Investigación y teoría de la migración.

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The increasing use of detention of asylum seekers and irregular migrants in the EU

Authors Carmine Conte, Valentina Savazzi, Migration Policy Group (MPG)
Year 2019
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1 Policy Brief

The Dynamics between Integration Policies and Outcomes: a Synthesis of the Literature

Authors Özge Bilgili, Thomas Huddleston, Anne-Linde Joki, ...
Description
This paper reviews the comparative multi-level quantitative research on the links between integration policies, the integration situation of immigrants and a wide range of individual and contextual factors. Twenty-one reviewed studies and additional supporting articles indicate that a number of individual and contextual variables explain most of the variation between countries in terms of immigrants’ labour market integration, educational attainment, naturalisation and political participation. Thanks to the use of MIPEX and similar indices, some evidence is emerging that certain integration policies can be related to the specific integration outcomes that they aim to address. So far, only certain general and targeted employment policies can be directly associated with better labour market outcomes for immigrants and a lower incidence of employment discrimination. More indirectly, facilitating naturalisation, a secure residence and a secure family life seems to have positive effects on boosting labour market outcomes for certain immigrants. In the area of employment, studies rarely focus on a specific policy or properly match it to its specific intended target group and outcome. In the area of education, the inclusiveness of the school and education system seems to matter most for immigrant and non-immigrant pupils. Although targeted immigrant education policies adopted at national level do not display consistent results across countries in terms of pupils’ tests scores, most studies conclude that inclusive schools and education systems are more successful when they also target the specific needs of immigrant pupils. Several studies on the acquisition of nationality find that naturalisation policies are perhaps the strongest determinant of the naturalisation rates for immigrants from developing countries. Further research can explore which specific elements of naturalisation policies most help or hinder naturalisation. The few studies on political participation find that targeted policies and the acquisition of nationality may boost participation rates for certain immigrant groups. The fact that studies find no link between the general integration policy (i.e. MIPEX overall score) and a specific labour market outcome (i.e. employment rates for foreign-born) does mean that no causal relationship exist between integration policies and outcomes across countries. Considering that this multi-level research is still in infancy, studies have great room for improvement in terms of their use of databases and methodological tools. A more robust methodological approach using new international datasets can better explore the nuanced links between policies and societal outcomes. Future research needs to pay greater attention to linking a specific integration policy with its actual target group and target outcomes. Studies must also take into account time-sensitive contextual factors and general policies. International surveys can improve their measurement of integration policy outcomes in terms of longterm residence, family reunification, anti-discrimination, language learning, and, to some extent, political participation.
Year 2015
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2 Report

Research-Policy Relations and Migration Studies

Authors Peter Scholten
Book Title Qualitative Research in European Migration Studies
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3 Book Chapter

Research-Policy Dialogues in Austria

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

Research-Policy Dialogues in the European Union

Authors Marthe Achtnich, Andrew Geddes
Year 2015
Book Title Integrating Immigrants in Europe
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5 Book Chapter

Research-Policy Dialogues on Migrant Integration in Europe: Comparison and Conclusions

Authors Han Entzinger, Peter Scholten, Rinus Penninx
Book Title Integrating Immigrants in Europe
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6 Book Chapter

Mapping migration studies: An empirical analysis of the coming of age of a research field

Authors Asya Pisarevskaya, Nathan Levy, Peter Scholten, ...
Year 2019
Journal Name Migration Studies
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7 Journal Article

Research-Policy Dialogues on Migrant Integration in Europe: A Conceptual Framework and Key Questions

Authors Han Entzinger, Peter Scholten, Rinus Penninx
Book Title Integrating Immigrants in Europe
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8 Book Chapter

Reflexive reciprocity under an ethics of care: Reflections from the field for refugee studies

Authors Aminath Nisha Zadhy-Çepoğlu
Year 2023
Journal Name Migration Studies
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9 Journal Article

Research-Policy Dialogues in Italy

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

Advancing knowledge on international migration : data and research needs

Authors Philippe FARGUES
Description
From the sheer numbers of migrants to the complex processes that set people on the move and the multiple changes they bring to both origin and destination countries, international migration suffers considerable deficits of knowledge. As international migration connects each country of the world with all the others, addressing knowledge gaps will require international consensus on definitions and methods of data collection. There is a long way to go before this most challenging objective will be reached. The current study describes some of the steps that need to be taken. Defining international migration A proper assessment of international migration data at the world level must be based on a systematic inventory of what exists and what does not in each country. For lack of such an inventory, this report provides an overview assessment of the various criteria used by public administrations to define and produce data on international migration. Documenting international migration Data are generally collected by national administrations to serve their own needs and not those of scientific research or evidence-based policymaking, with the result that data on international migration are too often insufficient and lacking in quality. Policymakers often lack the minimal statistical evidence necessary to make informed decisions, while academics lack the basic data needed for scientific research. This report identifies key issues that should be addressed to improve migration data for policymaking and scientific research. These include: disentangling migrants from travellers and differentiating between short-term mobility and migration; matching entry and exit data; counting emigrants, i.e. absent individuals; counting circular, seasonal and temporary migrants; and measuring irregular migration. These issues often require ad hoc measurement methods such as specialized surveys. Mapping research on international migration Research addresses the causes of international migration, the process of migration itself as well as its consequences; it does so in the countries of origin and destination, as well as in the transnational space spanning origin and destination. This paper outlines 7 priority areas for research on international migration: Determinants of migration in countries of origin; Pull factors in countries of destination; Linkages between countries of origin and destination; Migration stages; Emigrants, as actors of change in countries of origin; The inclusion of migrants and their contribution to development in destination countries; And finally, the global consequences of migration. Conclusions To significantly improve our understanding of international migration, including its multiple determinants, complex processes and diverse impacts, the following challenges need to be addressed: All countries should acknowledge that international migration is defined; by border crossing. Equating immigrants with foreign citizens confuses a geographic notion with a legal one and indirectly serves policies of exclusion; All countries should agree on producing population data by detailed country of birth using the same unified list of world countries; International organizations should make all possible efforts to extend the coverage of migration surveys to all the countries that host sizeable migrant populations in the Global North as well as in the Global South; The scientific community should organize itself at a global level to develop and disseminate methodologies to fill the huge knowledge gaps that are the result of the currently patchy, mostly administrative data.
Year 2018
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11 Report

Research-policy relations and migration studies

Year 2018
Book Title Qualitative Research in European Migration Studies.
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12 Book Chapter

Transit migration - Cultural anthropological remarks on the research of Europeanisation

Authors Sabine Hess
Year 2007
Journal Name ZEITSCHRIFT FUR VOLKSKUNDE
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13 Journal Article

Integration Policies: Who Benefits?

Authors Thomas Huddleston, Elena Sánchez-Montijano, Migration Policy Group (MPG), ...
Year 2015
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15 Policy Brief

CrossMigration

Principal investigator Peter Scholten (Project co-ordinator), Asya Pisarevskaya (Project manager), Nathan Levy (Project manager), Adham Aly (Project assistant)
Description
The Migration Research Hub supports the systematic accumulation of knowledge in migration studies. It aims to be the go-to resource for finding knowledge on migration, from the latest literature to the most appropriate topical experts. In the spirit of a collaborative approach to knowledge management in migration studies, researchers from all around the world are invited to contribute with their publications and expertise to further innovation in the field. The taxonomy of migration studies developed through this project allows everyone to identify opportunities for collaboration and new research projects across disciplines and geographies. The systematic approach to data collection and knowledge accumulation promotes and facilitates dialogue between researchers and policy stakeholders, and raises awareness of the latest debates and the most current and emerging questions about migration. The Migration Research hub was built during the IMISCOE-led Horizon 2020 project, CrossMigration (2018-2020). See a list of the team members below. The project is now fully integrated into and maintained by IMISCOE.
Year 2018
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16 Project

History of Philosophy and the Reflective Society

Authors Riccardo Pozzo
Year 2021
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17 Book

European Cities in Search of Knowledge for Their Integration Policies

Authors Rinus Penninx
Book Title Integrating Immigrants in Europe
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19 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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20 Book Chapter

The Early History Of Migration Research

Authors Michael J. Greenwood, Gary L. Hunt
Year 2003
Journal Name International Regional Science Review
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21 Journal Article

Research-Policy Dialogues in Denmark

Authors Martin Bak Jørgensen
Book Title Integrating Immigrants in Europe
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22 Book Chapter

Nachwuchsgruppe ›Die wissenschaftliche Produktion von Wissen über Migration‹

Principal investigator Isabella Löhr (Principal Investigator), Christiane Reinecke (Principal Investigator)
Description
"Die Nachwuchsgruppe analysiert die Bedingungen und Folgen der wissenschaftlichen Produktion von Wissen über Migration. Im Zentrum der gemeinsamen Arbeit stehen die Praktiken der Produktion und Zirkulation von Wissen über die räumliche Bewegung von Menschen, die jeweils an der Schnittstelle von Wissenschaft und Politik, Verwaltung und Gesellschaft untersucht werden. Mit der Nachwuchsgruppe wollen wir zu einem vertieften Verständnis von gesellschaftlichen Selbstverständigungsprozessen und Praktiken im Umgang mit Migration und Differenz beitragen und reflexive Perspektiven für die historische, sozial- und kulturwissenschaftliche Migrationsforschung erarbeiten. Der oftmals aus unterschiedlichen Disziplinen gespeisten Auseinandersetzung mit der räumlichen Bewegung von Menschen versuchen wir durch ein transdisziplinäres, dialogintensives und kooperatives Arbeiten gerecht zu werden. Konzeptionell beruht die Arbeit der Nachwuchsgruppe auf drei Säulen: Erstens begreifen wir die Produktion und Zirkulation von Migrations- und Mobilitätswissen als einen transnationalen, von Verflechtungen und Übersetzungen geprägten Prozess, der zwar in national verfasste Öffentlichkeiten und Wissenschaftslandschaften eingelassen ist, der wesentliche Impulse aber von transnational agierenden Akteuren und Institutionen erhält. Zweitens arbeiten wir mit einer historisch-kritischen Perspektive auf Ordnungskategorien, Begriffe und Daten, die den Umgang mit Migration und Mobilität prägen. Auf diese Weise können wir aktuellen Problematisierungen historische Tiefenschärfe verleihen, sie denaturalisieren und gesellschaftstheoretisch reflektieren. Drittens orientieren wir uns an einer praxeologischen Vorgehensweise. Dazu greifen wir Anregungen aus der neueren Wissens- und Wissenschaftsforschung auf und untersuchen die Produktion von Migrationswissen als einen situierten, in spezifische Praktiken, Netzwerke und Institutionen eingelassenen Prozess, der sich im Austausch mit anderen Feldern und außerwissenschaftlichen Akteuren vollzieht."
Year 2019
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25 Project

The Role of Narratives in Migration Policy-Making: A Research Framework

Authors Christina Boswell, Andrew Geddes, Peter Scholten
Year 2011
Journal Name The British Journal of Politics and International Relations
Citations (WoS) 61
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27 Journal Article

Cultures of Knowledge Use in Policymaking: The Functions of Research in German and UK Immigration Policy

Authors Christina Boswell
Book Title Integrating Immigrants in Europe
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28 Book Chapter

DIAMINT: Science-society dialogues on migration and integration in Europe

Description
DIAMINT is an international research cluster that studies science-society dialogues on migration and integration in Europe. Focusing on various European countries, as well as on the EU and local levels, , it aims to reconstruct how science-society dialogues on these contested topics have evolved and how these dialogues have shaped the understanding of migration and integration. The DIAMINT cluster was awarded the status of Standing Committee in the IMISCOE Research Network in 2014. Before, DIAMINT led an international comparative research project on Science-Society Dialogues on Migrant Integration, funded by the VolkswagenStiftung. APPROACH The DIAMINT cluster connects literatures of policy sciences, science studies and migration studies. Knowledge production in the field of migrant integration research. Dialogue structures, or the various institutionalized or non-institutionalized ways in which science-society dialogues are configured Knowledge utilization in the fields of migrant integration policymaking, politics and civil society.
Year 2012
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29 Project

Methodological Aspects of Recent Empirical Research on Academic Migration

Year 2014
Journal Name Studia Migracyjne - Przegląd Polonijny
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30 Journal Article

Promoting Comparative Quantitative Research in Europe

Description
PROMINSTAT is a research project funded under the 6th Framework Programme. It compiles meta-information on statistical datasets on migration, integration and discrimination in 29 European Countries (EU27 plus Norway and Switzerland). Through country reports and a series of comparative studies on particular topics of datacollection PROMINSTAT provides in-depth analyses of the scope, quality and comparability of statistical data collection on migration in a wide range of thematic fields, including population stocks and general demographic characteristics, migration flows, residence permits, acquisition and loss of citizenship, asylum seekers and refugees, irregular migration, employment, income, transfers and social benefits, housing and residental patterns, health and access to healthcare, education, family and household, political participation and crime and justice. The main aim of PROMINSTAT is to promote comparative quantitative research on migration, integration and discrimination in Europe, to enhance the knowledge base on statistical data collection in this field and thus to contribute to the improvement of statistics on migration, integration and discrimination.
Year 2007
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31 Project

Migration research and migration policy making: a study of Australia, the Philippines, and Thailand

Authors R Iredale, Tim Turpin, C Hawksley
Year 2004
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL SOCIAL SCIENCE JOURNAL
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33 Journal Article

The Role of International Migration in Australia's Research Workforce

Authors G Hugo
Year 2014
Journal Name Asian and Pacific Migration Journal
Citations (WoS) 1
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34 Journal Article

Cross-Migration ‘Current European and Cross-National Comparative Research and Research Actions on Migration’

Principal investigator Frank Düvell (Principal Investigator)
Description
"Inhalt und Fragestellung Migration und die Charakteristika, die deren Parameter konstituieren, sowie die Dynamiken und Komplexitäten stellen eine der vorrangigen Herausforderungen in Europa dar. Unter diesen Umständen besteht die Notwendigkeit, für die Gestaltung von effizienter und konstruktiver Politik relevantes, präzises und nützliches Wissen zur Verfügung zu haben. Auch wenn einige Datenbasen wie etwa Eurostat und OECD wertvolle Einblicke in diese migratorischen Dynamiken bieten, so existiert doch keine effiziente und integrierte Datenbasis in Europa, welche die enorm vielfältigen Untersuchungen von Migration auflistet, synthetisiert und kategorisiert. Dieses Projekt bringt deshalb 16 führende Forschungsinstitute überwiegend aus dem IMISCOE Netzwerk (International Migration, Integration and Social Cohesion) (vormals ein EU-gefördertes Network of Exellence) und politische Institute sowie internationale Organisationen zusammen mit dem Ziel, diese Lücke sachkundig zu füllen und einen zentralen Knotenpunkt (‘Hub’) zu schaffen. Dieser Knotenpunkt wird aufgrund seiner Fähigkeit, eine Grammatik für das Design von gegenwärtiger und zukünftiger Politik bereitzustellen, von instrumentellem Wert sein. Im Wesentlichen wird er vergangene, gegenwärtige und zukünftige Migrationsforschung akkumulieren und konsolidieren, indem er einen extensiven und bündigen Überblick über Triebkräfte von Migration, Infrastrukturen (Routen, Drehscheiben, Transportunternehmen/Dienstleister/Schmuggler, Netzwerke, soziale Medien), Flüsse und Politiken zur Verfügung stellt und ein Klassifikationssystem der Forschung entwickelt. Dies erlaubt es dann auch, zu einem systematischen Verständnis der Faktoren zu kommen, die die Interaktionen zwischen diesen analytischen Kategorien darstellen. Die Akkumulation, Integration und Zugänglichkeit von Forschung in einem solchen Knotenpunkt wird ein integrales Element zur Verbesserung von Politikgestaltung sein, insofern er alle relevanten Daten konzentriert und visualisiert und dadurch die Informationsbeschaffung zur Verfolgung politischer Ziele fördert. Deshalb ist auch ein kontinuierlicher Dialog von Forschung und Politik zentral für die Erstellung des Knotenpunktes. Dies setzt Nutzer in die Position, Szenarien zukünftiger Migrationen zu entwickeln. Schließlich zielt das Projekt – vom Design her ist es als Kollaborations- und Unterstützungsprojekt ausgelegt – darauf ab, in enger Zusammenarbeit mit der EU-Kommission Wissenslücken, Überschneidungen und Querverbindungen in der Forschung auszumachen und im Ergebnis zur Formulierung zukünftiger Migrationsforschungsagendas beizutragen. Methoden Das Projekt basiert auf Desk Research, der Entwicklung induktiver und deduktiver Forschungsfragen, einer computer-gestützten Erhebung der Migrationsforschung der vergangenen 10 Jahre sowie deren Auswertung durch die Experten des Forschungskonsortiums und einem Forschungs-Politikdialog."
Year 2018
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36 Project

Integrating Immigrants in Europe

Authors Han Entzinger, Peter Scholten, Rinus Penninx, ...
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37 Book

Die IAB brain-drain Daten

Description
Die IAB Datenerhebung zur internationalen Migration wurde im Rahmen des TEMPO Projekts (TEmporary Migration, integration and the role of POlicies) durchgeführt. Das Projekt wurde von NORFACE (New Opportunities for Research Funding Agency Co-operation in Europe) finanziert. Hierbei handelt es sich um einen europäischen Zusammenschluss von 15 Forschungseinrichtungen mit dem Ziel das Wissen über die Ursachen und Wirkungen der internationalen Migration zu erweitern. Spezielle Schwerpunkte enthalten Forschung zur temporären Migration, Integration von Migranten und Migrationspolitik. Das IAB war verantwortlich für den Aufbau eines Makrodatensatzes zur internationalen Migration für 20 OECD-Zielländer nach Geschlecht, Herkunftsland und Bildungsstand, für die Jahre 1980 bis 2010 (5-Jahres-Intervalle). Die oben genannte Datenerhebung wurde in Zusammenarbeit mit Abdeslam Marfouk (ULB, Brüssel) durchgeführt.
Year 1980
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38 Data Set

The Role of International Migration in Australia's Research Workforce

Authors G Hugo
Year 2014
Journal Name Asian and Pacific Migration Journal
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39 Journal Article

Migration and Democratic Diffusion: Comparing the Impact of Migration on Democratic Participation and Processes in Countries of Origin

Description
The objective of this project is to unravel the impact of migration on democratic participation and processes in countries of origin. Both international migration and democratic development are important contemporary public and policy concerns. Recent studies of transnational migrant practices have uncovered how migrants influence democratic participation in their homelands through the remittance of money and newfound ideas about democracy from afar or through return. Yet, there is still little comparative knowledge of how these processes intersect with broader economic, social and political transformations in countries of origin. Moreover, complex migration experiences and nonlinear processes of democratization in countries of origin point to the need for a more nuanced conceptualization of what kind of political ideas circulate and are negotiated among migrants, return migrants and non-migrants in countries of origin. The proposed project outlines an ambitious long-term comparative research strategy to analyse and theorize the scope and dynamics of processes of democratic diffusion through migration. The research strategy of the project is innovative in combining analysis of democratic diffusion across three countries of origin and at three levels of democratic participation and processes: individual citizens, civil society and among political leaders and representatives. To that end the project draws on both statistical and qualitative research methods and analysis. The project will analyse already existing aggregate data on remittances and political behaviour and, importantly, generate new comprehensive datasets based on surveys and in-depth qualitative research among non-migrants and returnees in countries of origin. Consequently, the project will contribute to our theoretical understanding of the conditions under which migration can influence democratic processes as well as the broader research fields of democracy studies, migration and citizenship.
Year 2018
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41 Project

Supporting ethical migration research: Practical recommendations for funding bodies

Authors Kahina Le Louvier, Jamie Mahoney, Diotima Bertel, ...
Year 2022
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42 Policy Brief

The Diversification of Intra-European Movement

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

Regulating Movement of the Very Mobile: Selected Legal and Policy Aspects of Ukrainian Migration to EU Countries

Authors Monika Szulecka
Book Title Ukrainian Migration to the European Union
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44 Book Chapter

Europe and its Others: Migrant Integration in Research and Policy

Principal investigator Iva Dodevska (Principal Investigator)
Description
Amidst heated debates on immigration and “migrant integration”, the European Union becomes an increasingly relevant actor, where important resources are earmarked for the implementation of civic integration measures, as well as for producing “scientific evidence” to guide policy. Simultaneously, a prolific scholarship attempts to understand, measure and compare how and whether immigrants are “integrated into society”, often in the effort to remain “policy-relevant”. This study joins other critical works that draw attention to the ways “integration” is debated, legislated, conceptualized, monitored, evaluated, and ultimately, normalized as a mode of governance. Situated at the interstices of migration studies, European studies, and the social studies of science, the dissertation examines the role of scientific research, EU policy, and research-policy knowledge infrastructures in shaping the “immigrant integration” paradigm in Europe. Interested primarily in integrationism as a technique of power, I take a decolonial and genealogical approach that situates integrationist discourses within wider and intersecting systems of hierarchy. The main argument is that the politics of integration research and the scientific claims in “evidence-based” policy intersect to produce “migrant integration” as the hegemonic paradigm in governing migration-related diversity in Europe. Through discourse analysis of research publications, policy documents, media statements, as well as a virtual ethnography of the EU’s science-for-policy community, I examine how integration comes to be seen simultaneously as a political problem and an object of scientific fascination, how is integration regulated at supranational level and through science-policy collaboration, and what are the power effects of integrationism, as a rationality of governance, on its target subjects. Ultimately, I argue, the practices of regulating, governing, measuring, theorizing and monitoring the integration of immigrants are shaped by power relations linked to the preservation of European liberal subjecthood against rapid demographic, social, political, and environmental shifts.
Year 2019
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46 Project

Second-Generation Outcomes of the Great Migration

Authors J. Trent Alexander, SE Tolnay, Christine Leibbrand, ...
Year 2017
Journal Name Demography
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47 Journal Article

Between fragmentation and institutionalisation: the rise of migration studies as a research field

Authors Nathan Levy, Asya Pisarevskaya, Peter Scholten
Year 2020
Journal Name Comparative Migration Studies
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48 Journal Article

Research-Policy Dialogues in the United Kingdom

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

Der Migrationshintergrund: Herstellung und gesellschaftliche Realität einer wissenschaftlichen Kategorie

Principal investigator Anne-Kathrin Will (Principal Investigator)
Description
Im Jahr 2005 wurden 17 Fragen zur Migration in die deutsche Repräsentativstatistik, den Mikrozensus, aufgenommen. Die bis dahin existierende Unterscheidung in Deutsche und Ausländer hatte zunehmend durch die wachsenden Gruppen Spätaussiedler_innen, Eingebürgerte und in Deutschland geborene Ausländer_innen ihre Aussagekraft bezüglich Zuwanderung verloren. Aus den Fragen zur Migration wird der Migrationshintergrund abgeleitet. Sie machen auch Nachfahren von Eingewanderten in der Repräsentativstatistik sichtbar, so dass sie seitdem zu den Personen mit Migrationshintergrund zählen, selbst wenn sie mit deutscher Staatsangehörigkeit in Deutschland geboren sind.Bisher existieren kaum Studien, die sich mit der Einführung, Umsetzung und Folgen der neuen statistischen Kategorie beschäftigen. Ausnahmen bilden Untersuchungen zur Nutzung des Begriffs Migrationshintergrund im medialen Diskurs (Scarvaglieri/Zech 2013) und im Bundestag (Elrick/Schwartzman 2015). Zur Verbindung von statistischer Kategorie und Alltag liegt bisher nur eine (noch) unveröffentlichte Dissertation vor (Lang 2015, 2017). Ein aktueller Beitrag thematisiert das Missverhältnis zwischen statistischem und offenbarem Migrationshintergrund (Bednaschewsky/Supik 2018).Um die Lücke zu schließen, beschäftigt sich das Projekt mit der Einführung und Herstellung des Unterscheidungsmerkmals Migrationshintergrund und erkundet seine Auswirkungen im Alltag. Das Vorhaben lässt sich an der Schnittstelle von vier Forschungsfeldern verorten. Dazu gehören: 1) die ethnologische Beschäftigung mit Klassifikationssystemen, 2) wissensanthropologische und postkoloniale Untersuchungen zur Verbindung von Wissenschaft, Politik und Alltag, 3) Science and Technology Studies und 4) Forschungen zu nationalen und ethnischen Zugehörigkeiten. Diese vier theoretischen Bezüge sollen durch fünf empirische Zugänge miteinander in Beziehung gesetzt werden.Vorgesehen sind a) Feldforschungen in statistischen Ämtern als Produktionsstätten von Klassifikationen, b) Interviews mit Parlamentarier_innen, Verantwortlichen in Ministerien und statistischen Ämtern zur Entstehung und Weiterentwicklung der Mikrozensusfragen, c) Überblick über Definitionen des Migrationshintergrundes in ausgewählten wissenschaftlichen Disziplinen, d) mental maps zu deutscher Zugehörigkeit und Herkunft, e) Interviews mit in Deutschland Geborenen, die der sogenannten Zweiten oder Dritten Zuwanderungsgeneration zugerechnet werden sowie Personen ohne Migrationshintergrund.Die Ergebnisse werden auf einem Workshop mit Wissenschaftler_innen in und außerhalb von statistischen Ämtern diskutiert, die die Kategorie Migrationshintergrund nutzen, um die Auswirkungen von Wissenschaft im Alltag zu thematisieren. Hiermit soll insbesondere der Anspruch einer kritisch involvierten Ethnografie eingelöst und zu einer Entmigrantisierung der Migrationsforschung beigetragen werden, indem zu einer stärkeren Reflexion statistisch generierter Personenklassifikationen angeregt wird.
Year 2019
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51 Project

Migrating EAST. The potential application of behavioural insights in Dutch migration policy

Authors Research and Documentation Centre (WODC), Sanne Noyon, Jiatong Cui
Description
Hoe kunnen Nederlandse beleidsmakers migratie beter managen? Het Nederlandse migratiebeleid kent verschillende issues die moeilijk aan te pakken zijn door de inzet van traditionele beleidsinstrumenten. Binnen het Ministerie van Justitie speelt een groeiende interesse in beleidsinterventies gestoeld op gedragsinzichten. Tegen deze achtergrond richt dit onderzoek zich op de vraag of gedragsinzichten ook relevant kunnen zijn op het terrein van migratiebeleid. Het onderzoek stelde de volgende drie onderzoeksvragen centraal: 1 Hoe worden gedragsinzichten toegepast in Nederlands beleid en wat kunnen we hiervan leren? 2 Leent de aard van besluitvorming onder migranten zich voor het toepassen van gedragsinzichten en wordt dit al gedaan in migratiebeleid in het buitenland? 3 Leent de Nederlandse migratiebeleidscontext zich voor het toepassen van gedragsinzichten?
Year 2022
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52 Report

A framework for understanding cross-national differences in the relationship between research and policy

Authors Roger Henke
Year 2001
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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53 Journal Article

The IAB brain-drain data

Description
The IAB data collection on international migration has been carried out within the framework of the TEMPO project (TEmporary Migration, integration and the role of POlicies), a European project financed by NORFACE (New Opportunities for Research Funding Agency Co-operation in Europe), a partnership of 15 research councils established to increase cooperation in research and research policy in Europe. The project has the goal of extend the knowledge of the causes and consequences of international migration with particular focus on themes like temporary migration, migrants’ integration, and migration policies. The IAB has been in charge of building a macro-dataset on international migration to 20 OECD destination countries by gender, country of origin and educational level, for the years 1980-2010 (5 years intervals). The above data collection has been carried out in cooperation with Abdeslam Marfouk (ULB, Brussels).
Year 1980
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55 Data Set

Mobilność przestrzenna, społeczna i kariery zawodowe migrantów: cele, problemy i podejścia badawcze

Year 2012
Journal Name Studia Migracyjne - Przegląd Polonijny
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56 Journal Article

Bayesian Agent-based Population Studies: Transforming Simulation Models of Human Migration

Description
The aim of BAPS is to develop a ground-breaking simulation model of international migration, based on a population of intelligent, cognitive agents, their social networks and institutions, all interacting with one another. The project will transform the study of migration – one of the most uncertain population processes and a top-priority EU policy area – by offering a step change in the way it can be understood, predicted and managed. In this way, BAPS will effectively integrate behavioural and social theory with modelling. To develop micro-foundations for migration studies, model design will follow cutting-edge developments in demography, statistics, cognitive psychology and computer science. BAPS will also offer a pioneering environment for applying the findings in practice through a bespoke modelling language. Bayesian statistical principles will be used to design innovative computer experiments, and learn about modelling the simulated individuals and the way they make decisions. In BAPS, we will collate available information for migration models; build and test the simulations by applying experimental design principles to enhance our knowledge of migration processes; collect information on the underpinning decision-making mechanisms through psychological experiments; and design software for implementing Bayesian agent-based models in practice. The project will use various information sources to build models bottom-up, filling an important epistemological gap in demography. BAPS will be carried out by the Allianz European Demographer 2015, recognised as a leader in the field for methodological innovation, directing an interdisciplinary team with expertise in demography, agent-based models, statistical analysis of uncertainty, meta-cognition, and computer simulations. The project will open up exciting research possibilities beyond demography, and will generate both academic and practical impact, offering methodological advice for policy-relevant simulations.
Year 2017
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57 Project

The National Immigrant Survey of Spain. A new data source for migration studies in Europe

Authors David Reher, Miguel Requena
Year 2009
Journal Name Demographic Research
Citations (WoS) 55
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58 Journal Article

2,000 Families: identifying the research potential of an origins-of-migration study

Authors Ayse Guveli, Lucinda Platt, Niels Spierings, ...
Year 2017
Journal Name Ethnic and Racial Studies
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59 Journal Article

Circular migration in Georgia

Authors Mirian TUKHASHVILI
Description
A critical limitation in addressing circular migration trends and characteristics of circular migration from Georgia is the lack of appropriate statistics to quantitatively measure and assess the phenomenon. The current system in this respect is disastrous. In Georgia, even the balance of external migration cannot be established, there are practically no statistical data as regards territorial population mobility. In this regard, the immediate substantial reform of the official migration statistics and its provision with respective resources is indispensable. On the other hand, migration research in general, including research on circular migration, requires significant development. It needs to acquire a systemic nature, as the existing incidental studies are fragmented and completely inadequate compared to the significance of the problem. Given the current situation, this note will first address the importance of developing and supporting circular migration schemes for Georgia. Second, it will offer a number of crucial measures to be inserted in rational and efficient circular migration policies.
Year 2012
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60 Report

Lessons from the South-North Migration of EU Citizens in Times of Crisis

Authors Mikolaj Stanek, Jean-Michel Lafleur
Book Title South-North Migration of EU Citizens in Times of Crisis
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61 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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62 Book Chapter

Migration of Ukrainians to the European Union: Background and Key Issues

Authors Marta Kindler, Olena Fedyuk
Book Title Ukrainian Migration to the European Union
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63 Book Chapter

International Student Migration: Mapping the Field and New Research Agendas

Authors Russell King, P Raghuram
Year 2013
Journal Name Population, Space and Place
Citations (WoS) 105
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64 Journal Article

Method as Border: Tuning in to the Cacophony of Academic Backstages of Migration, Mobility and Border Studies

Authors Kolar Aparna, Joris Schapendonk, Cesar Merlin-Escorza
Year 2020
Journal Name SOCIAL INCLUSION
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65 Journal Article

Structure and agency in development-induced forced migration: the case of Brazil’s Belo Monte Dam

Authors Heather Randell, Heather F. Randell
Year 2016
Journal Name Population and Environment
Citations (WoS) 6
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66 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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67 Book Chapter

Conclusions and Reflection

Authors Peter Scholten, Mark van Ostaijen
Book Title Between Mobility and Migration
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68 Book Chapter

New Chinese Migration to Germany: Historical Consistencies and New Patterns of Diversification within a Globalized Migration Regime

Authors Karsten Giese
Year 2003
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 8
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69 Journal Article

Some Conceptual Thoughts on Migration Research

Authors Andreas Demuth
Year 2000
Book Title Theoretical and Methodological Issues in Migration Research: Interdisciplinary, Intergenerational and International Perspectives
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70 Book Chapter

Estimation of international migration in post-Soviet republics

Authors Shushanik MAKARYAN
Year 2015
Journal Name International Migration
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71 Journal Article

The Troublesome Gulf: Research on Migration to the Middle East

Authors Manolo Abella
Year 1992
Journal Name Asian and Pacific Migration Journal
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73 Journal Article

Labour Migration and other Forms of Mobility Between Bulgaria and Greece: The Evolution of a Cross-Border Migration System

Authors Eugenia Markova, Panos Hatziprokopiou
Book Title Migration in the Southern Balkans
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74 Book Chapter

Promoting Comparative Quantitative Research in the Field of Migration and Integration in Europe

Description
With the Amsterdam Treaty and the increasing competence of the European Union in the field of migration, integration, anti-discrimination and asylum, the need for comparative data in this area has been increasingly recognised. The project compiles meta-information on statistical datasets on migration, integration and discrimination in 29 European countries (EU27 plus Norway and Switzerland). It builds on the earlier COMPSTAT project carried out under the 5th Framework Programme between 2001-2002, the FP6 project "Towards harmonised European Statistics on International Migration" (THESIM), completed in 2005 as well as ongoing research within the IMISCOE network. Objectives • To improve the quality of publicly available information on migration, integration and discrimination responding thus to the needs of researchers, policy makers and practitioners for more reliable, more systematic and more harmonized statistical data • To enhance comparability of statistical data and understanding of indicators Outcomes • Launch of a comprehensive online database containing descriptions of datasets relevant to the study of migration. • Analyses of the national data collection system in 29 European countries. • Detailed analysis of the availability, comparability, and the usability of statistical data in 12 thematic areas: 1) general demographic data; 2) migration flows; 3) legal status of immigrants; 4) citizenship; 5) political participation; 6) employment; 7) income 8) housing; 9) irregular migration; 10) education; 11) family and 12) health as well as in two cross-cutting thematic fields - integration and discrimination
Year 2007
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75 Project

Categorising What We Study and What We Analyse, and the Exercise of Interpretation

Authors Dirk Jacobs
Book Title Qualitative Research in European Migration Studies
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76 Book Chapter

Migrants hautement qualifiés et flux internationaux de talents, connaissances et capitaux

Principal investigator Ernest Miguelez (Principal Investigator)
Description
Highly Skilled Migration and International Flows of Talent, Knowledge, and Capital (TKC) is a project funded by the French National Research Agency (ANR). TKC aims to improve our understanding of whether and how highly skilled migrants activate their social networks and leverage their role as international knowledge gatekeepers, contribute to solve cross-border information problems, and transform the brain drain into brain gain and brain circulation. Highly skilled workers play a key role in today’s knowledge economies, as they introduce and diffuse innovations that encourage economic growth and well-being. Migrants are an essential component of these highly skilled workers worldwide: in 2013, the worldwide stock of migrants stood at 230 million, namely 3.2% of worldwide population (UN-DESA and OECD, 2013). However, important variations emerge across skills’ groups: tertiary educated immigrants living in OECD countries augmented by 70% during the 2000s, with just 10% for low-educated ones. Migration rates for the tertiary educated are higher than for the rest of the population, and generally increase with further education. Thus, differently from the past, highly skilled individuals represent the most dynamic component of international mobility flows. Far from taking place exclusively along a South-North or East-West axis, highly skilled migration occurs also between advanced economies, with the UK, Germany and other European countries as both destinations and origins. Science, technology, and engineering migration contributes heavily to these trends, including to its geographical variation. TKC’s research topic stands at the cross-roads of different disciplinary approaches, ranging from the geography of innovation, the economics of migration, and IB studies. All of them can be re-examined within the general theoretical framework of diaspora economics. Constant and Zimmermann (2016) define diasporas as “well-defined group(s) of migrants and their offspring with a joined cultural identity and ongoing identification with the country or culture of origin”, and propose to put them at centre-stage in all studies concerning migrations. While migration is the necessary precondition for diasporas to exist, not all migrant groups are internally bound by diasporic ties, nor ethnicity is the only source of such ties. In the case of highly skilled migrants, professional ties matter, too, as they both imply different migration channels and cohorts, and allows for specific forms of interaction. TKC is a theoretical and empirical project, whose deliverables will consist in research papers and open access datasets. Its ambition is to enrich the debate on migration on a global scale, but especially in Europe and France, where the dominant focus on low skilled or refugee immigration both obscures the importance of highly skilled flows and contributes to negative stereotyping. TKC will be articulated in six work-packages, taking a complementary approach between the macro (country), meso (firm), and micro (individual) levels of analysis. TKC has a strong engagement towards collecting micro-data concerning specific categories of very highly skilled workers, such as inventors, scientists and executives, with the migrant status to be ascertained by available biographic information and/or name analysis. These data may provide a suitable and interesting alternative to more classic data sources, both because of their detail and for their pointing at homogenous professional groups, rather than generically tertiary educated workers.
Year 2017
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77 Project

Negotiating the Aftermath of Forced Migration: A View from the Intersection of War and Migration Studies in the Digital Age

Authors Christoph Rass, Ismee Tames
Year 2020
Journal Name HISTORICAL SOCIAL RESEARCH-HISTORISCHE SOZIALFORSCHUNG
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78 Journal Article

The Utilization of Expert Knowledge in Times of Crisis: Budgetary and Migration Policies in the Netherlands

Authors Frans van Nispen, Peter Scholten
Year 2017
Journal Name European Policy Analysis
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79 Journal Article

Return Migration of the Highly Skilled in Higher Education Institutions: a Chinese University Case

Authors Qingfang Wang, Hui-Ping Li, Li Tang
Year 2015
Journal Name Population, Space and Place
Citations (WoS) 11
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81 Journal Article

MIGRATION IN NORWAY BETWEEN 1865 AND 1960: HISTORY, DIRECTIONS, NUMBERS

Authors Gunnar Thorvaldsen
Year 2020
Journal Name IZVESTIYA URALSKOGO FEDERALNOGO UNIVERSITETA-SERIYA 2-GUMANITARNYE NAUKI
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82 Journal Article

Mother’s, Household, and Community U.S. Migration Experience and Infant Mortality in Rural and Urban Mexico

Authors Erin R. Hamilton, Andrés Villarreal, Robert A. Hummer
Year 2009
Journal Name Population Research and Policy Review
Citations (WoS) 8
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83 Journal Article

Going Back Home? Changing Demography and Geography of Mexican Return Migration

Authors Claudia Masferrer, Bryan R. Roberts
Year 2012
Journal Name Population Research and Policy Review
Citations (WoS) 26
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84 Journal Article

Measuring Irregular Migration and Related Policies (MIRREM)

Principal investigator Albert Kraler (Scientific Coordinator), Ettore Recchi (PI European University Institute), Franck Düvell (PI University of Osnabrück), Arjen Leerkes (PI University of Maastricht), Jussi Jauhiainen (PI University of Turku), Claudia Finotelli (PI Complutense University Madrid), Marina Nikolova (PI Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy), Maurizio Ambrosini (PI University of Milan), Michele LeVoy (Director Platform for International Cooperation on Undocumented Migration), Veronika Bilger (PI International Centre for Migration Policy Development ), Hanne Beirens (PI Migration Policy Institute Europe), Pawel Kaczmarczyk (PI University of Warsaw), Tuba Bircan (PI Vrije Universiteit Brussel ), Anna Triandafyllidou (PI Toronto Metropolitan University), Alan Desmond (PI University of Leiceister), Carlos Vargas-Silva (PI University of Oxford)
Description
Targeted policy responses for irregular migration require better knowledge about the characteristics of the irregular migrant population and dynamics of irregular migration, as well as about the effects of policy measures. Yet, quantitative data relating to irregular migration are scarce, often outdated and contested. The inadequecy of current data makes it challenging for stakeholders to develop and monitor policies. How do legal frameworks in different countries define migrant irregularity? What are the characteristics of irregular migrants in terms of age, gender, nationality or other socioeconomic variables? How can the effects of policy measures, such as regularisation, be assessed? MIrreM adresses the challenge of insufficent knowledge about irregular migration and regularisation in Europe by actively involving relevant stakeholders in every stage of this project – as co-creators of its results and as stakeholders to its mission. In a rigorous comparative and multi-level study, we will assess the policies, data needs and estimates that define migrant irregularity in 11 EU member states, the UK, Canada, the USA and five transit countries. Using several coordinated pilots we will develop new and innovative methods for measuring irregular migration and ‘regularisation scenarios’, and we will explore if and how these instruments can be transferred or scaled up to other socio-economic or institutional conditions. Based on these insights, we will develop two public databases: a) a database with estimates on irregular migrant stocks and b) a database on irregular migration flows, that will also include data on regularisations. Together with the expert groups, we will synthesize our findings into a Handbook on data on irregular migration and a Handbook on regularisation that will support evidenced-based and targeted policymaking concerning irregular migration. Finally, we will develop training resources for policymakers, practitioners, journalists and early-career researchers.
Year 2022
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85 Project

Rural out-migration and smallholder agriculture in the southern Ecuadorian Andes

Authors Clark L. Gray
Year 2009
Journal Name Population and Environment
Citations (WoS) 69
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86 Journal Article

IMMIGRATION AND COMPETITIVENESS - SOME METHODOLOGICAL QUESTIONS

Authors Tuende Patay
Year 2017
Journal Name DETUROPE-THE CENTRAL EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT AND TOURISM
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87 Journal Article

A Multi Sited Approach to Analysis of Destination Immigration Data: An Asian Example

Authors Graeme Hugo, G Hugo
Year 2014
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 2
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88 Journal Article

Polskie studia na temat migracji kobiet: wybrane perspektywy teoretyczne i wyniki badań

Year 2008
Book Title Women's migrations: a multidimensional perspective
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89 Book Chapter

National paradigms of migration research.

Authors D. Thranhardt, M. Bommes
Year 2010
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91 Book

Now there is no land: a story of ethnic migration in a protected area landscape in western Uganda

Authors Joel Hartter, Sadie J. Ryan, Colin A. Chapman, ...
Year 2015
Journal Name Population and Environment
Citations (WoS) 18
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93 Journal Article

Introduction

Authors Gabriella SANCHEZ
Year 2018
Journal Name Migration policy practice
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94 Journal Article

A research review of education and professional development in countries with migration potential

Authors Francesco De Maria
Year 2019
Journal Name Form@re-Open Journal per la formazione in rete
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95 Journal Article

Key Knowledge Questions on Migration Drivers

Authors Katharina Natter
Year 2020
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96 Policy Brief

Prague Process Targeted Initiative

Description
The Research Team is supporting the PPTI Team in implementing Specific Objective 2 of the Prague Process Targeted Initiative: Knowledge Base. This objective builds on the results of the “Building Migration Partnerships” (BMP) project implemented in 2009-2011. Objective: The aim of this component is to maintain, update and/or further improve the BMP knowledge base, through gathering information in the form of Migration Profiles for countries in Eastern Europe, Southern Caucasus, Central Asia and Russia. Information and data gathering will be a continuous process throughout the whole implementation period with the purpose of collecting and analysing data, statistics and information on migration flows, trends and dynamics between the countries participating in the Prague Process. The information gathered will be presented in form of Migration Profiles and the i-Map. Activities: • Expert-level Workshop on data management/data and sources utilisation for the elaboration of Migration Profiles or other documents of similar nature • Expert Missions of a group of 3 EU experts nominated by the Project Steering Committee to the 11 participating beneficiary countries. The target of these missions: 1. To re-introduce the purpose of Migration Profiles, their history and format to the relevant state authorities both on policy and expert level; 2. To confirm existing or identify new responsible national bodies for development or update of the Migration Profiles and agree on the methodology and timeframe for development of the Migration Profiles; 3. To gather key information and data, identify existing gaps and propose solutions for how to address them on the national level; 4. To exchange information on selected thematic areas of the Action Plan of the Prague Process which are not covered by the 4 Pilot Projects of the Prague Process Targeted Initiative or to meet a request for information from Prague Process states which do not participate in the Specific Objective 2 Knowledge Base. • Elaboration of 4 and update of 7 existing migration profiles including additional research, expert input, data gathering and analysis. The Support team (ICMPD project team) will act as the help desk for the national authorities in charge of coordination of development of the Migration Profile and will ensure communication between the national authorities and experts from the leading states including ensuring translation of relevant documents in English and Russian language. The support team will collect and store all information and communication, translate relevant information into the PP Knowledge Base and the i-Map and will keep the Knowledge Base up-to-date. • 2 Study visits of 11 beneficiary states’ experts (1 expert on migration analysis and statistics for each state) to project partner states (Czech Republic, Germany, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Sweden). The purpose of the study visits is to get acquainted with the work of analytical units of the partner states (e.g. the Analytical Centre for Border Protection and Migration within the Ministry of Interior in the Czech Republic) Outcomes: • Interactive online i-Map updated and improved. • 4 beneficiary states' Migration Profiles developed and used. • 7 existing beneficiary states' Migration Profiles updated and used. • Strengthening the capacity of the 11 beneficiary states to gather and process data on migration.
Year 2012
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97 Project

Forschungsnetzwerk: Migration @ Gender in Niedersachsen

Principal investigator Helen Schwenken (Principal Investigator), Sabine Hess (Principal Investigator)
Description
"Am 29. Mai 2015 nahm das neu gegründete Forschungsnetzwerk ""Gender und Migration @Niedersachsen"" seine Arbeit auf. Etwa 30 Wissenschaftler_innen vor allem aus Niedersachsen waren zum Gründungstreffen an das Institut für Migrationsforschung und Interkulturelle Studien (IMIS) der Universität Osnabrück gekommen, um dort ihre Forschungsschwerpunkte vorzustellen und gemeinsame Vorhaben anzudenken. Das Netzwerk verfolgt das Ziel, die in Niedersachsen vorhandene transdisziplinäre Expertise in den Bereichen Gender- und Migrationsforschung zu bündeln. Insbesondere sollen die Erkenntnisse des jeweils anderen Felds für die eigene Forschung nutzbar gemacht werden. Die internationale Auftakt-Tagung ""Gendering Migration Studies - Geschlecht und die Politiken der Migration"" fand vom 11. bis 12. Dezember 2015 an der Universität Göttingen statt. Das Netzwerk ""Gender und Migartion[at]Niedersachsen"" wurde vom Göttinger Centrum für Geschlechterforschung (GCG) in Kooperation mit Wissenschaftlerinnen des Instituts für Migrationsforschung und Interkulturelle Studien (IMIS) der Universität Osnabrück sowie der HBK Braunschweig gegründet. Es wird aus Mitteln des Niedersächsischen Ministeriums für Wissenschaft und Kultur finanziert und künftig unter dem Dach der LAGEN tätig sein."
Year 2015
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98 Project

Potentialities of social network analysis for migration studies

Authors Veronica de Miguel Luken
Year 2020
Journal Name EMPIRIA
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99 Journal Article

‘Mind the Gap!’ Integrating Approaches to Internal and International Migration

Authors Russell King, Ronald Skeldon
Year 2010
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
Citations (WoS) 156
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100 Journal Article
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