integration of Migrants, Refugees and Asylum Applicants in European Labour Markets

Description
Despite the polarization in public and policy debates generated by the post-2014 fluxes of refugees, asylum applicants and migrants, European countries need to work out an evidence-based way to deal with migration and asylum rather than a prejudice-based one. The proposed project, SIRIUS, builds on a multi-dimensional conceptual framework in which host country or political-institutional, societal and individual-related conditions function either as enablers or as barriers to migrants’, refugees’ and asylum seekers’ integration via the labour market. SIRIUS has three main objectives: A descriptive objective: To provide systematic evidence on post-2014 migrants, refugees and asylum applicants especially women and young people and their potential for labour market employment and, more broadly, social integration. An explanatory objective: To advance knowledge on the complexity of labour market integration for post-2014 migrants, refugees and asylum applicants, and to explore their integration potential by looking into their spatial distribution (in relation to the distribution of labour demand across the labour market), while taking into account labour market characteristics and needs in different country and socio-economic contexts. A prescriptive objective: To advance a theoretical framework for an inclusive integration agenda, outlining an optimal mix of policy pathways for labour market integration including concrete steps that Member States and other European countries along with the EU can take to ensure that migrant-integration policies and the broader system of workforce-development, training, and employment programmes support new arrivals’ access to decent work opportunities and working conditions. SIRIUS has a mixed methods approach and innovative dissemination plan involving online priority action networks, film essays, festival, job fair and an applied game along with scientific and policy dialogue workshops and conferences.
Year 2018
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62 Project

Parental attitudes: A study of German, Greek, and second generation Greek migrant adolescents

Authors G Siefen, BD Kirkcaldy, JA Athanasou
Year 1996
Journal Name [Migration Policy Centre]
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63 Journal Article

Introduction

Authors Joëlle Moret
Book Title European Somalis' Post-Migration Movements
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64 Book Chapter

Gaps in protest activities between natives and individuals of migrant origin in Europe

Authors Katia Pilati
Year 2018
Journal Name Acta Sociologica
Citations (WoS) 1
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66 Journal Article

Identity Development Among Youth of Vietnamese Descent in the Czech Republic

Authors Eva Janská, Andrea Svobodová
Book Title Contested Childhoods: Growing up in Migrancy
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67 Book Chapter

The Migration-Development Nexus Evidence and Policy Options State-of-the-Art Overview

Authors N Nyberg-Sorensen, Ninna Nyberg-Sorensen, Nicholas Van Hear, ...
Year 2002
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 94
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68 Journal Article

The New European Migration Laboratory: East Europeans in West European Cities

Authors Adrian Favell
Book Title Between Mobility and Migration
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69 Book Chapter

Problems of Migrant Integration in Ukraine

Authors Oleksii POZNIAK
Description
The paper assesses opportunities and develops proposals for the integration of immigrants, as well as the adaptation of re-emigrants – long-term Ukrainian labour migrants returning home. An analysis of immigration to Ukraine has been carried out on the basis of: the 2001 population census; the current registering of migration processes; and also administrative sources of information. These sources include material from the Ministry of the Interior of Ukraine, the State Migration Service of Ukraine, the State Employment Service of the Ministry of Social Policy of Ukraine, the Ministry of Education and Science, Youth and Sports of Ukraine, as well as data from special sampling surveys, including those held under the author’s guidance. The paper considers three specific migration groups in Ukraine: ‘non-traditional’ immigrants; the ‘Soviet Diaspora’; and long-term labour emigrants. An assessment has been made of ‘non-traditional’ immigrants in Ukraine and the prospects for their integration. A bilateral approach was here employed – the comparison of opinions from Ukrainian citizens and from foreigners on the basis of student youth surveys (including foreign students). It has been demonstrated that the frequency of contacts between immigrants and the receiving society is an important integration mechanism. An assessment has been made of the conditions of long-term Ukrainian migrants in recipient countries with the conclusion that these conditions are not significantly different from the conditions of short- and medium-term migrants. Particular attention has been paid to the ‘Soviet Diaspora,’ thus far practically untouched by scholarly publications in Ukraine. It is shown that the Soviet Diaspora in Ukraine (and other former USSR republics) has certain features sharply distinguishing it from ‘diaspora’ in the classical sense. An attempt has been made to define the term, develop the criteria to limit the reference groups and to assess the dimensions of the Soviet Diaspora. An analysis of current Ukrainian immigration policies has been given. Policy recommendations for perfecting Ukrainian state policy in the field of immigration, immigrants’ integration and the reintegration of returning long-term Ukrainian labour migrants have been formulated as well.
Year 2012
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70 Report

Transnational ties and the health of sub-Saharan African migrants: The moderating role of gender and family separation

Authors Patience A. Afulani, Joseph Asunka, May Sudhinaraset, ...
Year 2016
Journal Name Social Science & Medicine
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71 Journal Article

The Temporary Nature of Ukrainian Migration: Definitions, Determinants and Consequences

Authors Marta Kindler, Agata Górny
Book Title Ukrainian Migration to the European Union
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72 Book Chapter

Generational differences in translocal practices: Insights from rural-urban remittances in Vanuatu

Authors Kirstie Petrou
Year 2018
Journal Name Population, Space and Place
Citations (WoS) 1
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73 Journal Article

Verbreitung und Kontextbedingungen Transnationaler Migrantenorganisationen in Europa

Principal investigator Ludger Pries (Principal Investigator), Zeynep Sezgin (Principal Investigator)
Description
Das zivilgesellschaftliche Engagement von Migranten lässt sich mit einer Perspektive auf die einzelne Gesellschaft nicht immer ausreichend erfassen. Ein interdisziplinäres und transnationales Forschungsteam will in Deutschland, Großbritannien, Polen und Spanien untersuchen, wie die Migrantenorganisationen ihre Ressourcen verteilen und wie eng verteilte Organisationseinheiten koordiniert werden. Das Interesse der Studiengruppe gilt u. a. der Frage, ob Migrantenorganisationen zu qualitativ neuen Formen der europäischen und generell der transnationalen gesellschaftlichen Integration beitragen, wenn sie die Grenzen einzelner europäischer Ankunftsstaaten überschreiten.
Year 2007
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74 Project

Latino/as in the South: Immigration, integration and identity

Authors Suzanne Oboler
Year 2012
Journal Name Latino Studies
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75 Journal Article

The Economic Contribution of Humanitarian Settlers in Australia

Authors G Hugo
Year 2014
Journal Name International Migration
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76 Journal Article

Migrants, Ethnic Minorities and the Labour Market

Authors Andrea Rea, John Wrench, Nouria Ouali
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78 Book

Exploring Social and Geographical Trajectories of Latin Americans in Sweden

Authors Roger Andersson
Year 2015
Journal Name International Migration
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79 Journal Article

The Diversification of Intra-European Movement

Authors Deniz Sert
Book Title Between Mobility and Migration
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80 Book Chapter

Child Health and Migrant Parents in South-East Asia

Description
Migration is often part of an economically beneficial livelihood strategy for transnational families. For many of the sending countries in Southeast Asia, a growing proportion of transnational migrants, particularly in Indonesia and the Philippines, are women. Many of these female migrants are married and an unknown number leave their children behind. To date, no official data exists on the number of children under 12 years of age with one or both parents absent due to migration but anecdotal evidence suggests that growing numbers of transnational migrants from the region leave children behind. Although most migrants send remittances to left-behind kin, visits home tend to be infrequent with migrants going away for two or more years at a time. With demand from wealthy countries for domestic workers, nurses and other carers increasing as their populations age, solving care problems in rich countries may be creating a considerable ‘crisis of care’ in less developed countries. However, little is known about the multi-dimensional impacts of migration on left-behind families, particularly children. It is not known whether left-behind children themselves are more vulnerable to poor physical and mental health outcomes, or in what way, when and under what circumstances do they benefit and/or suffer from the absence of parent(s), especially when the migrant is the child’s mother. CHAMPSEA Wave 1 is the first mixed-method study aimed at filling this significant gap in existing knowledge by examining both the reconfiguration of familial support systems after parental migration and the impact on child health/well-being in Southeast Asia. CHAMPSEA Wave 2 continues to investigate the long-term impacts of parental migration on the health and well-being of children who took part in CHAMPSEA Wave 1. The follow-up study surveyed and interviewed members of the same CHAMPSEA households in Indonesia (East and West Java) and the Philippines (Bulacan and Laguna) including children in middle childhood (then 3, 4 and 5 years and are now 11, 12 and 13) and young adults (then 9, 10 and 11 and are now 17, 18 and 19). Using the same mixed-methods research design utilised in CHAMPSEA Wave 1 that capitalizes on the complementary strengths of quantitative and qualitative methods, CHAMPSEA Wave 2 collects primary data using carefully designed survey instruments in order to create a unique longitudinal data set that will allow the investigation of multiple dimensions of children’s health and well-being. Through the longitudinal examination of transnational migration/householding, familial care politics and left-behind children, CHAMPSEA Wave 2 aims to: enhance knowledge on the health and well-being of children left behind in Southeast Asia when one/both parents migrate overseas for work; examine comparative impacts of paternal/maternal migration on child health over time; and contribute to academic, community, and policy debates in the region and beyond on larger questions relating to the feminisation of ‘care migration’ and the politics of care in sending communities, the organisation of reproductive labour within transnational households, and the migration-and-development nexus.
Year 2008
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81 Project

Transnational involvement and social integration

Authors ERIK SNEL, GODFRIED ENGBERSEN, ARJEN LEERKES
Year 2006
Journal Name Global Networks
Citations (WoS) 148
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82 Journal Article

The Bibimbap Migration Theory? Challenges of Korea’s Multicultural Mix and Social Integration Development

Authors Shawn Shen
Year 2017
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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83 Journal Article

Social Stigma, Social Capital Reconstruction, and Rural Migrants in Urban China: A Population Health Perspective

Authors Xinguang Chen, Danhua Lin, Xiaoyi Fang, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Human Organization
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84 Journal Article

Do First- and Second-Generation Migrants Stay Longer in Social Assistance Than Natives in Belgium?

Authors Sarah Carpentier, Karel Neels, Karel Van den Bosch
Year 2017
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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85 Journal Article

Changing sector? Social mobility among female migrants in care and cleaning sector in Spain and Sweden

Authors María Sánchez-Domínguez, Maria Sanchez-Dominguez, Susanne Fahlen, ...
Year 2018
Journal Name Migration Studies
Citations (WoS) 1
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86 Journal Article

The Second Generation in Germany: Between School and Labor Market

Authors Susanne Worbs, S Worbs
Year 2003
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 51
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89 Journal Article

Life satisfaction of immigrants: does cultural assimilation matter?

Authors Viola Angelini, Luca Corazzini, Laura Casi
Year 2015
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
Citations (WoS) 18
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90 Journal Article

The educational integration of migrants : what is the role of sending society actors and is there a transnational educational field?

Authors Dirk JACOBS
Description
It is well documented that in most European countries migrants have lower educational attainment levels than natives. Access to education for migrant children is almost universally guaranteed in the EU, but this does not automatically equate to access to adapted education, taking into account specific needs linked to socio-economic disadvantages and linguistic challenges. Furthermore, social and ethnic school segregation constitutes a serious barrier towards access to good education for migrant children. Sending society actors seem to have only a limited impact on the educational integration of migrant children in destination countries, but initiatives like diaspora schools constitute one strategy to try and improve the educational outcomes of migrant children. The scientific literature has only given limited space to the potential role played by sending society actors for access to good education for migrant children. The Interact-project should aim to cover this field and assess whether the role played by sending society actors has not unjustly been overlooked.
Year 2013
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91 Report

The effect of acculturation and discrimination on mental health symptoms and risk behaviors among adolescent migrants in Israel.

Authors Ora Nakash, Maayan Nagar, Anat Shoshani, ...
Journal Name Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology
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92 Journal Article

Social interactions between immigrants and host country populations : a country-of-origin perspective

Authors Sonia GSIR
Description
This paper aims at exploring how countries of origin can affect migrants’ socio-cultural integration in multicultural European societies. Socio-cultural integration is considered through the lenses of different kinds of social interactions between migrants and host society namely: intermarriages, interethnic friendship, interethnic relations in workplaces, and encounters in the neighbourhood. The literature review highlighted that these social interactions prove to depend on a multiplicity of factors related mainly to the destination country (such as residential segregation, degree of racism and acceptance, opportunities for encounters and neighbourhood effects) and of individual factors related to the migrant (such as demographic characteristics, migration trajectory and length of residence and work position). The impact of countries of origin and transnational links is more difficult to assess considering that little research has directly dealt with the issue. However, the paper shows that some non-state actors such as family members and some state-actors such as Ministries or consulates, may have an influence on the social interactions of emigrants abroad even though this influence can be indirect. The paper tries to map actors and related actions including very specific cases like family pressure to discourage intermarriage or broader ones through programmes targeting diaspora which may have an empowerment effect on emigrants and thus foster their socio-cultural integration. Finally, through the paper, some specific case studies on transnational ties and integration are presented and several hypotheses and questions for further research are highlighted.
Year 2014
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94 Report

Pathways to Integration: Lessons from Australia’s Humanitarian Migrant Resettlement Programs

Year 2017
Journal Name Studia Migracyjne - Przegląd Polonijny
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95 Journal Article

A family affair: how and why second-generation Filipino-Americans engage in transnational social and economic connections

Authors Armand Gutierrez
Year 2018
Journal Name Ethnic and Racial Studies
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96 Journal Article

‘For us, Migration is Ordinary’: Post-1989 Labour Migration from Bulgaria to Turkey

Authors Ayse Parla
Book Title Migration in the Southern Balkans
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97 Book Chapter

Migrant worker acculturation in China

Authors Yongxia Gui, JW Berry, Yong Zheng, ...
Year 2012
Journal Name International Journal of Intercultural Relations
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98 Journal Article

Transnational migrant families: navigating marriage, generation and gender in multiple spheres

Authors Mulki Al-Sharmani, Marja Tiilikainen, Sanna Mustasaari
Year 2017
Journal Name Migration Letters
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99 Journal Article

Creating transregional collective nostalgia: the organising role of Catholic parishes among Louisiana migrants in Great Migration-era Los Angeles

Authors Faustina M. DuCros
Year 2017
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
Citations (WoS) 1
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100 Journal Article
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