El Salvador

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Access to electoral rights : El Salvador

Authors Eduardo Alberto CUÉLLAR NAVIDAD
Year 2015
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2 Report

Country report on citizenship law : El Salvador

Authors Isabel ROSALES
Year 2015
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4 Report

Through the lens of urban culture

Authors Elisa Pritzker, Karlos Carcamo
Year 2017
Journal Name KOOT-REVISTA DE MUSEOLOGIA
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5 Journal Article

Migration, Risk, and Liquidity Constraints in El Salvador

Authors Timothy Halliday
Year 2006
Journal Name Economic Development and Cultural Change
Citations (WoS) 87
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6 Journal Article

TRANS-MIGRANTS IN MEXICO: A POLICY AND ONLINE COMMUNICATIONS CASE STUDY OF THE 2014 CENTRAL AMERICAN REFUGEE CRISIS IN THE MEXICAN CONTEXT

Authors Lidija Kos-Stanisic, Emil Cancar, Josh Richardson
Year 2018
Journal Name TEORIJA IN PRAKSA
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7 Journal Article

Risk, Migration, and Rural Financial Markets: Evidence from Earthquakes in El Salvador

Authors Dean Yang
Year 2008
Journal Name SOCIAL RESEARCH
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15 Journal Article

When the children remain in El Salvador: Transnational families and familiar reunification of Salvadorian immigrants in Washington, D.C.

Authors RS Molina
Year 2004
Journal Name Revista de Dialectología y Tradiciones Populares
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16 Journal Article

Central Americans in transit through Mexico: an analysis of migration flows and containment policies (2009-2019)

Authors Lorena Mena Iturralde, Rodolfo Cruz Pineiro
Year 2021
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18 Journal Article

Immigrant concentration and educational attainment: Evidence from US data

Authors Alexei Izyumov, Nan-Ting Chou, Paul Coomes, ...
Year 2002
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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20 Journal Article

From transit to waiting: the role of migrant houses in Mexico in the trajectories of Central American migrants

Authors Guillermo Candiz, Daniele Belanger
Year 2018
Journal Name Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies / Revue canadienne des études latino-américaines et caraïbes
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24 Journal Article

​KNOMAD-ILO Migration Costs Surveys

Description
he KNOMAD-ILO Migration Costs Surveys (MCS) aim to systematically document monetary and non-monetary costs incurred by migrant workers seeking jobs abroad. The project is a joint initiative by the Global Knowledge Partnership on Migration and Development (KNOMAD), which is hosted at the World Bank, and the International Labor Organization (ILO). The data is also intended to support methodological work on developing a new Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) indicator 10.7.1 to monitor trends in recruitment costs paid by workers, of which the World Bank and ILO are joint custodians. Datasets and documentation for the 2015 and 2016 survey waves are now available on the World Bank’s Central Microdata Catalog. Collectively, the surveys covered over 19 bilateral migration corridors with a total of 5,603 interviewed migrants. The Migration Costs Surveys primarily focused on costs incurred by workers who were recruited in their home countries and received a job offer prior to migrating. On a pilot basis, several migration corridors were also surveyed to account for non-recruited migrants who moved abroad in search of work without prior job offers. In the 2015 dataset, these are limited to workers who migrated to Mexico from Guatemala, Honduras and El-Salvador and in 2016, the relevant corridors are workers who migrated to Italy from multiple African countries and from Central Asia to Russia.
Year 2015
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38 Data Set

Every Immigrant Is an Emigrant: How Migration Policies Shape the Paths to Integration (IMISEM)

Description
The IMISEM project adopts a comprehensive view of migration policy that includes both its emigrant/emigration and immigrant/immigration sides, bridging the two sides of migration policy. The main research question is: how does policy offer or hinder a path for migrants to become or remain an integral part of the polity? The theoretical framework bridges the stages of entry/exit, residency in/abroad, and access to citizenship and looks for patterns of how states manage the process of migrant inclusion in or exclusion from the polity. IMISEM gathers cross-regional evidence on the variety and depth of policy configurations governing migration trajectories for different profiles of migrants. With these data it charts the connections between policies of mobility, settlement and belonging, looking forward to extracting the underlying principles structuring them, and possibly to find whether or not there are threads of coherence across the “two sides” (emi-/immigrant policies). Using a comparative area study angle, IMISEM develops a broadened perspective on the migration policy landscape across regions. Thus, it looks at 30 cases from Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean, and Asia, to cover a wide breadth of migratory profiles and institutional contexts to which policies can be traced back un further analyses.
Year 2018
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49 Data Set

MACIMIDE Global Expatriate Dual Citizenship Database

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Year 2018
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50 Data Set

World Population Policies Database

Description
Since the mid-1970s, the World Population Policies Database, last updated in 2015, provides comprehensive and up-to-date information on the population policy situation and trends for all Member States and non-member States of the United Nations. Among several areas, the database shows the evolution of government views and policies with respect to internal and international migration. The migration strand covers internal migration, immigration, emigration, and return. The Database is updated biennially by conducting a detailed country-by-country review of national plans and strategies, programme reports, legislative documents, official statements and various international, Inter-governmental and non-governmental sources, as well as by using official responses to the United Nations Inquiry among Governments on Population and Development.
Year 2015
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51 Data Set

ELECLAW Indicators

Description
The ELECLAW indicators measure the degree of inclusion of the electoral franchise for three categories of potential voters or candidates: resident citizens, non-resident citizens and non-citizen residents. They cover both the right to vote (VOTLAW) and the right to stand as candidate (CANLAW) in three types of elections (presidential/executive, legislative and referendum) at four levels (supranational, national, regional and local). For each category of persons, the ELECLAW indicators measure on a 0 to 1 scale the degree of inclusion of electoral laws along two dimensions. First, eligibility restrictions determine the category of persons who have the right to vote or stand as candidate. Second, access restrictions determine how those eligible can exercise their right to vote by means of voter registration and voting methods. The indicators have been calculated on the basis of the qualitative information included in our National Electoral Laws and Electoral Rights databases and our country reports on Access to Electoral Rights. The current version includes the 28 Member States of the European Union based on electoral laws in both 2013 and 2015, as well as Switzerland, the Americas, and Oceania based on electoral laws in 2015.
Year 2015
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52 Data Set

Emigrant Policies Index (EMIX)

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Year 2015
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53 Data Set

Study on EU Support for Integrated Border Management in the Latin American and Caribbean Region

Principal investigator Borut Erzen (Project Coordinator), Alina Cibea (Project Team Member)
Description
The Research Team is supporting the Border Management and Visa Team in implementing the Study on EU Support for Integrated Management in the Latin American and Caribbean Region. Objective: The project aims to support the European Commission Directorate DEVCO G and other relevant EU services in preparing possible future EU assistance to the development of integrated border management in the Latin American and the Caribbean (LAC) region. Summary: Specifically, the project will carry out an independent study on the main characteristics (general features, strengths and weaknesses) and needs of the border management systems in the LAC region, as well as of the support provided so far in this area by the EU and other relevant donors. It will also provide a set of concrete recommendations on the objectives and types of activities that could be envisaged by the EU in terms of possible future support in this area in the LAC region. This support would address, in particular, the regional/sub-regional level under the DCI and also cover an analysis on possible implementation options.
Year 2012
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54 Project

UN Inquiry on population and development - International Migration

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Year 2010
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55 Data Set

Vikhrov's visa index

Description
The index is based on three types of entry visa restrictions: visa required, visa not required for short stays and visa not required. The author identifies country pairs which changed their visa regime during 1998–2010. This immigration policy index is constructed for all countries and territories in the world for both March 1998 and November 2009. This index is heterogeneous across destination and origin countries as well as over time.
Year 2009
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56 Data Set

Diaspora Engagment Policies

Description
Based on review of documentary sources on state-emigrant relations, the dataset reviews how 64 states relate to their diasporas. It shows how states constitute various extra-territorial groups as members of a loyal diaspora, through a diverse range of institutions and practices. Three higher-level types of diaspora engagement policy are identified: 1 - capacity building policies, aimed at discursively producing a state-centric ‘transnational national society’, and developing a set of corresponding state institution; 2 - extending rights to the diaspora, thus playing a role that befits a legitimate sovereign, and 3 - extracting obligations from the diaspora, based on the premise that emigrants owe loyalty to this legitimate sovereign.
Year 2008
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57 Data Set
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