Marché du travail et de l'emploi

Labour markets and employment refers to factors at the macro and micro levels, such as unemployment rates, wages, and the probability of finding employment that drive migration by altering the economic returns from relocating.

Studies listed under this migration driver refer to wages differentials, expected labour income, individual unemployment and unemployment rates, labour demand, migration driven by career motivations, labour market opportunities, and individual economic insecurity related to employment conditions.

Showing page of 1344 results, sorted by

Tourism Employment and Creative In-migrants

Authors Maria Thulemark, Mats Lundmark, Susanna Heldt-Cassel
Year 2014
Journal Name Scandinavian Journal of Hospitality and Tourism
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
2 Journal Article

Charakterystyka migrantów powracających do Polski oraz ich aktywność zawodowa na rodzimym rynku pracy

Year 2013
Journal Name Studia Migracyjne - Przegląd Polonijny
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
3 Journal Article

Occupational choice and returns to self-employment among immigrants

Authors Lina Andersson
Year 2011
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANPOWER
Citations (WoS) 4
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
4 Journal Article

A New Starting Point: The Factors That Made Taiwanese Professional Baseball Players Migrate to Mainland China After the 1997 Match-Fixing Scandal

Authors Ping-Chao Lee, Ling-Mei Ko, Jheng-Han Huang
Year 2021
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF SPORT
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
5 Journal Article

On the potential interaction between labour market institutions and immigration policies

Authors Claudia Cigagna, Giovanni Sulis
Year 2015
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANPOWER
Citations (WoS) 2
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
7 Journal Article

What Drives Migration to Europe? Survey Experimental Evidence from Lebanon

Authors Anselm Hager
Year 2021
Journal Name International Migration Review
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
8 Journal Article

THE RELATIONS BETWEEN LABOUR MARKET INSTITUTIONS AND EMPLOYMENT OF MIGRANTS

Authors mate domician, imran sarihasan, krisztina dajnoki
Year 2017
Journal Name Amfiteatru Economic
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
9 Journal Article

Labour Market Responses to Immigration: Evidence from Internal Migration Driven by Weather Shocks

Authors Marieke Kleemans, Jeremy R. Magruder, Jeremy Magruder
Year 2018
Journal Name The Economic Journal
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
10 Journal Article

Connectivity as the facilitator of intra-European student migration

Authors Balaz, Allan Williams, Martina Chrancokova
Year 2018
Journal Name Population, Space and Place
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
11 Journal Article

Southern Negro Migration: Social and Economic Components of an Ecological Model

Authors William F. Stinner, Gordon F. De Jong
Year 1969
Journal Name Demography
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
12 Journal Article

Developments in the Irish Labour Market during the Crisis: What Lessons for Policy?

Authors Thomas Conefrey, Martina Lawless, Suzanne Linehan
Year 2015
Journal Name JOURNAL OF THE STATISTICAL AND SOCIAL INQUIRY SOCIETY OF IRELAND
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
13 Journal Article

The Combined Effect of Qualifications and Marriage on the Employment Trajectories of Peruvian Graduates in Switzerland

Authors Romina Seminario, Nicky Le Feuvre
Year 2019
Journal Name JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION AND INTEGRATION
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
14 Journal Article

Varieties of capitalism, variation in labour immigration

Authors Camilla DEVITT
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
Citations (WoS) 24
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
15 Journal Article

Labour markets performance and migration flows in Arab Mediterranean countries : a regional perspective

Authors Iván MARTIN
Description
The objectives of the Study are two-fold: To analyze the key labour market determinants of migration flows from selected Arab Mediterranean Countries (Algeria, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Syria, Tunisia and the Occupied Palestinian Territories), with a particular emphasis on demographic pressures, wage differentials and relative income disparities with the EU, employment policies, labour market flexibility and unemployment rates; this analysis includes the impact of migration on the labour markets of Arab Mediterranean Country (AMCs) labour markets; To propose a series of specific recommendations to improve the design of the EU’s migration policies towards AMCs and policy options available to them for the management of mismatches between labour supply and demand.
Year 2009
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
16 Report

Trapped in Precariousness? Risks and Opportunities of Female Immigrants and Natives Transitioning from Part-Time Jobs in Spain

Authors Jacobo Muñoz-Comet, Stephanie Steinmetz
Year 2020
Journal Name Work, Employment and Society
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
17 Journal Article

The labour market consequences of globalisation and regionalisation INTRODUCTION

Authors Ludo Cuyvers, Philippe De Lombaerde, Glenn Rayp
Year 2011
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANPOWER
Citations (WoS) 2
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
18 Journal Article

Is the push-pull paradigm useful to explain rural-urban migration? A case study in Uttarakhand, India

Authors Ellen M. Hoffmann, Verena Konerding, Sunil Nautiyal, ...
Year 2019
Journal Name PLOS ONE
Citations (WoS) 1
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
20 Journal Article

Constrained voluntary informalisation: Analysing motivations of self-employed migrant workers in an urban village, Guangzhou

Authors Gengzhi Huang, Changjian Wang, Yan Guo, ...
Year 2020
Journal Name CITIES
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
21 Journal Article

Einwanderung, Arbeitsangebot und Fertilitätsentscheidungen von einheimischen Frauen

Principal investigator Concetta Mendolicchio (Principal Investigator)
Description
Einwanderer treten im Gastland häufig als Anbieter von haushaltsbezogenen Dienstleistungen auf, zum Beispiel im Bereich der Haushaltsführung, Kinderbetreuung und Pflege von älteren Haushaltsangehörigen, und können damit potenziell zur Erhöhung des Arbeitsangebots und der Fertilität von einheimischen Frauen beitragen. Das Projekt untersucht anhand von regional desaggregierten Daten für die Jahre 1996-2012, inwieweit das für Deutschland zutrifft. Datengrundlage ist zum einen das Sozio-ökonomische Panel (SOEP), und zum anderen INKAR (Indikatoren und Karten zur Raumentwicklung). Die Analyse wird regional und nach Qualifikationsniveau differenziert durchgeführt. Projektziel Beantwortung der folgenden Fragen: Entlasten Immigranten einheimische Frauen in Deutschland bei haushaltsbezogenen Dienstleistungen? Trägt dies zur Erhöhung von deren Arbeitsangebot und Fertilität bei? Unterscheiden sich die Effekte je nach Region und Qualifikationsniveau?
Year 2014
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
22 Project

Remittances and informal work

Authors Artjoms Ivlevs
Year 2016
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANPOWER
Citations (WoS) 2
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23 Journal Article

Migrant labor in hospitality: The Cyprus experience

Authors Anastasios Zopiatis, AL Theocharous, Panayiotis Constanti
Year 2014
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HOSPITALITY MANAGEMENT
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
24 Journal Article

Migrant Employment and the Recession — the Case of the Irish in Britain

Authors F.X. Kirwin, A.G. Nairn
Year 1983
Journal Name International Migration Review
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
25 Journal Article

Migration Differentials in Women's Market Employment: An Empirical and Multicultural Analysis

Authors Yaghoob Foroutan
Year 2008
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 15
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
26 Journal Article

Determinants of immigrant self-employment in Spain

Authors Begona Cueto, Vanesa Rodriguez Alvarez
Year 2015
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANPOWER
Citations (WoS) 3
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
27 Journal Article

Immigrant Employment Success in Canada, Part I: Individual and Contextual Causes

Authors Jeffrey G. Reitz
Year 2007
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
28 Journal Article

Finding an Adequate Job: Employment and Income of Recent Immigrants to Israel

Authors Haya Stier, Varda Levanon
Year 2003
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 26
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
29 Journal Article

Refugee crisis in Europe: determinants of asylum seeking in European countries from 2008-2014

Authors Yoo-Duk Kang
Year 2020
Journal Name JOURNAL OF EUROPEAN INTEGRATION
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
30 Journal Article

International migration of health professionals and the marketization and privatization of health education in India: From push–pull to global political economy

Authors Margaret Walton-Roberts
Year 2015
Journal Name Social Science & Medicine
Citations (WoS) 25
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
31 Journal Article

FROM EDUCATION TO EMPLOYMENT. AN EVENT-HISTORY ANALYSIS OF SECOND-GENERATION IMMIGRANTS OF INDIAN AND PAKISTANI ORIGIN

Authors Gunn Elisabeth Birkelund, Elisabeth Ugreninov, Mats Lillehagen, ...
Year 2014
Journal Name TIDSSKRIFT FOR SAMFUNNSFORSKNING
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
32 Journal Article

Regional Disparities in Employment of High-Skilled Foreigners – Determinants and Options for Labour Migration Policy in Germany

Authors Carola Burkert, Annekatrin Niebuhr, Rüdiger Wapler
Year 2008
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
33 Journal Article

Invisible capitalism: political economy and the regulation of undocumented ­immigration in France

Authors Michael Samers, M Samers
Year 2003
Journal Name Economy and Society
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
34 Journal Article

Mismatch in the Norwegian Labour Market 2003-2013: Did Immigrants Make a Difference?

Authors Dag Kolsrud
Year 2018
Journal Name Social Indicators Research
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
35 Journal Article

Labour mobility and regional disparities: the role of female labour participation

Authors Sjef Ederveen, Richard Nahuis, Ashok Parikh
Year 2007
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
Citations (WoS) 12
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
36 Journal Article

Is it Push or Pull? Recent Evidence from Migration into Bangalore, India

Authors Kala Seetharam Sridhar, A. Venugopala Reddy, Pavan Srinath
Year 2012
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
37 Journal Article

Immigration and the public sector: Income effects for the native population in Sweden

Authors Jan Ekberg
Year 1999
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
Citations (WoS) 16
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
38 Journal Article

Modelling Population Changes in Small English Urban Areas

Authors P Congdon, J Shepherd
Year 1986
Journal Name Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
40 Journal Article

Admission-Group Salary Differentials in the United States: The Significance of the Labour-Market Institutional Selection of High-Skilled Workers

Authors Lingxin Hao, LX Hao
Year 2013
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
Citations (WoS) 3
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
41 Journal Article

Poles Apart? EU Enlargement and the Labour Market Outcomes of Immigrants in the United Kingdom

Authors Stephen Drinkwater, John Eade, Michal Garapich
Year 2009
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 112
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
42 Journal Article

Discrimination in Migrant Workers' Welfare Entitlements and Benefits in Urban Labour Market: Findings from a Four-City Study in China

Authors Haining Wang, Zhiming Cheng, F Guo
Year 2015
Journal Name Population, Space and Place
Citations (WoS) 13
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43 Journal Article

Transnationale Arbeitsmärkte: Migration von Arbeitskräften zwischen Österreich und Deutschland

Principal investigator Andrea Weber (Principal Investigator ), Rudolf Winter-Ebmer (Principal Investigator ), David Card (Principal Investigator)
Description
Dieses Projekt verfolgt das Ziel, Umfang und Charakteristiken der Beschäftigung Älterer umfangreich zu analysieren. Im ersten Projektteil benutzen wir zwei umfangreiche administrative Datensätze, um die Charakteristiken der letzten Beschäftigungsphase vor der Verrentung, das Übergangsmuster zwischen Beschäftigung und Verrentung, sowie eine Beschäftigung nach der Verrentung zu analysieren. Hierbei werden die Charakteristiken der Beschäftigten, ihrer Arbeitsmarkthistorien, ihrer Arbeitgeber sowie das ökonomische Umfeld in die Analyse einbezogen. Zudem werden die Zusammenhänge zwischen den einzelnen Aspekten der Beschäftigung Älterer analysiert. Im zweiten Projektteil werden die Determinanten der Beschäftigung Älterer zunächst theoretisch abgeleitet und anschließend empirisch auf der Basis der gleichen Datensätze untersucht. Mit einem Focus auf ökonomisch motivierten Entscheidungen werden wieder individuelle und betriebliche Charakteristiken sowie das ökonomische Umfeld in die Analyse einbezogen. Der letzte Projektteil analysiert wieder auf der Basis von theoretischen Hypothesen mit Hilfe eines dritten verknüpften Arbeitgeber-Arbeitnehmerpaneldatensatzes, ob Personalmaßnahmen einen Einfluss auf die Charakteristiken der Beschäftigung Älterer haben. Dieses Projekt geht somit deutlich über die geringe und verstreute Evidenz zum Thema Beschäftigung Älterer in Deutschland hinaus. Es gibt zum ersten Mal eine vollständige Übersicht über die Charakteristiken und Determinanten der Beschäftigung Älterer. Es schließt nicht nur die ökonomischen Überlegungen der Betroffenen, sondern auch deren Arbeitgeber und des ökonomischen Umfelds mit ein. Politik- und Managementimplikationen dieses Projekts können die Identifizierung von Potenzialen einer Erhöhung der Beschäftigung Älterer sein sowie deren Gründe und Hindernisse. Eine umfangreiche Analyse von Personalmaßnahmen gibt uns zusätzliche Einsichten über die Möglichkeiten von Arbeitgebern, die Beschäftigung Älterer zu erhöhen.
Year 2014
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
44 Project

Labor migration among elite sport coaches: An exploratory study

Authors Johannes Orlowski, Pamela Wicker, Christoph Breuer
Year 2018
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL REVIEW FOR THE SOCIOLOGY OF SPORT
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
45 Journal Article

Workforce nationality composition and workplace flexibility in Britain

Authors Philip B. Whyman, Alina Ileana Petrescu
Year 2014
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANPOWER
Citations (WoS) 2
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46 Journal Article

Measurement errors in geographical labour mobility using data linkage: the Spanish case

Authors Monica Marti, Carmen Rodenas
Year 2021
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
47 Journal Article

The changing nature of employment in Europe in the context of challenges, threats and opportunities for employees and employers

Description
Europe is today facing several major challenges. These go beyond the future of the euro and the instability of the financial system to some of the underlying issues concerned with the work activities that underpin the European economy. How can Europe retain manufacturing and production as restructuring and relocation towards lower-wage costs economies gathers pace? As demographic change lifts the proportions of older workers in society and in employment, how can Europe both maintain decent levels of pensions and provide decent jobs for younger workers? As cross-border migration becomes ever easier how can migrant workers be fully integrated and accepted into the European labour market? How can aspirations for decent jobs be squared with the nearly pan-European progression of precarious work? Europe’s future depends in large part on the answers it can provide to these questions within the context of the vision of a competitive, technologically-innovative economy bolstered by a high road social model that was captured in the Europe 2020 strategy. The aim of the ChangingEmployment programme is to train a cross-European and interdisciplinary network of policy-focused social scientists comprehensively skilled in understanding, analyzing, and responding to social and institutional employment changes. Overall, it will: 1.Explore, societal differences, national variations in employees’ experiences of working life. 2.Examine historic and changing relations between management and employees. 3.Develop a comparative understanding of the changing quality of work, organisation and employment in the context of the (above) changes. 4.Consider patterns and consequences of workplace inclusion-exclusion in relation to migration, employment and unemployment, shifting inequalities in terms of gender and ethnicity and the implications for older employees of new patterns of work and retirement. 5.Assess impact of the current economic retrenchment on these forms of employment in Europe
Year 2012
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
48 Project

Poland as a (n)(un) attractive destination for Belarusian labour migrants

Authors Zuzanna BRUNARSKA, Magdalena LESINSKA
Year 2014
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
49 Working Paper

The Discourse and Dimensions of Irregularity in Post‐Apartheid South Africa

Authors Jonathan Crush
Year 1999
Journal Name International Migration
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
50 Journal Article

Welcome home in a crisis: Effects of return migration on the non-migrants' wages and employment

Authors Ricardo Hausmann, Ljubica Nedelkoska
Year 2018
Journal Name European Economic Review
Citations (WoS) 4
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
51 Journal Article

Push/Pull Factors, Networks and Student Migration from Côte d’Ivoire to France and Switzerland

Authors Franck Dago, Simon Barussaud
Year 2021
Journal Name Social Inclusion
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
52 Journal Article

Drivers and patterns of rural youth migration and its impact on food security and rural livelihoods in Tunisia

Authors Carolina Viviana ZUCCOTTI, Andrew GEDDES, Alessia BACCHI, ...
Description
The RuMiT (Rural Migration in Tunisia) research addresses the determinants of migration and mobility, the patterns and types of rural youth outmigration and the impact of rural youth migration on rural livelihoods and societies in origin regions in Tunisia. The research used a mixed-methods approach combining quantitative and qualitative methods, providing comparative insights into: international and internal migrants and non-migrants; pre- and post-2011 migrants; households with and without migrants. Main results show that migrants from rural areas are increasingly highly educated and leaving to pursue their studies abroad. This particularly applies to women, who also register a decrease in marriage-related migration. Migration proves to be rewarding for both internal and international migrants, in terms of occupational and social security outcomes. In particular, migrant women have higher labour market participation and employment rates than non-migrants. As a direct consequence of an emigration which is still male dominated, households with migrants are increasingly feminized, i.e. with a higher share of women, who are more likely to be active compared with women in nonmigrant households. Migrant households were also found to have higher access to social security. While incomes from remittances tend not to be invested in productive activities, evidence shows that one internal migrant out of four and one international migrant out of three has an economic activity in the areas of origin, which in most of the cases is connected with agricultural or animal production. The Rural Migration in Tunisia (RuMiT) research project was undertaken in the framework of the FAO project “Youth mobility, food security and rural poverty reduction: Fostering rural diversification through enhanced youth employment and better mobility” (GCP/INT/240/ITA) – in brief, the Rural Youth Migration (RYM) project – implemented in Tunisia and Ethiopia between 2015 and 2017, and funded by the Italian Development Cooperation.
Year 2018
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
53 Report

A study on undocumented migrant workers in the Dutch household sector

Authors Masood Gheasi, P Nijkamp, P Rietveld
Year 2014
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANPOWER
Citations (WoS) 3
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
54 Journal Article

Motivations for the inmigration component of population turnaround in nonmetropolitan areas

Authors James D. Williams, Andrew J. Sofranko
Year 1979
Journal Name Demography
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
55 Journal Article

Circular migration of the population of the Republic of Moldova

Authors Valeriu MOSNEAGA
Description
The specific nature of Moldovan circular migration to the CIS and EU is determined by two criteria: vector (direction) of migration and nature of employment in destination countries. According to the results of public opinion poll, mainly people from the villages participate in circular migration to the CIS; heads of households, men with secondary or vocational education. For them labor migration abroad is a secondary form of employment, and it is seasonal. Circular migrants to the other countries are predominantly women, and a great share of them have higher education. There are significant differences which determine circular nature of migration, especially in the impact of push and pull factors. Labor migration to the CIS countries is determined to a greater extent by the migrants' and their households' need to survive, while migration to the EU countries is conditioned by the greater living (functioning) opportunities for migrants and their families. Visa regime, high travel expenses have a significant impact on the nature of circular migration to the EU. It explains greater length of trips. Work trip to the CIS (mainly to Russia) usually lasts around 7 months, while in the EU it's twice longer, 15 months. Quite often it stimulates non-return migration. In the conditions of modern financial and economic crisis of 2008-2010 circular migration acquired several new features. These include delayed nature of migration, greater comparable choice possibilities in terms of destination countries and countries of origin, uncertainty and mass multiple choices of its implementation.
Year 2012
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
56 Report

Work in the kebab economy

Authors Östen Wahlbeck, Osten Wahlbeck
Year 2007
Journal Name Ethnicities
Citations (WoS) 28
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
57 Journal Article

Immigrants and health: Unemployment and health-risks of labour migrants in the Federal Republic of Germany, 1984-1992

Authors T Elkeles, W Seifert
Year 1996
Journal Name Social Science & Medicine
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
58 Journal Article

The missing bridge: How immigrant networks keep Americans out of dirty jobs

Authors Philip L. Martin
Year 1993
Journal Name Population and Environment
Citations (WoS) 8
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
59 Journal Article

Up and on or down and out? Gender, immigration and the consequences of temporary employment in Canada

Authors Sylvia Fuller
Year 2011
Journal Name Research in Social Stratification and Mobility
Citations (WoS) 8
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
60 Journal Article

The European Union Cohesion Policy and External Migration in Romania. Multistage Analysis

Authors Ionel Bostan, Cristian Popescu, Elena-Doina Dascalu, ...
Year 2016
Journal Name REVISTA DE CERCETARE SI INTERVENTIE SOCIALA
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
61 Journal Article

Moving Out but Not Up: Economic Outcomes in the Great Migration

Authors Suzanne C. Eichenlaub, SE Tolnay, J. Trent Alexander
Year 2010
Journal Name American Sociological Review
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
62 Journal Article

Rotterdam as a Case of Complexity Reduction: Migration from Central and Eastern European Countries

Authors Mark van Ostaijen, Erik Snel, Margrietha ‘t Hart
Book Title Coming to Terms with Superdiversity
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
64 Book Chapter

Labour market outcomes and Egypt's migration potential

Authors Mona AMER, Philippe FARGUES
Year 2014
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
65 Working Paper

Poland’s Perspective on the Intra-European Movement of Poles. Implications and Governance Responses

Authors Marta Kindler
Book Title Between Mobility and Migration
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
66 Book Chapter

EVALUATING THE IMPACT OF STRUCTURAL POLICIES ON HEALTH INEQUALITIES AND THEIR SOCIAL DETERMINANTS AND FOSTERING CHANGE

Description
The need to deal with health inequalities is now on the agenda of key supranational institutions, such as the European Commission (EC). To tackle the so-called “causes of the causes of health inequity”, the focus should be put on structural policies, policies that – especially in the current times of financial and employment crisis – influence patterns of social stratification, living and working conditions, and thus people's health. The SOPHIE project aims to generate new evidence on the impact and effectiveness of structural policies in reducing health inequalities, and to develop innovative methodologies for the evaluation of these policies in Europe. We will study major policy areas, including macro-economy, welfare state, labour market and employment relations, built environment, housing, as well as gender-oriented and immigration-related policies. Examples of these policies at the European, national and local levels will be examined, in addition to their impacts on health inequalities by social class, gender and migrant status. The project will develop theoretical frameworks as well as quantitative and qualitative methods for evaluating the effectiveness of such policies in different contexts. Novel methods that are useful for evaluating the impact of complex social interventions will be employed, including realist reviews, explanatory case studies and concept mapping. Particular attention will be given to increasing the involvement of affected stakeholders (civil society and deprived population groups) in the identification, design and evaluation of policies to tackle health inequalities. Affected communities and stakeholders will work with responsible policymakers in activities of dissemination of results, knowledge transfer and translation of findings into policy recommendations. Through SOPHIE, the EC will gain knowledge on the impact on health and health inequalities of social and economic policies which may be implemented or recommended to Member States
Year 2011
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
67 Project

Literature review labour migration

Authors Maastricht University - Research Centre for Education and the Labour Market, Frank Cörvers, Julia Reinold, ...
Description
Attracting and retaining migrants can have many benefits for the host country and its economy, for example to mitigate skills shortages. Regulating immigration may prevent several negative consequences of a shrinking and ageing population. However, research and policy often focus on the highly skilled or so-called knowledge migrants (kennismigranten) as a source of human capital, which can increase innovation and a country’s competitiveness. A group of labour migrants that receives significantly less attention from research and policy, are the medium-skilled migrant workers. Although it makes up a significant share of the migrant population, this group is rarely supported by specific migration policies. Therefore, in this report we would like to answer the following central research question: What is known in available literature about the opportunities and limitations of filling labour shortages through labour migration, especially in the middle segment of the labour market? CONTENT: 1. Introduction, 2. Methodology, 3. Shortages and skill requirements in the middle segment of the Dutch labour market, 4. Priority supply from EEA+ countries and beyond, 5. Migration as a solution to address shortages in the middle segment of the Dutch labour market, 6. Alternative solutions to staffing bottlenecks in the middle segment of the Dutch labour market, 7. Conclusions and directions for further research.
Year 2021
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
68 Report

Re-thinking skilled international labour migration: World cities and banking organisations

Authors Jonathan V. Beaverstock
Year 1994
Journal Name Geoforum
Citations (WoS) 64
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
69 Journal Article

Australian immigration: the triumph of economics over prejudice?

Authors J Teicher, C Shah, G Griffin
Year 2002
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANPOWER
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
70 Journal Article

Vulnerable groups in Canada and labour market exclusion

Authors Tony Fang, Morley Gunderson
Year 2015
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANPOWER
Citations (WoS) 2
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
71 Journal Article

Recruitment to Occupations with a Surplus of Workers: The Unexpected Outcomes of Swedish Demand-Driven Labour Migration Policy

Authors Henrik Emilsson
Year 2016
Journal Name International Migration
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
72 Journal Article

Migration, Crisis, and the Global Labour Market

Authors S Castles, Stephen Castles
Year 2011
Journal Name Globalizations
Citations (WoS) 55
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
73 Journal Article

Coach migration in German high performance sport

Authors Pamela Wicker, Christoph Breuer, Johannes Orlowski
Year 2018
Journal Name EUROPEAN SPORT MANAGEMENT QUARTERLY
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
74 Journal Article

Efekty migracji w odniesieniu do rynku pracy - przypadek polskich migracji poakcesyjnych

Year 2014
Journal Name Studia Biura Analiz Sejmowych
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
75 Journal Article

Impact of Economic Labour Migration: A Qualitative Exploration of Left-Behind Family Member Perspectives in Sri Lanka

Authors Chesmal Siriwardhana, Tine Van Bortel, Kolitha Wickramage, ...
Year 2015
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
76 Journal Article

Why does fertility remain high among certain UK-born ethnic minority women?

Authors Hill Kulu, H Kulu, Tina Hannemann
Year 2016
Journal Name Demographic Research
Citations (WoS) 13
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
77 Journal Article

Employment‐Housing Paradigm of Internal Migration: Evidence from Norway

Authors Boris A. Portnov
Year 2001
Journal Name International Migration
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
78 Journal Article

Multivariate explanation of the 1985–1990 and 1995–2000 destination choices of newly arrived immigrants in the United States: the beginning of a new trend?

Authors Kao-Lee Liaw, William H. Frey
Year 2007
Journal Name Population, Space and Place
Citations (WoS) 23
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
79 Journal Article

Współczesne migracje zagraniczne Polaków a polski rynek pracy

Year 2010
Journal Name Studia Migracyjne - Przegląd Polonijny
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
80 Journal Article

Irregular Georgian Migration to Greece: The role of migration policies and social networks

Authors Michaela Maroufof
Description
Τhe causes of irregular migration can be traced at the junctions between individual search for life prospects, demand in the labour market, and restrictive migration control policies. The present report aims at examining the way in which these three forces (individual activity, labour market and policies) intertwine in the case of irregular Georgian migration to Greece. The research looks at the ways in which various factors, including Greek policies of migration and asylum management and migration control affect the plans and the actions of Georgian irregular migrants.
Year 2015
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
81 Report

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
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
82 Book Chapter

Temporary employment and social inequality in Canada: Exploring intersections of gender, race and immigration status

Authors Sylvia Fuller, Leah F. Vosko
Year 2008
Journal Name Social Indicators Research
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
83 Journal Article

Gendered Patterns of Migration in Rural South Africa

Authors Carol S. Camlin, Victoria Hosegood, Rachel C. Snow
Year 2014
Journal Name Population, Space and Place
Citations (WoS) 32
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
84 Journal Article

Accounting for peoples' preferences in establishing new cities: A spatial model of population migration in Kuwait

Authors Nayef Alghais, David Pullar, Elin Charles-Edwards
Year 2018
Journal Name PLOS ONE
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
85 Journal Article

Feasibility study on the labour market performance of regularised migrants in Europe

Description
The regularisation of irregular immigrants remains one of the main controversial policy options in regard to policies towards irregular migrants. While there is an increasing realisation that in some contexts regularisation may be an appropriate and necessary response to the sustained presence of irregular migrants, notably in humanitarian cases such as migrants who cannot be returned or who have family or other strong ties to their country of residence, opposition against regularisation remains strong, often based on principled considerations. However, very little is still known about wider impacts of regularisation, and in particular the impact of regularisation on those regularised. Objectives: The objectives of this feasibility study are threefold: • To determine the feasibility of conducting a comparative survey on the labour market performance of regularised immigrants in seven European countries; • To identify the best design for an empirical study of the labour market performance of regularised and irregular migrants and prepare draft tools for an implementation of the survey; • To provide tentative results on labour market trajectories of regularised migrants on the basis of exploratory qualitative research conducted in the course of the feasibility study. An earlier study conducted by ICMPD between 2007 and 2009 ( “Regularisations in Europe”, REGINE) had identified the overall extent of regularisation, the different forms, rationales and target groups of regularisation, while linking regularisation to the complex causes of irregularity, differing patterns of irregular migration and different overall policy responses to irregular migration across the EU. Yet as a study largely based on desk research and limited primary data collection amongst public authorities and other stakeholders, the study was unable to provide robust evidence regarding the wider impacts of regularisation, including the impact of regularisation on labour market trajectories of regularised migrants. The REGANE study sets out to address this gap. In its feasibility study phase, the study has three aims. First, it will assess the feasibility of conducting a quantitative survey amongst regularised and non-regularised migrants in 7 European countries; second, it will explore the best design for a quantitative empirical study of labour market trajectories of regularised migrants; and third it will undertake explorative qualitative research involving research with relevant experts, public authorities and migrants, thus not only preparing the ground for the implementation of the quantitative survey but also providing preliminary results regarding labour market trajectories of regularised migrants. The quantitative survey prepared through this feasibility study itself is planned to be implemented in a second phase of the project. It expected to provide the first systematic comparative assessment of individual level impacts of regularisation on those regularised in Europe.
Year 2012
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
86 Project

Does assimilation work? Sociocultural determinants of labour market participation of European Muslims

Authors Ruud Koopmans, R Koopmans
Year 2016
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
Citations (WoS) 29
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
87 Journal Article

Irregular migration and migrants’ informal employment: a discussion theme in international migration governance

Authors Gülay Toksöz, Guelay Toksoz
Year 2018
Journal Name Globalizations
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
88 Journal Article

Migrant Worker Well-Being and Its Determinants: The Case of Qatar

Authors Michael Ewers, Kien Trung Le, Abdoulaye Diop, ...
Year 2020
Journal Name SOCIAL INDICATORS RESEARCH
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
89 Journal Article

Determining labour shortages and the need for labour migration from third countries in the EU -Luxembourg

Authors Adolfo Sommarribas, Fabienne Becker, Birte Nienaber
Description
Since almost 150 years, Luxembourg depends on two kinds of migration, qualified and non-qualified, in order to deal with the workforce needs of its economy. Compared to the other EU Member States, Luxembourg is the country with the largest proportion of foreigners; however, this foreign population is mainly composed of EU citizens. Due to its size and geographic position, Luxembourg was able to have access to a very particular form of economic migration: cross-border workers. Globalisation has also played a decisive role in the development of economic migration for the Luxembourgish labour market. The financial centre was obliged to become highly specialised in order to remain competitive in regards to other financial centres and to maintain its volume of business. In order to maintain its competitive advantage, Luxembourg needs highly skilled personnel, which the country has found, up until now, within the Greater Region. This reality is even more pronounced with regards to the labour market: the number of actives (salaried and non-salaried) on 31 March 2014 shows that Luxembourgish nationals represented only 31%, EU citizens 65% and third-country nationals only 4%. Cross-border workers from Belgium, France and Germany represented 42% of the workforce and the resident migrant population (EU citizens and third-country nationals) 28%. Cross-border workers, which consist of skilled and highly skilled labour are substantially attracted for two reasons: 1) more competitive salaries on the Luxemburgish labour market ; and 2) a geographical location which allows the commuting of cross-border workers. The attitude of the successive governments was to adapt immigration to the economic needs of the country. The government policy intends to focus on attracting highly added value activities focussed on new technologies (biomedicine and information as well as communication technologies – focusing on IT security), logistics and research. However, being one of the smallest countries in the European Union, Luxembourg has limited human resources to guarantee the growth not only of the financial sector but also of the new technologies sectors. The government introduced the highly qualified worker residence permit in the bill on free movement of persons and immigration approved by law of 29 August 2008 almost a year before of the enactment of the Blue Card Directive to facilitate the entry of third-country national highly qualified workers. However, this reform was isolated and incomplete and took place without making a real evaluation of the workforce demand of the different sectors of the economy. Even though until now Luxembourg has been relying on the workforce from the Greater Region, for some socio-economic and political stakeholders, highly qualified workforces began to become scarce in the Greater region. In addition to the cross-border workers, the lifting of restrictions to access all the sectors of the labour market for citizens of the new Member States (EU-8) can be considered as a mitigating factor for the need to make an evaluation of the workforce demand, because the high salaries paid in Luxembourg became a real pull factor for the highly qualified workers. As a consequence, the political authorities did not foresee a systematic plan on how to address labour shortages in specific sectors of the economy, because there has not been a significant need for doing so.
Year 2015
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
90 Report

Transnationale Dienstleistungserbringung in der Langzeitpflege zwischen West- und Osteuropa

Principal investigator Karin Gottschall (Principal Investigator ), Heinz Rothgang (Principal Investigator )
Description
Das TP widmet sich der transnationalen Entwicklung auf dem Feld der Langzeitpflege. Pflegesicherungssysteme sind eine der jüngsten Sozialpolitikexpansionen in Wohlfahrtsstaaten. Die Pflegepolitiken sind durch vorwiegend weibliche Arbeitskräftemigration transnational verflochten. Es werden die Folgen dieser Migration für die Sozialpolitik der Immigrationsländer in Abhängigkeit von ihrem Wohlfahrtsstaatstypus ebenso untersucht wie die Migrations-Auswirkungen auf die Sozialpolitik in den Emigrationsländern unterschiedlichen Wohlstandsniveaus, so in Polen, Rumänien und der Ukraine.
Year 2018
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
91 Project

Emigration and Economic Theory: Missing the Boat in Mexico and Ecuador

Authors Jon Jonakin
Year 2013
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
92 Journal Article

State policy on emigration and diasporas in Ukraine

Authors Alissa TOLSTOKOROVA
Description
The dissolution of the socialist system in the early 1990s resulted in crucial quantitative and qualitative transformations in post-Soviet society. One of the determinants of the status of a person in a newly-shaped social hierarchy was individual mobility: social, economic, occupational, and geographical1 . The propensity for economic mobility, in search of employment became an indispensable survival skill for millions of impoverished people2 . Hence, an increasing transnationalism has been observable in society, accompanied by a growing wave of emigration. According to IOM3 , in absolute numbers, the pull of Ukrainian nationals residing abroad approached 6 million, while BMP data4 are even more impressive – 10 million.
Year 2012
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
94 Report

Labour market disadvantage or poor health upon arrival? An examination of the native–immigrant gap in early retirement on a disability pension

Authors Jeevitha Yogachandiran Qvist, Hans-Peter Y Qvist
Year 2021
Journal Name Acta Sociologica
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
95 Journal Article

The employment adjustment of male immigrants in England

Authors Stephen Wheatley Price
Year 2001
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
Citations (WoS) 29
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
96 Journal Article

Performance, labour flexibility and migrant workers in hotels: An establishment and departmental level analysis

Authors Natina Yaduma, Allan Williams, Andrew Lockwood, ...
Year 2015
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HOSPITALITY MANAGEMENT
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
97 Journal Article

Regionalization, economic restructuring and labour migration in Singapore

Authors WT Hui
Year 1997
Journal Name International Migration
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
98 Journal Article

Regionalization, economic restructuring and labour migration in Singapore

Authors WT Hui
Year 1997
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 26
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
99 Journal Article

Discrimination of the Second Generation: Evidence from a Field Experiment in Norway

Authors Arnfinn H. Midtbøen, Arnfinn H. Midtboen
Year 2016
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
100 Journal Article
SHOW FILTERS
Ask us