Familienbeziehungen und Migration

Migration ist ein Prozess, an dem sowohl Einzelpersonen als auch Familien beteiligt sind. Zum Beispiel können Familienbeziehungen Integrationsprozesse beeinflussen und Familienbeziehungen können sich ändern, wenn Familienmitglieder migrieren. In dieser Kategorie werden die Beziehungen nach der Migration in (erweiterten) Familien betrachtet, die (z. B. durch Heirat) vereint oder durch Migration getrennt wurden oder die zusammen migriert sind.

Zu den aufgeführten Studien gehören Studien zu Heiratsmigration, Familienzusammenführung, dem Verhältnis zwischen familiären Bindungen und wirtschaftlicher Stabilität, sozialem Kapital, familiären Bindungen zwischen Nicht-MigrantInnen in ländlichen Gebieten, Aufrechterhaltung der ethnischen Sprache, Transnationalismus und elterlichen Einflüssen auf die Einstellung gegenüber ImmigrantInnen in Aufnahmegesellschaften.

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Intergenerational Family Relations in Luxembourg

Authors Isabelle Albert, Dieter Ferring, Tom Michels
Year 2013
Journal Name European Psychologist
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
2 Journal Article

Made in France? Chinese Student Return Migration from French Business Schools

Authors Wei SHEN
Description
Chinese migration to France is not a new phenomenon; however, France has seen rapid growth of migration from China in the past decade. Among the increasingly diverse migratory flow, a prominent group is Chinese students. As in many European countries, more and more Chinese students are now studying in France, at universities, grandes écoles and language schools etc… There is limited research focusing on this group of migrants. Therefore, this paper will analyse the circular migration of Chinese students between China and France by focusing on the return migration from elite French business schools. It illustrates the importance of prior experiences and pre-acquisition of academic and professional capital on their choice to migrate to France. At the same time, this paper investigates how family ties with China and institutional agents (private and public sectors) and the multiple-layers of forces (national and supranational) behind Chinese student return migration. This paper argues that the strong family relations and contacts, career strategy and prospects for returnees and confidence in the Chinese economy are significant return factors. Returnees’ academic, professional and social experiences in France are also important in their decision. In addition, it shows how these talents are integrated in the skilled labour market and how they maintain connections with France. The return migration of Chinese students from France is a unique link and network, which needs cooperation from both parties to ensure a win-win brains circulation.
Year 2008
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
4 Report

Family ties that bind: A new view of internal migration, immobility and labour-market outcomes

Description
Internal migration (long-distance moves within national borders) is generally assumed to be beneficial to individuals and households. This FamilyTies project has been designed to make a decisive contribution to a much more comprehensive explanation of internal migration and its labour-market outcomes than current, mainly economic, explanations have achieved thus far. It introduces a novel perspective on internal migration and immobility, which focuses on the role of family outside the household in deciding on whether and where to relocate, and which takes into account contemporary family complexity: the family ties perspective. The aim is to identify the role of family ties in internal migration, immobility and labour-market outcomes. The objectives are: 1. Identifying the role of family ties as a deterrent of migration and key determinant of immobility. 2. Explaining migration towards family in relation to migration in other directions. 3. Determining to what extent and for whom family-related motives drive migration and immobility. 4. Unravelling how individual labour-market outcomes of migration versus immobility differ between (im)mobility related to family ties and (im)mobility due to other factors. Geo-coded register and census data containing micro-links between family members will be used for Sweden, Norway, Denmark, the Netherlands and Belgium, as well as survey data for Sweden, the Netherlands, the UK, the USA and New Zealand. These will be analysed using advanced applications of hazard regression, logistic regression, OLS regression and structural equation models, which take into account the multilevel and multi-actor structure of the data and issues of endogeneity and self-selection. The project will provide major new insights into migration, immobility and labour-market outcomes, and input for better predictions and policies concerning migration, population growth and decline, ethnic segregation, labour-market flexibility and family support.
Year 2017
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
6 Project

Seeking asylum and the politics of family

Authors Melanie Griffiths
Year 2017
Journal Name Families, Relationships and Societies
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7 Journal Article

Health, Wealth or Family Ties? Why Turkish Work Migrants Return from Germany

Authors Oliver Razum, Nuriye N. Sahin-Hodoglugil, Karin Polit
Year 2005
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
Citations (WoS) 34
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
9 Journal Article

Transnational Ageing, Intergenerational Family Ties and the Social Embedding of Older Italian Migrants in Australia

Authors Rosa Brandhorst
Year 2023
Book Title Handbook of Transnational Families Around the World
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
19 Book Chapter

The concept of migration and clandestinity in the Chinese culture

Authors Mara Caira
Year 2008
Journal Name Social Science Information
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21 Journal Article

From Generation to Generation: Changing Family Relations, Citizenship and Belonging

Authors Louise Waite, Claudine Attias-Donfut
Book Title Citizenship, Belonging and Intergenerational Relations in African Migration
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
22 Book Chapter

RURAL-URBAN MIGRATION AND FAMILY TIES - AN ANALYSIS OF FAMILY CONSIDERATIONS IN MIGRATION BEHAVIOR IN INDIA

Authors B BANERJEE
Year 1981
Journal Name OXFORD BULLETIN OF ECONOMICS AND STATISTICS
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23 Journal Article

‘Integration’: Migrants and Refugees between Scandinavian Welfare Societies and Family Relations

Authors Karen Fog Olwig
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
Citations (WoS) 38
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26 Journal Article

Biographic Consequences of Parent Child-Separation during the Migration Process: The Case of Guest-Worker Migration to Germany

Principal investigator Rahim Hajji (Principal Investigator)
Description
"Theoretical background and objectives Research on youth migration in Germany has given little attention to transnational family relations so far. The project explores both the extent and the long-term individual consequences of migration-related family separation during childhood. The first part of the study focuses on guest-workers' immigration strategies in order to explain the development and consequences of transnational family relations in the context of the recruitment of ""gastarbeiter"" in Germany. The study differentiates between guest workers from Southern Europe (Greece, Italy, Spain, Yugosla­via and Portugal) and from Islamic Mediterranean countries (Turkey, Morocco, Tunisia). Survey data are used to construct and describe ""migration chains"" in order to test hypotheses on transnational family relations and the extent of resulting parent-child separation. The analysis of qualitative data gathered from interviews with young migrants living in Germany permits the investigation of the familial decision-making processes concerning migration and the cones­quences of separation from parents experienced during childhood. At the second stage, the project also analyses the attachment behaviour of migrants who, in the context of immigration to Germany, temporarily lived in transnational families during their childhood. The idea that a separation from parents experienced during childhood will influence the general attachment behaviour forms the core thesis of attachment theory (Bowlby 1969, Ainsworth 1985a). But instead of concentrating on immediate social consequences of migration-related parental loss on the child-parent-relationship, the study analyses the marital status of adults depending on whether they experienced separation from their parent(s) due to migration during their childhood. Research design, data and methodology Data are analysed descriptively and by means of logistic regression models, using the German Mikrozensus 2005. Additionally, a series of interviews has been conducted with young Moroccan migrants who had been temporarily separated from their parents. Findings The extent of separation experiences differs according to ethnic background. Children with an Islamic Mediterranean background have a significantly higher hazard of experiencing a migration-related separation from one of their parents (mostly, from their father) than those from Southern European countries. A temporary loss of both parents was observed more frequently among young migrants with a European origin. The interviews reveal that it is much more difficult for the children to deal with the absence of both parents. Regression results show that the experience of a separation from parents during childhood significantly reduces the chances of marriage among adult migrants, and that the age at separation plays an important role, while the duration does not show any effects."
Year 2008
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29 Project

Networks among Bretons? - The evidence for Paris, 1875-1925

Authors LP Moch
Year 2003
Journal Name CONTINUITY AND CHANGE
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31 Journal Article

Family relations and the attitude towards ethnic minorities as close kin by marriage

Authors Maykel Verkuyten, Marcel Coenders
Year 2013
Journal Name Ethnic and Racial Studies
Citations (WoS) 10
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32 Journal Article

"Families in context: Unraveling the ways in which policy, economic, and cultural contexts structure generational interdependencies in families and their life outcomes"

Description
'Recognizing that in ageing societies many parents are also children, even grandchildren, in a multi-generational structure, the project has generational interdependencies in families as its unifying theme. Interdependencies exist when family members are emotionally, financially, practically, and morally reliant on and responsible to each other. The project’s main objective is to unravel the ways in which policy, economic, and cultural contexts structure intergenerational dependencies in families and their life outcomes. Sub-project 1: Transcending space starts from the premise that new insights can be gained from acknowledging the distinction between family and household. It focuses on the ways in which different kinds of intergenerational transfers (emotional, practical, financial) are affected by proximity versus distance. Sub-project 2: Drivers of family behaviour starts from the premise that new insights can be gained from comparing and contrasting different theoretical models underlying generational interdependence. It aims to find out whether family members help each other for different reasons, depending on where they live. Sub-project 3: Back-up functions starts from the premise that new insights can be gained from taking a multigenerational view of family ties, across life phases. It examines the necessity of family members to provide money, practical help, care, and lodging to the young and the old, given limited public safety nets. Sub-project 4: Rethinking men in families starts from the premise that insights can be gained from a more balanced treatment of men and women across topics in the research literature on families. It focuses on men with limited generational interdependencies and men in multigenerational families. The Generations and Gender Surveys (GGS) are the primary source of data. Given the absence of a survey on the family ties of migrants from CEE countries, a new survey will be carried out among Polish migrants to the Netherlands.'
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
34 Project

Emotional expression in tsukiau dating relationships in Japan

Authors James Farrer, Haruka Tsuchiya, Bart Bagrowicz
Year 2008
Journal Name Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
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39 Journal Article

Family, paisanaje, and migration among Madrid's merchants (1750-1800)

Authors JC Sola-Corbacho
Year 2002
Journal Name JOURNAL OF FAMILY HISTORY
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40 Journal Article

RELACJE MIĘDZYGENERACYJNE NA ODLEGŁOŚĆ W PERSPEKTYWIE RODZICÓW EMIGRANTÓW Z WOJEWÓDZTWA ŚLĄSKIEGO

Year 2016
Journal Name Studia Migracyjne - Przegląd Polonijny
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42 Journal Article

Family Migration

Authors Eleonore Kofman, Franz Buhr, Maria Lucinda Fonseca
Year 2022
Book Title Introduction to Migration Studies
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44 Book Chapter

Community Dimensions of Smuggling: The Case of Afghanistan and Somalia

Authors Nassim Majidi
Year 2018
Journal Name The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
45 Journal Article

Ambiguous Subjectivity, Irregular Citizenship: From Inside/Outside to Being-Caught In-between

Authors Aoileann Ni Mhurchu
Year 2015
Journal Name International Political Sociology
Citations (WoS) 3
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
47 Journal Article

Gender and Eroticism in Contemporary Art from South Africa

Authors Aneta Pawlowska
Year 2017
Journal Name WERKWINKEL-JOURNAL OF LOW COUNTRIES AND SOUTH AFRICAN STUDIES
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
48 Journal Article

Racial stereotypes revisited

Authors M.L. Clark, Willie Pearson
Year 1982
Journal Name International Journal of Intercultural Relations
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
50 Journal Article
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