Situación política, represión y transiciones de régimen

Political situation, repression, and regime transitions refers to political drivers in sending and receiving countries, such as persecution, political terror and oppression, mandatory military conscription, corruption, democracy, and the right-wing vote share. The security-related political drivers mostly affect asylum and irregular migration while democracy drives young and high-skilled migration.

Studies listed under this migration driver refer to the general political situation, corruption, democracy, right-wing vote share, military service or conscription, and persecution.

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The Experiences of Asylum Seekers and Refugees

Authors Anastasia Bermudez
Book Title International Migration, Transnational Politics and Conflict
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1 Book Chapter

Demoralization-led migration in Bangladesh: A sense of insecurity-based decision-making model

Authors AKM Ahsan Ullah, Ahmed Shafiqul Huque
Year 2020
Journal Name ASIAN JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE POLITICS
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2 Journal Article

Do Tolerant Societies Demand Better Institutions?

Authors Eva Ma Buitrago, Ma Angeles Caraballo, Jose L. Roldan
Year 2019
Journal Name Social Indicators Research
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3 Journal Article

Climate-health risk (In)visibility in the context of everyday humanitarian practice

Authors John Doering-White, Alejandra Diaz de Leon, Arisbeth Hernandez Tapia, ...
Year 2024
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4 Journal Article

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

Authors Susana Salgado
Year 2018
Journal Name European Political Science
Citations (WoS) 7
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5 Journal Article

Persecution, pogroms and genocide: A conceptual framework and new evidence *

Authors Sascha O. Becker, Sharun Mukand, Ivan Yotzov
Year 2022
Journal Name EXPLORATIONS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
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7 Journal Article

Does corruption promote emigration? An empirical examination

Authors Arusha Cooray, Friedrich Schneider
Year 2015
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
Citations (WoS) 13
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8 Journal Article

‘Frontline corruption and emigration in the Western Balkans’

Authors Ana Isabel López García, Barry Maydom
Year 2023
Journal Name Migration Studies
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9 Journal Article

"ON THE ROAD TO RELIGIOUS FREEDOM": A STUDY OF THE NAZARENE EMIGRATION FROM SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE TO THE UNITED STATES

Authors Aleksandra Djuric Milovanovic
Year 2017
Journal Name REVISTA DE ETNOGRAFIE SI FOLCLOR-JOURNAL OF ETHNOGRAPHY AND FOLKLORE
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10 Journal Article

Corruption and the Desire to Leave Quasi-Experimental Evidence on Corruption as a Driver of Emigration Intentions

Authors Daniel Auer, Friederike Römer, Jasper Tjaden
Year 2020
Journal Name IZA Journal of Development and Migration
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11 Journal Article

Freedom of Movement Needs to Be Defended as the Core of EU Citizenship

Authors Floris De Witte
Book Title Debating European citizenship
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12 Book Chapter

THE ASYLUM PROCEDURE IN THE FACE OF PERSECUTION BY ARMED BANDS

Authors Ivana Belk Ruiz-Estramil
Year 2019
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13 Journal Article

Protection in Crisis: Forced Migration and Protection in a Global Era

Description
More than 51 million people worldwide are forcibly displaced today as refugees, asylum seekers, or internally displaced persons. According to the 1951 Geneva Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, to be recognized legally as a refugee, an individual must be fleeing persecution on the basis of religion, race, political opinion, nationality, or membership in a particular social group, and must be outside the country of nationality. However, the contemporary drivers of displacement are complex and multilayered, making protection based on a strict definition of persecution increasingly problematic and challenging to implement. Many forced migrants now fall outside the recognized refugee and asylum apparatus. Much displacement today is driven by a combination of intrastate conflict, poor governance and political instability, environmental change, and resource scarcity. These conditions, while falling outside traditionally defined persecution, leave individuals highly vulnerable to danger and uncertain of the future, compelling them to leave their homes in search of greater security. In addition, the blurring of lines between voluntary and forced migration, as seen in mixed migration flows, together with the expansion of irregular migration, further complicates today's global displacement picture. This report details the increasing mismatch between the legal and normative frameworks that define the existing protection regime and the contemporary patterns of forced displacement. It analyzes contemporary drivers and emerging trends of population displacement, noting that the majority of forcibly displaced people – some 33.3 million – remain within their own countries, and that more than 50 percent of the displaced live in urban areas. The author then outlines and assesses key areas where the international protection system is under the most pressure, and finally examines the key implications of these trends for policymakers and the international community, outlining some possible policy directions for reform.
Year 2015
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14 Report

Swiss referendum: flying the flag for nativism

Authors Reem Abu-Hayyeh, Graham Murray, Liz Fekete
Year 2014
Journal Name Race & Class
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15 Journal Article

When Do Migration Aspirations Materialize?

Principal investigator Daniel Auer (Principal Investigator), Marc Helbling (Principal Investigator), Friederike Römer (Principal Investigator), Jasper Tjaden (Principal Investigator)
Description
"(1) Aspirations: In the absence of reliable, internationally available migration flow data necessary for statistical forecasting, policymakers increasingly turn to survey data on emigration intentions to evaluate future migration trends. The important assumption – i.e. that there is a measurable and systematic relationship between the intention to migrate and actual migration – has not been firmly established at the international level. In a first step, we examine the association between estimated population averages of emigration intentions and official migration flow data based on data for more than 160 countries. First results show a strong association between emigration intentions and recorded bilateral flows to industrialized countries, as well as between intentions and aggregated out-migration. The results provide policymakers with a reliability assessment of survey data on emigration intentions and encourage future attempts to incorporate survey data in formal statistical migration forecasting models. (2) Policies: Furthermore, we want to explore to what extent migrants consciously decide to migrate to countries that allow them to improve their economic situation taking into account the difficulties to migrate to this country. In particular, we would like to know how the difficulty to immigrate into a country prevents potential migrants from moving to this country. Might it be that migrants decide to move to more liberal countries to increase the chances to be accepted? We already know that migration flows increase when the destination country is economically more attractive (Borjas 1989; Hatton and Williamson 2003) and decrease when immigration policies are more restrictive (Helbling and Leblang 2018). These effects are to some extent due to rejections during the migration processes when for example visa applications are declined or people are not allowed to enter a country when they arrive at the border. (3) Corruption: Eventually, besides immigration policies in potential destination countries, the formation and subsequent materialization of migration aspirations is determined by various factors in the country of residence. However, there is surprisingly little empirical evidence on factors outside the pure economic sphere. For instance, the link between corruption and emigration has received growing attention. Until now, the evidence claiming a strong relationship relies on individual case studies and correlational analysis which severely limits generalizability. In our study, we apply quasi-experimental methods including instrumental variables and propensity score matching to global survey data on 130 countries over 6 years, covering almost 600’000 individual respondents. We find support for the notion that corruption – systematically and strongly - induces emigration plans across countries, across various model specifications and estimation methods. Strengthening causal claims about the link between corruption and emigration is important for further research in this field. Results are also relevant for policy-makers exploring options to address irregular migration in the context of development and trade agreements. "
Year 2018
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17 Project

Reading Too Much and Too Little into the Matter? Latent Limits and Potentials of EU Freedom of Movement

Authors Julija Sardelić
Book Title Debating European citizenship
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18 Book Chapter

From Refuge to Riches? An Analysis of Refugees’ Wage Assimilation in the United States1

Authors Animesh Giri
Year 2018
Journal Name International Migration Review
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20 Journal Article

Refugees and Refugee Protection in the Early Modern Period

Authors Susanne Lachenicht
Year 2016
Journal Name Journal of Refugee Studies
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21 Journal Article

Clarifying Survival Migration: A Response

Authors alexander betts
Year 2014
Journal Name European Political Science
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22 Journal Article

Asylum Seekers’ Trajectories of Exclusion: An Analysis Through the Lens of Intersectionality

Authors Ana Sofia Branco, Romana Xerez
Year 2024
Journal Name Social Inclusion
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23 Journal Article

What Is Wrong with Selling Citizenship? It Corrupts Democracy!

Authors Rainer Bauböck
Book Title Debating Transformations of National Citizenship
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24 Book Chapter

Refugees or Migrants? The UNHCR’s Comprehensive Approach to Afghan Mobility into Iran and Pakistan

Authors Giulia Scalettaris
Book Title The Politics of International Migration Management
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25 Book Chapter

Who Ought to Stay? Asylum Policy and Protest Culture in Switzerland

Authors Dina Bader
Book Title Protest Movements in Asylum and Deportation
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26 Book Chapter

From Islamists to Muslim Democrats: The Case of Tunisia’s Ennahda

Authors SHARAN GREWAL
Year 2020
Journal Name American Political Science Review
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27 Journal Article

The “Great Replacement” conspiracy: How the perceived ousting of Whites can evoke violent extremism and Islamophobia

Authors Milan Obaidi, Jonas Kunst, Simon Ozer, ...
Year 2021
Journal Name Group Processes & Intergroup Relations
Citations (WoS) 57
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28 Journal Article

The Racial Drops of Culture

Authors Suzanne Oboler
Year 2008
Journal Name Latino Studies
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29 Journal Article

EUmagine

Description
EUMAGINE is a collaborative European research project aimed at investigating the impact of perceptions of human rights and democracy on migration aspirations and decisions. Project description The EUMAGINE project aims to study how Europe is perceived from outside the EU, and how these perceptions affect migration aspirations and decisions. The project focuses on how people’s perceptions on democracy and human rights – in relation to their regions and countries of origin as well as places abroad – affect their perceptions on and attitudes to migration. We are also interested in investigating how perceptions on human rights and democracy interact with other determinants of migration aspirations, to what extent migration is perceived as a valuable life project, and how potential migrants compare Europe to other migration destinations. EUMAGINE studies migration-related perceptions among people aged 18-39 in four countries of origin and transit: Morocco, Senegal, Turkey and Ukraine. Conceptual framework The theoretical starting point for the project is two-fold: First, we assume that different types of discourses on human rights and democracy influence how individuals in countries of origin and transit perceive issues of human rights and democracy. Secondly, we expect that individuals’ perceptions in turn influence their migratory aspirations and decisions. The EUMAGINE project explores two types of imaginations: “migratory imaginations” and “geographical imaginations.” The term “migratory imaginations” refers to people’s attitude to migration as a valuable life project. Migration-related perceptions and aspirations develop within a specific cultural, political-juridical and economic setting, known as the “emigration environment.” Migration aspirations are linked with socially and culturally constructed perceptions. These include ideas and meanings attached to the migration project, subjective images of one’s current environment, and thoughts about potential destinations. We assume that perceptions on human rights and democracy have an impact on what Massey (1998) has termed “cultures of emigration,” where migration becomes deeply rooted into people’s behavioral repertoires. By “geographical imaginations” we refer to the meanings and images that make up people’s subjective conception of particular places, including Europe. We assume that migratory and geographical imaginations are influenced by different types of discourses: macro-level discourses (e.g. from policy and media sources) and meso-level discourses, (e.g. disseminated through popular culture and social networks). We also expect migratory and geographical imaginations to be shaped by individual-level factors, such as gender or age. Research questions The project is informed by five overarching research questions: 1) How are human rights and democracy related to imaginations in migrant sending countries constructed? 2) How are perceptions on human rights, democracy, migration and possible destination countries affected by various factors? 3) How do perceptions on human rights and democracy and ‘geographical imaginations’ relate to migration aspirations and migration? 4) How to develop a better informed migration policy, taking into account human rights and democracy as important migration determinants? 5) How to contribute to local capacity building in source countries, in order to prepare the ground for locally based research initiatives in the future? Methodology The project systematically analyzes migration aspirations and decisions, following a case-study approach: it compares and contrasts a diversity of important international emigration countries; various types of regions within these countries; several modes of migration; various types of influential discourses; and different profiles of potential migrants. This allows the project to make analytical generalizations about how migration-related perceptions, aspirations and decisions are formed. EUMAGINE has a multidisciplinary approach and combines the varied disciplinary background of its researchers: sociology, law, anthropology, economics, human geography and political science. The field research follows a mixed-method approach with three main methodological components: 1) ethnographic fieldwork in the community, 2) a large-scale quantitative survey, and 3) semi-structured qualitative interviews with selected survey respondents, directed by an interview guide. The research uses between- as well as within-method triangulation. Between-method triangulation is reached through combining qualitative as well as quantitative research methodologies. For within-method triangulation, we use two types of qualitative research, namely in-depth interviews and observation in communities. In each country, fieldwork is undertaken in four diverse regions, selected on the basis of the following model: 1) An area characterized by high emigration rates; 2) A second, comparable socio-economic area with low emigration; 3) A comparable area with a strong immigration history; and 4) A location with a specific human rights situation.
Year 2011
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30 Project

„It’s xenophobia, stupid!“ Soziodemografische Merkmale und Einstellungen der FPÖ-Wähler*innen

Authors Torben Krings, Torben Krings
Year 2024
Journal Name Österreichische Zeitschrift für Soziologie
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31 Journal Article

Incremental Changes Are not Enough – Voting Rights Are a Matter of Democratic Principle

Authors Tony Venables
Book Title Debating European citizenship
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32 Book Chapter

Criminality, chaos and corruption: Analyzing the narratives of labor migration dynamics in Malaysia

Authors Laura Foley, Laura Foley
Year 2023
Journal Name Asian and Pacific Migration Journal
Citations (WoS) 2
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33 Journal Article

El retorno de las migraciones circulares: la regulación de las migraciones profesionales

Authors Antonio Alaminos Chica, Cristina López Fernández, Begoña López Monsalve, ...
Year 2003
Journal Name OBETS. Revista de Ciencias Sociales
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34 Journal Article

Migration in market and democracy transition: Migration intentions and behavior in Romania

Authors Dumitru Sandu, Gordon F. de Jong
Year 1996
Journal Name Population Research and Policy Review
Citations (WoS) 17
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35 Journal Article

Venezuelan cualified migrants and their process of inclusion in the uruguayan bimodal or dual labor market

Authors Silvia Facal Santiago, Belen Casal Gil
Year 2021
Journal Name Immigrant Youth and Employment: Lessons Learned from the Analysis of LSIC and 82 Lived Stories
Citations (WoS) 1
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36 Journal Article

The Determinants of Human Trafficking: A US Case Study

Authors Alicja Jac-Kucharski
Year 2012
Journal Name International Migration
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37 Journal Article

Political Trust as Modest Expectations: <i>Exploring Immigrants’ Falling Confidence in Swedish Political Institutions</i>

Authors Per Adman, Per Stromblad
Year 2015
Journal Name Nordic Journal of Migration Research
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38 Journal Article

Politics and the migration-development nexus: the EU and the Arab SEM countries

Authors Françoise DE BEL-AIR
Description
In the hope of regulating migratory flows, the European Council endorsed a “global approach” to migration in December 2005, an approach which is based on the correction of the “deep causes of migration”: poverty, unemployment and development gaps between North and South. Besides liberalising economies and trade systems, a set of measures are advocated in order to enhance home countries’ development by using “migration [as a] medicine against migration”: stimulating the remittance of funds back to the country of origin; expanding the role of diasporas settled in member states; reinforcing circular migration schemes and facilitating return movements; and improving the management of the emigration of the highly-skilled in order to curb “brain drain”. The paper focuses on the Arab South and East Mediterranean (SEM) countries. It challenges the views, implicit in EU migration policies, that migration is entirely rooted in economics and that migrants’ agency alone is able to spur development in the origin country. Using the theoretical background of political economy with a neo-institutional approach to migration, it explores the stakes, the outreaches and the outcomes of the migration and development nexus. By so doing, it re-politicizes migration and development and emphasises the structural and contextual dimension of factors pushing on migration and hampering development: unemployment and high professional turn over; economic liberalisation and deregulation policies, and socio-political “blockages” (gender inequalities, patronage, clientelism and corruption, lack of public expression). Moreover, the analysis of SEM country practices in the field of migration management and engineering migration for development shows how the design of policies and the channelling of flows respond to political and demographic stakes in the various national contexts. Migration patterns act as a political shield for regimes in the region that: allows these regimes to monitor political opposition; renews socio-cultural elites; and decreases the economic opportunities in national economies, due to corruption and patronage. Current policies also reconstruct state-society/expatriates relations, through (controlled) economic participation and socio-cultural solidarity. They do not, however, lead to political participation. The paper thus concludes that amendments to macro-political contexts in the SEM countries are more likely than liberalisation policies to curb emigration flows, by engineering global social and political development. As a matter of fact, the onset and patterns of the Arab revolutions since December 2010 aptly confirm the need for political reform in the region. Adoptée par le Conseil européen en décembre 2005, l’Approche globale des migrations est axée sur la correction des « causes profondes de la migration » (la pauvreté, le chômage, les écarts de développement entre nord et sud) afin d’en réguler les flux. Parmi les mesures préconisées figurent la facilitation de l’envoi de fonds vers les pays d’origine (transparence des coûts, développement de l’accès aux services financiers), l’encouragement du rôle des diasporas implantées dans les États membres (aider les pays en développement à identifier leur diaspora et à établir des liens), le renforcement de la migration circulaire et la facilitation du retour, une meilleure gestion des migrations de personnes hautement qualifiées afin de limiter la « fuite des cerveaux ». Cette étude traite des pays arabes du sud et de l’est de la Méditerranée (SEM). Elle met en question les représentations, contenues dans les politiques migratoires de l’UE, de la migration comme facteur purement économique, mais aussi des migrants comme agents d’un développement à grande échelle dans leurs pays d’origine. Le cadre théorique de l’économie politique et les approches néo-institutionnelles des migrations, utilisés ici, permettent de dégager les enjeux et la portée du lien entre migration et développement sur le terrain arabe. L’étude ‘re-politise’ ces deux processus. Elle met en relief la dimension structurelle des facteurs déclenchant l’émigration et entravant les processus de développement : les caractéristiques du marché du travail, les politiques de libéralisation des économies et les « blocages » sociopolitiques (inégalités hommes-femmes, clientélisme et corruption, obstacles à l’expression publique). En outre, l’analyse des politiques migratoires menées dans les pays du SEM montre que ces mesures répondent aux enjeux politiques et démographiques particuliers aux divers contextes nationaux de la région. Elles permettent aux régimes en place de contrôler l’opposition politique, le renouvellement des élites socioculturelles et les conséquences de la contraction des opportunités économiques, due à la corruption et au clientélisme. Les politiques migratoires participent également d’une restructuration des relations États-sociétés-expatriés autour d’une participation économique (étroitement contrôlée) et d’une solidarité socioculturelle, mais excluant toute participation politique. L’étude conclut donc que des réformes des contextes sociaux et politiques dans les pays du SEM seraient plus à même d’agir sur les flux migratoires que les réformes néolibérales. Le déclenchement des révoltes arabes en décembre 2010 confirme d’ailleurs l’urgence de ces réformes politiques.
Year 2011
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39 Report

The Political Economy of Refugee Migration

Authors Mathias Czaika
Year 2009
Journal Name Jahrbücher für Nationalökonomie und Statistik
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40 Journal Article

Seeking a Rational Approach to a Regional Refugee Crisis: Lessons from the Summer 2014 “Surge” of Central American Women and Children at the US-Mexico Border

Authors Karen Musalo, Eunice Lee
Year 2017
Journal Name Journal on Migration and Human Security
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41 Journal Article

Determinants of migration and the gravity model of migration - application on Western Balkan emigration flows

Authors Visar Malaj, Stefano de Rubertis
Year 2017
Journal Name MIGRATION LETTERS
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42 Journal Article

Does Direct Democracy Hurt Immigrant Minorities? Evidence from Naturalization Decisions in Switzerland

Authors Jens Hainmueller, Dominik Hangartner
Year 2019
Journal Name American Journal of Political Science
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43 Journal Article

Foreigners, citizens and the tyrannical edges of the 'Vox Populi' : empirical and normative evidence from Switzerland

Authors Jean-Thomas ARRIGHI, Universitat Pompeu Fabra : Departament de Ciències Polítiques i Socials
Year 2017
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44 Working Paper

Politics and the migration-development nexus: the EU and the Arab SEM countries

Authors Françoise DE BEL-AIR
Description
In the hope of regulating migratory flows, the European Council endorsed a “global approach” to migration in December 2005, an approach which is based on the correction of the “deep causes of migration”: poverty, unemployment and development gaps between North and South. Besides liberalising economies and trade systems, a set of measures are advocated in order to enhance home countries’ development by using “migration [as a] medicine against migration”: stimulating the remittance of funds back to the country of origin; expanding the role of diasporas settled in member states; reinforcing circular migration schemes and facilitating return movements; and improving the management of the emigration of the highly-skilled in order to curb “brain drain”. The paper focuses on the Arab South and East Mediterranean (SEM) countries. It challenges the views, implicit in EU migration policies, that migration is entirely rooted in economics and that migrants’ agency alone is able to spur development in the origin country. Using the theoretical background of political economy with a neo-institutional approach to migration, it explores the stakes, the outreaches and the outcomes of the migration and development nexus. By so doing, it re-politicizes migration and development and emphasises the structural and contextual dimension of factors pushing on migration and hampering development: unemployment and high professional turn over; economic liberalisation and deregulation policies, and socio-political “blockages” (gender inequalities, patronage, clientelism and corruption, lack of public expression). Moreover, the analysis of SEM country practices in the field of migration management and engineering migration for development shows how the design of policies and the channelling of flows respond to political and demographic stakes in the various national contexts. Migration patterns act as a political shield for regimes in the region that: allows these regimes to monitor political opposition; renews socio-cultural elites; and decreases the economic opportunities in national economies, due to corruption and patronage. Current policies also reconstruct state-society/expatriates relations, through (controlled) economic participation and socio-cultural solidarity. They do not, however, lead to political participation. The paper thus concludes that amendments to macro-political contexts in the SEM countries are more likely than liberalisation policies to curb emigration flows, by engineering global social and political development. As a matter of fact, the onset and patterns of the Arab revolutions since December 2010 aptly confirm the need for political reform in the region. Adoptée par le Conseil européen en décembre 2005, l’Approche globale des migrations est axée sur la correction des « causes profondes de la migration » (la pauvreté, le chômage, les écarts de développement entre nord et sud) afin d’en réguler les flux. Parmi les mesures préconisées figurent la facilitation de l’envoi de fonds vers les pays d’origine (transparence des coûts, développement de l’accès aux services financiers), l’encouragement du rôle des diasporas implantées dans les États membres (aider les pays en développement à identifier leur diaspora et à établir des liens), le renforcement de la migration circulaire et la facilitation du retour, une meilleure gestion des migrations de personnes hautement qualifiées afin de limiter la « fuite des cerveaux ». Cette étude traite des pays arabes du sud et de l’est de la Méditerranée (SEM). Elle met en question les représentations, contenues dans les politiques migratoires de l’UE, de la migration comme facteur purement économique, mais aussi des migrants comme agents d’un développement à grande échelle dans leurs pays d’origine. Le cadre théorique de l’économie politique et les approches néo-institutionnelles des migrations, utilisés ici, permettent de dégager les enjeux et la portée du lien entre migration et développement sur le terrain arabe. L’étude ‘re-politise’ ces deux processus. Elle met en relief la dimension structurelle des facteurs déclenchant l’émigration et entravant les processus de développement : les caractéristiques du marché du travail, les politiques de libéralisation des économies et les « blocages » sociopolitiques (inégalités hommes-femmes, clientélisme et corruption, obstacles à l’expression publique). En outre, l’analyse des politiques migratoires menées dans les pays du SEM montre que ces mesures répondent aux enjeux politiques et démographiques particuliers aux divers contextes nationaux de la région. Elles permettent aux régimes en place de contrôler l’opposition politique, le renouvellement des élites socioculturelles et les conséquences de la contraction des opportunités économiques, due à la corruption et au clientélisme. Les politiques migratoires participent également d’une restructuration des relations États-sociétés-expatriés autour d’une participation économique (étroitement contrôlée) et d’une solidarité socioculturelle, mais excluant toute participation politique. L’étude conclut donc que des réformes des contextes sociaux et politiques dans les pays du SEM seraient plus à même d’agir sur les flux migratoires que les réformes néolibérales. Le déclenchement des révoltes arabes en décembre 2010 confirme d’ailleurs l’urgence de ces réformes politiques.
Year 2011
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45 Report

Can we put an end to human smuggling?

Authors Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
Year 2015
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46 Policy Brief

Twenty Years after IIRIRA: The Rise of Immigrant Detention and its Effects on Latinx Communities across the Nation

Authors Melina Juárez, Bárbara Gómez-Aguiñaga, Sonia P. Bettez
Year 2018
Journal Name Journal on Migration and Human Security
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47 Journal Article

Immigration, Backlash, and Democracy

Authors RYAN PEVNICK
Year 2023
Journal Name American Political Science Review
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48 Journal Article

Volk auf dem Weg: Transnational Migration of the Russian‐Germans from 1763 to the Present Day

Authors J. Otto Pohl
Year 2009
Journal Name Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism
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49 Journal Article

Towards a social determination of health framework for understanding climate disruption and health-disease processes

Authors Jose Enrique Hasemann Lara, Alejandra Diaz de Leon, Deniz Daser, ...
Year 2024
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50 Journal Article

The British Media, the Veil and the Limits of Freedom

Authors Milly Williamson
Year 2014
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51 Journal Article

Non-Conventional Migration: An Evolving Pattern in South Asia

Authors AKM Ahsan Ullah, Mallik Akram Hossain, Ahmed Shafiqul Huque
Year 2022
Journal Name Journal of Asian and African Studies
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52 Journal Article

Grief, a Wedding Veil, and Bureaucratic Persecution: Becoming Refugee-adjacent in the Aftermath of Tragedy, 1941-1946

Authors Lauren Banko
Year 2021
Journal Name Immigrants &amp; Minorities
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53 Journal Article

On the Causes and Significance of the December 2008 Social Explosion in Greece

Authors Spyros Sakellaropoulos
Year 2012
Journal Name SCIENCE & SOCIETY
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54 Journal Article

Protest Against the Reception of Asylum Seekers in Austria

Authors Sieglinde Rosenberger, Miriam Haselbacher
Book Title Protest Movements in Asylum and Deportation
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55 Book Chapter

Migrants and Refugees at the Borders of Europe: Qualifying through Suffering, Bare Life and Paradoxical Agency

Authors Estela Schindel
Year 2017
Journal Name Revista de Estudios Sociales
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56 Journal Article

Climatic conditions are weak predictors of asylum migration

Authors Sebastian Schutte, Jonas Vestby, Jørgen Carling, ...
Year 2021
Journal Name Nature Communications
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57 Journal Article

Issues of human potential development in the republics of the Russian Federation (according to the results of a survey of experts in Dagestan and Tuva)

Authors Rim M. Valiakhmetov, Ayrat Ya. Zaripov, Marcel S. Turakayev
Year 2022
Citations (WoS) 4
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58 Journal Article

Motywacje studentów pochodzących z Europy Wschodniej do studiowania w Polsce – kontekst międzynarodowy, lokalny i instytucjonalny

Authors Kamila Dolińska, Andrzej Jekaterynczuk, Julita Makaro, ...
Year 2024
Journal Name Edukacja Międzykulturowa
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60 Journal Article

The globalization of football: a study in the glocalization of the ‘serious life’

Authors Richard Giulianotti, Roland Robertson
Year 2004
Journal Name The British Journal of Sociology
Citations (WoS) 136
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61 Journal Article

Explaining the Populist Right in the Neoliberal West

Authors Christian Joppke
Year 2023
Journal Name Societies
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62 Journal Article

PERCEPTIONS

Principal investigator Peter Leitner (Person in charge of the proposal), Diotima Bertel (Coordinating project manager)
Description
Narratives and an understanding of a “common identity” are an effective legitimisation for European integration (Sassatelli, 2015). Furthermore, perceptions, e.g. on human rights and democracy, have an impact on migration (EUMAGINE, policy brief); and feedbacks from migrants back to their country of origin can affect migration both in a positive and negative way (Timmerman, Hemmerechts, & De Clerck 2014b), and, thus, also influence the image or perception of Europe. Migration is caused by a number of push and pull factors – narratives are one part of this. Therefore, the project aims to investigate the different perceptions of Europe, as well as the problems that are caused when expectation and reality do not match, or security problems that might arise from false narratives. The current image of Europe is influenced by a number of imaginations and narratives, and with the ‘Brexit’ vote, the positive idea of the European Union is under re-evaluation within the world. Migration as one of the key challenges in the last years further leads to a re-imagination of the EU. According to Sassatelli (2015), cultural identity is closely connected to various narratives (public, academic, institutional). In addition, normative influences, as identified by Garip and Asad (2013), describe the influence that previous migrants have on migration aspirations of prospective migrants. Furthermore, European identity is still in the making and heavily contested (ibid.) – as e.g. the mentioned “Brexit” vote shows (Cassidy, Innocenti & Bürkner 2018). Much research is carried out around the topic of narratives and European identity; however, most of it is focused on strategies for solidarity, changing the narratives about migration, creating an inter-European narrative and strengthening the cultural identity within Europe (e.g. Cantat 2015; Innocenti 2015; Scuzzarello & Kinnvall 2013). PERCEPTIONS, therefore, aims to support first-line practitioners outside of Europe in counteracting on false narratives and correcting skewed images of the EU.
Year 2019
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63 Project

Moving to the Homeland: South African Jews in Israel

Authors Rebeca Raijman
Year 2013
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant &amp; Refugee Studies
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64 Journal Article

Penalizing democracy: punitive politics in neoliberal Mexico

Authors Markus-Michael Mueller
Year 2016
Journal Name Crime, Law and Social Change
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65 Journal Article

The 2016 EU Referendum: Explaining Support for Brexit Among Would-Be British MPs

Authors Siim Trumm, Caitlin Milazzo, Joshua Townsley
Year 2020
Journal Name Political Studies
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66 Journal Article

ROOT CAUSES OF MIGRATION TO AND FROM ECUADOR

Authors Raul Fabricio Sanchez Santacruz, Leonardo Ivan Barahona Tapia, Rosa Leonor Maldonado Manzano
Year 2022
Journal Name Immigrant Youth and Employment: Lessons Learned from the Analysis of LSIC and 82 Lived Stories
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67 Journal Article

Neville Laski, Anglo-Jewry and the crises of the 1930s

Authors Daniel Tilles
Year 2019
Journal Name Patterns of Prejudice
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68 Journal Article

The European Union as a destination of Turkish migrants in 2008–2018

Authors Selda Dudu, Teresa Rojo
Year 2022
Journal Name NEW PERSPECTIVES ON TURKEY
Citations (WoS) 1
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69 Journal Article

The Emotional Impacts of Working as an Asylum Lawyer

Authors Neil Graffin
Year 2019
Journal Name Refugee Survey Quarterly
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70 Journal Article

When the Export of Social Problems Is No Longer Possible: Immigration Policies and Unemployment in Switzerland

Authors Alexandre Afonso
Year 2005
Journal Name Social Policy &amp; Administration
Citations (WoS) 10
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71 Journal Article

POLITICAL UPHEAVALS IN THE ARAB WORLD: INSTABILITIES AND MIGRANTS INFLUX TO THE WESTERN BALKANS

Authors Jelisaveta Blagojevic, Radenko Scekic
Year 2017
Journal Name ANNALES-ANALI ZA ISTRSKE IN MEDITERANSKE STUDIJE-SERIES HISTORIA ET SOCIOLOGIA
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72 Journal Article

Op zoek naar veilige(r) landen. Onderzoek naar beweegredenen van asielzoekers

Authors The Dutch Advisory Committee on Migration Affairs (Adviescommissie voor Vreemdelingenzaken, ACVZ)
Description
Een advies over de komst van asielzoekers uit door Nederland als veilig aangemerkte landen. Waarom dienen zij een asielaanvraag in, terwijl de kans op inwilliging nihil is? Uit het onderzoek is gebleken dat motieven voor personen om uit veilig aangemerkte landen te vertrekken zeer divers zijn en een krachtige drijfveer vormen voor migratie naar ‘Europa’. Die motieven komen bijvoorbeeld voort uit een gebrek aan perspectief in eigen land – armoede, werkloosheid, ongelijkheid – versterkt door gebrekkig bestuur en corruptie en zijn krachtiger dan de aantrekkingskracht van Nederland. Nederland is dan ook vaak niet de eerste bestemmingskeuze. Tijdens de reis ontstaan meer pullfactoren voor Nederland, die vaak zijn ingegeven door verhalen van landgenoten over Nederland. Op basis van dit onderzoek doet de ACVZ de volgende aanbevelingen: • 1) Pak de grondoorzaken van migratie aan en overweeg legale migratiekanalen. • 2) Zet in op een geharmoniseerde EU-definitie van veilig land en uniforme toepassing ervan. • 3) Verkort de Dublinprocedure en/of doe meer zaken zelf af. • 4) Versterk de inzet op terugkeer. Bied maatwerk inreisverboden en terugkeerondersteuning. • 5) Richt informatiecampagnes in, ook op personen die al onderweg zijn.
Year 2018
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73 Report

Understanding refugee durable solutions by international players: Does dialogue form a missing link?

Authors Fred Bidandi
Year 2018
Journal Name COGENT SOCIAL SCIENCES
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74 Journal Article

Fighting to belong: drivers for transnational diaspora military service in Israel and beyond

Authors Lior Yohanani
Year 2024
Journal Name Comparative Migration Studies
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75 Journal Article

Belarus in the Eurasian Migration System: The Challenges of the Last Decade and Their Consequences

Authors Yuliya Petrakova
Year 2022
Citations (WoS) 1
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76 Journal Article

"Smenovekhovtsy" Movement and Realities of Soviet Society of 1920-ies

Authors Vyacheslav Nikolayevich Azarov
Year 2018
Journal Name NAUCHNYI DIALOG
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77 Journal Article

Common Dynamics of Identity and Immigration: The Roles of Mobility and Democracy

Authors Nicolas Houy
Year 2019
Journal Name Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation
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78 Journal Article

Did Covid-19 make things worse? The pandemic as a push factor stimulating the emigration intentions of junior doctors from Poland: A mixed methods study

Authors Dominika Pszczółkowska, Sara Bojarczuk, Maciej Duszczyk, ...
Year 2024
Journal Name PLOS ONE
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79 Journal Article

Well-Founded Fear of Algorithms or Algorithms of Well-Founded Fear? Hybrid Intelligence in Automated Asylum Seeker Interviews

Authors Robert G. McNamara, Pia Tikka
Year 2023
Journal Name Journal of Refugee Studies
Citations (WoS) 2
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81 Journal Article

Violations produced by COVID-19 of the fundamental rights of good living. Legal- comparative analysis.

Authors Alberto Fernando Velez Leon, Maria Esther Gonzalez Andarcia, Dayton Francisco Farfan Pinoargote, ...
Year 2023
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83 Journal Article

Religious and Social Reflections of the Migration: In the Context of Quranic References

Authors Ihsan Capcioglu, Mehmet Akin, Niyazi Akyuz
Year 2018
Journal Name TARIH KULTUR VE SANAT ARASTIRMALARI DERGISI-JOURNAL OF HISTORY CULTURE AND ART RESEARCH
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85 Journal Article

Socio-economic Determinants for the Portuguese Immigration: An Empirical Discussion

Authors Paulo Reis Mourao
Year 2016
Journal Name Social Indicators Research
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86 Journal Article

From Armed Neutrality to External Dependence: Swiss Security in the 21stCentury

Authors Marc R. DeVore, Armin Stähli
Year 2011
Journal Name Swiss Political Science Review
Citations (WoS) 3
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87 Journal Article

Why Black and Latino Home Ownership Matter to the Color Line and Multiracial Democracy

Authors Jacob S. Rugh
Year 2020
Journal Name Race and Social Problems
Citations (WoS) 16
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88 Journal Article

Central Europe as a space of transnational migration

Authors Max Haller, Roland Verwiebe
Year 2016
Journal Name Österreichische Zeitschrift für Soziologie
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89 Journal Article

Do Migrants Get Involved in Politics? Levels, Forms and Drivers of Migrant Political Participation in Italy

Authors Livia Elisa Ortensi, Veronica Riniolo
Year 2019
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
Citations (WoS) 8
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90 Journal Article

Migration potential from Iran: A cluster analysis of the main departure drivers

Authors Faranak Gholampour, Faranak Gholampour, Blanka Szeitl, ...
Year 2024
Journal Name SOCIAL SCIENCE INFORMATION SUR LES SCIENCES SOCIALES
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91 Journal Article

Introduction: Immigration in Ireland and Migrant-Led Activism

Authors Ronit Lentin
Book Title Migrant Activism and Integration from Below in Ireland
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92 Book Chapter

Immigration, Politics and Democracy: The World Jewish Congress in Europe, 1936–1939

Authors Zohar Segev
Year 2017
Journal Name Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism
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93 Journal Article

Democracy in private government (a case study of the International Typographical Union)

Authors Seymour M. Lipset
Year 2010
Journal Name The British Journal of Sociology
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94 Journal Article

Book reviews

Year 1999
Journal Name Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie
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95 Journal Article

What Shapes Satisfaction with Democracy? Interests, Morals, and the German East-West Divide

Authors Heinz Welsch
Year 2022
Citations (WoS) 3
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97 Journal Article

Political Disaffection, Sociodemographic, and Psychographic Variables as State Legitimacy Determinants in the European Union

Authors Cristina Del-Castillo-Feito, Gabriel Cachon-Rodriguez, Iria Paz-Gil
Year 2020
Journal Name AMERICAN BEHAVIORAL SCIENTIST
Citations (WoS) 4
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98 Journal Article

Sexual politics, torture, and secular time

Authors Judith Butler
Year 2008
Journal Name The British Journal of Sociology
Citations (WoS) 208
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99 Journal Article

US FOREIGN POLICY: POLITICAL RISKS AND PRIORITIES

Authors Aida Mamed Yusifzade
Year 2022
Journal Name Immigrant Youth and Employment: Lessons Learned from the Analysis of LSIC and 82 Lived Stories
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100 Journal Article
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