Angola

Showing page of 81 results, sorted by

Linguistic hypotheses on the origin of Namibian Khoekhoe speakers

Authors Wilfrid Heinrich Gerhard Haacke
Year 2008
Journal Name SOUTHERN AFRICAN HUMANITIES
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2 Journal Article

Performing “China in Africa” for the West: Chinese migrant discourses in Angola

Authors Cheryl Mei-ting Schmitz, Cheryl Mei-Ting Schmitz
Year 2018
Journal Name Asian and Pacific Migration Journal
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3 Journal Article

THE IMPORTANCE OF ANCESTRAL GAMES AS A MECHANISM OF CULTURAL VALUATION AND A MECHANISM OF SOCIAL RELATIONS CASE STUDY CASEUU INDIGENOUS COMMUNITY OF MAYAPO IN LA GUAJIRA, COLOMBIA

Authors Alcides Rafael Daza Daza, Margelis Brillid Illidge Fonseca, Alexis Carabali Angola
Year 2020
Journal Name PRISMA SOCIAL
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4 Journal Article

Report on citizenship law : Angola

Authors Patrícia JERÓNIMO
Description
This report discusses citizenship in Angola. It explores the history of citizenship in this country, modes of acquisition and loss, and current debates and reform plans regarding citizenship policy.
Year 2019
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5 Report

International parental migration and the psychological well-being of children in Ghana, Nigeria, and Angola

Authors Valentina Mazzucato, Allen White, Jeanne Vivet, ...
Year 2015
Journal Name Social Science & Medicine
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6 Journal Article

The Power in and of Labour Relations

Authors Lisa Åkesson
Book Title Postcolonial Portuguese Migration to Angola
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7 Book Chapter

From expulsion to extortion: deportability, predatory policing and West African migrants in Angola

Authors Paolo Gaibazzi
Year 2017
Journal Name Citizenship Studies
Citations (WoS) 3
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8 Journal Article

Migrants, Settlers and Colonists: The Biopolitics of Displaced Bodies

Authors Cristiana Bastos
Year 2008
Journal Name International Migration
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10 Journal Article

"HOMELAND IS WHERE MY FEET ARE": THE PLURAL TERRITORIES NARRATED IN A RAINHA GINGA, BY JOSE EDUARDO AGUALUSA

Authors Marcele Aires Franceschini
Year 2019
Journal Name HUMANIDADES & INOVACAO
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12 Journal Article

Childbearing in crisis: War, migration and fertility in Angola

Authors Winfred Avogo, Victor Agadjanian
Year 2008
Journal Name Journal of Biosocial Science
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13 Journal Article

Angola: A Model Repatriation Programme?

Authors K. Kalumiya
Year 2004
Journal Name Refugee Survey Quarterly
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15 Journal Article

West African strangers and the politics of inhumanity in Angola

Authors PAOLO GAIBAZZI
Year 2018
Journal Name American Ethnologist
Citations (WoS) 2
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16 Journal Article

South Atlantic Dialogue in the Favela: Angolan Immigration Narrated by a Brazilian Theatre Company

Authors Nicolas Quirion
Year 2021
Journal Name LUSOTOPIE
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18 Journal Article

A chronology of nostalgia: memories of former Angolan and Mozambican worker trainees to East Germany

Authors Marcia C. Schenck
Year 2018
Journal Name Labor history
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19 Journal Article

Humanitarianism and local service institutions in Angola

Authors Ian Christoplos
Year 1998
Journal Name Disasters
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20 Journal Article

Forced migration and HIV/AIDS risks in Angola

Authors Victor Agadjanian, Winfred Avogo
Year 2008
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 7
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21 Journal Article

Refugee Repatriation and Local Politics in Angola: Conflict and Creativity Following the Return of Chiefs and Party Functionaries

Principal investigator Katharina Inhetveen (Principal Investigator), Martin Sökefeld (Principal Investigator)
Description
Migration and return migration are challenging phenomena of creativity and adaptation, both in past and contemporary Africa. They cause changes in local structures and induce conflicts, which propel further cycles of adaptation and creativity by locals and migrants.The project focuses on the political dimension of such changes by analyzing the case of returning Angolan refugees after years or decades in Zambian refugee camps. More specifically, it studies the return of refugees who held political positions prior to their flight from Angola, either as neo-traditional chiefs or as functionaries of the UNITA party/rebel group. The project addresses a twofold question. Firstly, it is asked what kinds of repercussions are invoked by the return of such refugees and their re-immersion into the local political structures which will have changed during their years of absence. What kind of political order emerges from the interaction between returned political leaders and those who stayed? Secondly, it is asked how this new political order is influenced by the experiences of the returnees during their time as camp refugees. In particular, the project will examine the influence, if any, of their exposure to the international refugee regime, which propagates humanitarian and democratic values (often seen as Western values) in the camps. Has this experience shaped the new political engagement in Angola of local leaders, who have returned after staying in the refugee camps of Zambia?
Year 2011
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22 Project

Evaluation of UNHCR's returnee reintegration programme in Angola

Authors Jeff Crisp, José Riera, Raquel Freitas, ...
Year 2008
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23 Report

Forced migration and child health and mortality in Angola

Authors Winfred Avogo, Victor Agadjanian
Year 2010
Journal Name Social Science & Medicine
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24 Journal Article

Introduction: Setting the Scene

Authors Lisa Åkesson
Book Title Postcolonial Portuguese Migration to Angola
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25 Book Chapter

The Impacts of Conservation and Militarization on Indigenous Peoples: A Southern African San Perspective

Authors Robert K. Hitchcock
Year 2019
Journal Name HUMAN NATURE-AN INTERDISCIPLINARY BIOSOCIAL PERSPECTIVE
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26 Journal Article

Forced migration and HIV/AIDS risks in Angola

Authors Victor Agadjanian, Winfred Avogo
Year 2008
Journal Name International Migration
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27 Journal Article

Peace in Angola: IDPs on the way home?

Authors N.M. Birkeland
Year 2003
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28 Report

Luanda - Holanda: Irregular Migration from Angola to the Netherlands

Authors Joris Van Wijk
Year 2010
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
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29 Journal Article

Luanda - Holanda: Irregular Migration from Angola to the Netherlands

Authors Joris van Wijk
Year 2010
Journal Name International Migration
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30 Journal Article

Bodily Practices and Colonialism: Sport and Physical Culture in Luanda, 1860-1930

Authors Andrea Marzano
Year 2018
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF SPORT
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31 Journal Article

When the displaced return challenges to reintegration in Angola

Authors Alexandra Kaun, UNHCR. Policy Development and Evaluation Service
Year 2008
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32 Report

ANGOLA - MEETING HEALTH AND HEALTH RELATED NEEDS WITH REFUGEES

Authors SP SIMMONDS, H BROWN
Year 1979
Journal Name Disasters
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33 Journal Article

Race, Church, and Colonial Government in the Atlantic: the case of Angola in the age of Enlightenment

Description
ATLANTIC_ANGOLA seeks to address the issue of race by analyzing its intersections with religion/church and colonial government in Angola in the second half of the 18th-century/beginning of the 19th century. Being the main provider of slaves to Brazil, Angola had a significant role for the economic success of the Portuguese South American colony, but also in the broader context of the Portuguese empire, due its privileged geographic position in the way between Asia and Brazil. That explains the increasing attention it started to receive from the Portuguese Crown after c. 1750.The aim of ATLANTIC_ANGOLA is to understand the role of the Catholic Church in disciplining and controlling the population, and instilling ideas of racial difference. The project hypothesis is that at least part of the population resisted the disciplining aims of the rulers. That resistance took different forms, but the result was the constitution of a creolized society, mainly in the city of Luanda and its hinterland. The project will contribute to the discussion of the relations between races and perceptions of the “other” in the context of the Portuguese empire. Doing so, ATLANTIC_ANGOLA proposes a path-breaking approach to problems still understudied concerning the history of European colonization of Africa before the 19th century. It will help to develop a better understanding of the historical dynamics of the relations between Europe and Africa over the longue durée. It will also contribute to the historical explanation of the long-term effects of the colonization and the formation of the post-colonial societies, but also to the perception both of the Europeans towards Africa and Africans, and those towards Europe. As to the more tangible outcomes of this project, they include 2 books, 3 articles in major peer-reviewed journals, 1 international conference, a talk series, and the setting-up of an online project.
Year 2017
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34 Project

Migracje młodych, wykształconych ludzi poza Unię Europejską

Year 2012
Journal Name Analizy Biura Analiz Sejmowych
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35 Journal Article

Colonial Migration to Angola and Mozambique: Constraints and Illusions

Authors Cláudia Castelo
Book Title Imperial Migrations
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36 Book Chapter

Eastern and Southern Africa

Authors Brendan Girdler‐Brown, Brendan Girdler-Brown
Year 1998
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 12
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38 Journal Article

Plundering Polarities: Writing about the Colonisation of the Body

Authors Ana Lucia Sa
Year 2012
Journal Name REVISTA DE DIALECTOLOGIA Y TRADICIONES POPULARES
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39 Journal Article

Queen Njinga in a South-Atlantic Dialogue: Gender, Race and Identity

Authors Doris Wieser
Year 2017
Journal Name Iberoamericana
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40 Journal Article

Atlantic Women in Motion: Ana Miranda's and Jose Eduardo Agualusa's Postcolonial Historical Novel

Authors Edvaldo A. Bergamo
Year 2017
Journal Name Iberoamericana
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41 Journal Article

Conclusions: Continuity, Rupture and Hybridity

Authors Lisa Åkesson
Book Title Postcolonial Portuguese Migration to Angola
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42 Book Chapter

The effect of mass influx on labor markets: Portuguese 1974 evidence revisited

Authors Erik Mäkelä, Erik Makela
Year 2017
Journal Name European Economic Review
Citations (WoS) 2
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43 Journal Article

A Cross-Cultural Investigation of Satisfaction with Sex Life Among Emerging Adults

Authors F Neto, Maria da Conceicao Pinto
Year 2015
Journal Name Social Indicators Research
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44 Journal Article

IBERIAN AND ANGLO-SAXON RACISM - STUDY OF PORTUGUESE ANGOLA AND SOUTH-AFRICA

Authors K JORDAAN
Year 1979
Journal Name Race & Class
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45 Journal Article

Educational performance of children of migrant parents in Ghana, Nigeria and Angola

Authors Victor Cebotari, Valentina Mazzucato
Year 2016
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
Citations (WoS) 8
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46 Journal Article

How Brazilian are Quicumbis? On Mesticagem and "African Indians" in Brazilian Popular Culture

Authors Jeroen Dewulf
Year 2021
Journal Name LUSO-BRAZILIAN REVIEW
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47 Journal Article

Retention and Attrition of Umbundu in Sao Tome and Principe

Authors Gerardo Augusto Lorenzino
Year 2015
Journal Name SAGE OPEN
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48 Journal Article

IBERIAN AND ANGLO-SAXON RACISM - STUDY OF PORTUGUESE ANGOLA AND SOUTH-AFRICA

Authors K JORDAAN
Year 1979
Journal Name Race & Class
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49 Journal Article

Looking (also) at the Other Side of the Story. Resilience Processes in Migrants

Authors Sandra Roberto, Carla Moleiro
Year 2016
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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50 Journal Article

Transnational families and the subjective well-being of migrant parents: Angolan and Nigerian parents in the Netherlands

Authors Karlijn Haagsman, Valentina Mazzucato, Bilisuma B. Dito
Year 2015
Journal Name Ethnic and Racial Studies
Citations (WoS) 5
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51 Journal Article

Portuguese policies fostering international student mobility: a colonial legacy or a new strategy?

Authors Thais França, Elisa Alves, Beatriz Padilla
Year 2018
Journal Name Globalisation, Societies and Education
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52 Journal Article

First-Time Migration in Juvenile Common Cuckoos Documented by Satellite Tracking

Year 2016
Journal Name PLOS ONE
Citations (WoS) 10
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55 Journal Article

Genotyping of 49-plex autosomal SNP panel in Iranian Turkmens ethnic group

Authors Omid Yousef, Sayed Mostafa Hosseini
Year 2019
Journal Name LEGAL MEDICINE
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60 Journal Article

Civil war and child health: regional and ethnic dimensions of child immunization and malnutrition in Angola

Authors Victor Agadjanian, Ndola Prata
Year 2003
Journal Name Social Science & Medicine
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62 Journal Article

Creolization of the Atlantic World: The Portuguese and the Kongolese

Authors Francisco Bethencourt
Year 2011
Journal Name PORTUGUESE STUDIES
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63 Journal Article

Ricochet Effects: Global Circulations of Cultural Memory Debates

Description
'The aim of this project is for Dr Alison Ribeiro de Menezes to go from University College Dublin, Ireland, to Brown University, USA, for a period of 1 year to gain new expertise in memory debates and cultural exchanges in the Portuguese and Spanish-speaking worlds. She will transfer this to Ireland during a return year of training at University College Dublin, thereby developing a new understanding within the ERA of the global circulation of memory debates. The project addresses memory’s global migrations by shifting attention from nationally based perspectives to a multi-lingual and multi-continental view. Knowledge of identity and memory debates in the Lusophone world (including Portugal, Brazil, Angola, Mozambique, and East Timor) and of Hispanic transatlantic exchanges (particularly between Spain, Argentina, and Chile) gained at Brown will be used to develop a ‘ricochet’ model of transnational cultural exchange. The research foregrounds the contingency of exchange processes involved in memory formation, de-formation, and re-formation; explores the lessons, for the advancement of national and international justice, of the vernacularization of human rights discourses and their role in promoting memory’s cross-cultural migrations; and seeks re-centre cultural memory studies by exploring multidirectional memory in a Luso-Hispanic perspective in order to supplement and deepen prevailing Franco-German theoretical models. Through knowledge transfer activities in the incoming phase, the project will facilitate mutual exchanges between researchers and policy makers in the fields of memory, rights and retrospective justice in the ERA and so enhance research excellence and bridge links between academia and practitioners.'
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66 Project

Structural Emigration: The Revival of Portuguese Outflows

Authors Pedro Góis, José Carlos Marques
Book Title South-North Migration of EU Citizens in Times of Crisis
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68 Book Chapter

Migration and Interaction in a Contact Zone: mtDNA Variation among Bantu-Speakers in Southern Africa

Authors Chiara Barbieri, Mark Stoneking, K. Bostoen, ...
Year 2014
Journal Name PLOS ONE
Citations (WoS) 21
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69 Journal Article

On the Concept of “We are all Africans”

Authors Ali A. Mazrui
Year 1963
Journal Name American Political Science Review
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70 Journal Article

Goans in Portugal: Role of history and identity in shaping diaspora linkages

Authors Rupa CHANDA, Sriparna GHOSH
Description
The Portuguese colonial era in India began in 1502 and ended in 1961 with the annexation of Goa by India. This long standing colonial relationship led to a deep-rooted historical, cultural and social relationship between Goa and Portugal. Migration from Goa to Portugal, over different periods, played an important part in forging this relationship. This paper examines the history of migration from Goa to Portugal, the characteristics of the Goan community in Portugal, and its engagement with Goa and with India, based on secondary and primary sources of information. Section 2 discusses the different waves of migration from Goa to Portugal. It finds that Goans migrated to Portugal during the colonial period in search of education, then following the annexation of Goa by India in 1961, and subsequently during the 1970s when Goans “twice migrated” to Portugal from Mozambique and Angola following their independence. In recent decades, Goans have been migrating to Portugal to seek access to the larger European market. Today, there is a sizeable Goan community residing in Portugal. Sections 3 and 4 explore the question of identity as perceived by this community in Portugal. The findings indicate that history, the causal factors underlying migration, and the heterogeneity within the community in terms of background, economic and social status have a major influence on the notion of identity. One section of the community does not consider itself as a diaspora group or as expatriates or migrants as it sees itself as fully integrated with Portuguese society. Their connection is with Goa, not with India. Another section of the community views itself as belonging to India and also Goa, realizing that they have a distinct identity within Portugal. For the twice migrated, the issue of identity is even more complex as they identify with a third country and many have never lived in Goa or India. Section 5 discusses how this issue of identity has in manifested itself in different ways, such as through the community’ position on issues of minority representation within Portuguese society, through diaspora associations and networks, and the extent to which the community has engaged with and contributed back to Goa and India. It finds that due to the dilemma over identity, the community has had very weak economic and philanthropic ties with the homeland. Section 6 highlights the growing engagement between the Goan community in Portugal and India in recent years and some initiatives at the government level to deepen this engagement. However, it finds that a long term strategic vision has been lacking on the part of both the Indian and the Portuguese governments. Section 7 concludes by calling for a forward looking approach to engaging with the Goan diaspora community in Portugal. It recommends that this community be strategically leveraged not only to strengthen economic and cultural relations with Portugal but also to serve India’s larger foreign policy and geopolitical objectives in the Lusophone countries of Latin America and Africa.
Year 2012
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71 Report

The Making of a Portuguese Community in South Africa, 1900–1994

Authors Clive Glaser
Book Title Imperial Migrations
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72 Book Chapter

Sex, love and money along the Namibian-Angolan border

Authors Adriana de Araujo Pinho, Francisco Inacio Bastos, Simone Monteiro, ...
Year 2016
Journal Name Culture, Health & Sexuality
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73 Journal Article

Land grabbing: a preliminary quantification of economic impacts on rural livelihoods

Authors Kyle F. Davis, Paolo D'Odorico, Maria Cristina Rulli, ...
Year 2014
Journal Name Population and Environment
Citations (WoS) 33
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74 Journal Article

Where’s populism? Online media and the diffusion of populist discourses and styles in Portugal

Authors Susana Salgado
Year 2019
Journal Name European Political Science
Citations (WoS) 7
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75 Journal Article

Gangs, Migration, and Crime: The Changing Landscape in Europe and the USA

Authors Scott H. Decker, Frank van Gemert, David C. Pyrooz
Year 2009
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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76 Journal Article

MACIMIDE Global Expatriate Dual Citizenship Database

Description
The MACIMIDE Global Expatriate Dual Citizenship Dataset charts the rules that existed in near all states of the world since 1960 with regard to the loss or renunciation of citizenship after a citizen of a respective state voluntarily acquires the citizenship of another state. The central variable of the Dataset is the dualcit_cat variable. This is a categorical variable whose values may be used to interpret, in broad lines, the position of a country with regards to the expatriate dual citizenship. The dualcit_cat variable reflects what consequences the legislation and legal practice of a country attaches to the voluntary acquisition of a foreign citizenship. The value of this variable depends on a number of criteria, including whether a citizen of the reference country who voluntarily obtains a foreign citizenship automatically loses – in principle – the citizenship of the origin country, and whether a citizen of the reference country can renounce that citizenship. The value assigned to dualcit_cat reflects the position of the country on the 1st of January of the reference year. Any subsequent changes in legislation will be reflected in the dualcit_cat value of the following year and included in updated versions of the Dataset. The dualcit_binary variable is a recoding of the dualcit_cat variable. This variable can be used for broad comparisons of the dual citizenship positions around the world. The possible values reflect whether the legislation of a country, in a given reference year, provides for the automatic loss of the origin citizenship (1) or not (2). All data have been centrally collected and refer to specific provisions in national law.
Year 2018
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77 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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78 Data Set

UN Inquiry on population and development - International Migration

Description
The Inquiry gathers critically important data for monitoring the implementation of the Programme of Action of the International Conference on Population and Development and other international agreements, including the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. The Inquiry, mandated by the General Assembly in its resolution 1838 (XVII) of 18 December 1962, has been conducted by the Secretary-General at regular intervals since 1963. The Twelfth Inquiry consists of multiple-choice questions, organized in three thematic modules: Module I on population ageing and urbanization; Module II on fertility, family planning and reproductive health; and Module III on international migration. In 1994, Member States attending the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) in Cairo agreed that “population-related goals and policies are integral parts of cultural, economic and social development” and recommended that actions be taken “to measure, assess, monitor and evaluate progress towards meeting the goals of its Programme of Action”. The year 2019 will mark the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Cairo conference and adoption of the ICPD Programme of Action, which continues to provide crucial guidance for addressing the fundamental development challenges facing the world today. Population issues are also at the core of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development adopted in 2015. The United Nations Inquiry among Governments on Population and Development (the “Inquiry”) gathers critically important data for monitoring the implementation of the ICPD Programme of Action and other international agreements, including the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. The Inquiry, mandated by the General Assembly in its resolution 1838 (XVII) of 18 December 1962, has been conducted by the Secretary-General at regular intervals since 1963. The most recent Inquiry, the Eleventh, was implemented in 2014.
Year 2010
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79 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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80 Data Set

Informal Child Migration in Europe

Principal investigator Elisabeth L'orange Fürst ()
Description
Prosjektet ønsket i utgangspunktet å undersøke hvordan omsorg blir forstått og praktisert i de ulike landene og i de spesielle situasjonene som transnasjonal migrasjon representerer. Vi var interessert i forståelsen til de involverte migrerende selv, men også de ulike lands og myndigheters syn og politikk. Ikke minst gjelder dette deres oppfatninger av ”barnets beste” slik dette blir formulert i barnekonvensjonen. Forstås omsorg som noe som bør gis av foreldre i en kjernefamilie modell som norm? Kan andre typer slektskapsformer og normer gi andre praksiser og forståelser? Hvordan løser migrantene selv omsorgsspørsmål i praksis?
Year 2005
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81 Project
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