Emirats Arabes Unis

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Motorcycle-related injuries in the United Arab Emirates

Authors Ashraf F. Hefny, Peter Barss, Hani O. Eid, ...
Year 2012
Journal Name ACCIDENT ANALYSIS AND PREVENTION
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2 Journal Article

"But we can always get more!" Deportability, the State and Gendered Migration in the United Arab Emirates

Authors Pardis Mandavi
Year 2011
Journal Name Asian and Pacific Migration Journal
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6 Journal Article

CROSS-CULTURAL MENTORING: LESSONS LEARNT FROM SCHOOL LEADERS IN THE UNITED ARAB EMIRATES

Authors W. C. Bock, S. Schulze
Year 2016
Journal Name JOURNAL FOR NEW GENERATION SCIENCES
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8 Journal Article

The United Arab Emirates, an Early Adopter of Global Best Practices

Authors William Guéraiche
Year 2024
Book Title Comparing the place of experts during the first waves of the COVID-19 pandemic
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10 Book Chapter

A new era for labour migration in the GCC?

Authors Philip Martin, Froilan T. Malit
Year 2017
Journal Name MIGRATION LETTERS
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12 Journal Article

Skilful survivals : irregular migration to the Gulf

Authors Philippe FARGUES, Nasra M. SHAH
Year 2017
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19 Book

Some aspects of ukrainian legislative reform relating to combating against human trafficking

Authors Lyudmila DAVYDOVYCH, Valentina SUBOTENKO
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Year 2013
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24 Report

United Arab Emirates' legal framework of migration

Authors Maysa ZAHRA
Description
The following explanatory note outlines the main legislative texts including laws, regulations, and cabinet and ministerial decisions, which govern the inward migration of foreigners to the United Arab Emirates and some elements of the outward migration of Emirati citizens.
Year 2015
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26 Report

The legal framework of the sponsorship systems of the Gulf Cooperation Council countries : a comparative examination

Authors Maysa ZAHRA
Description
The sponsorship system of the Arab Gulf countries comprises rules and regulations that tie the residence of a migrant worker to his/her sponsor in the country. This paper offers an in-depth examination of the legal framework of the sponsorship system of the countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) ヨ Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman and the United Arab Emirates. It looks at different aspects of the system starting with the requirement for sponsorship and ending with the rules on absconding and repatriation.
Year 2015
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33 Report

Knowledge migration flows in education hubs: Mobile students enrolled at Indian and British branch campuses in the United Arab Emirates

Description Read More
Year 2017
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34 Project

EduHubMig: Knowledge migration flows in education hubs: Mobile students enrolled at Indian and British branch campuses in the United Arab Emirates

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Year 2017
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36 Project

Energy Consumption, Economic Growth and CO2 Emissions in Middle East

Authors Omar M. Alkasasbeh, Abdalla Alassuli, Amro Alzghoul
Year 2023
Journal Name International Journal of Energy Economics and Policy
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38 Journal Article

La migration marocaine dans les pays du Golfe

Authors Mohamed KHACHANI
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Year 2009
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43 Report

Labour Migration Policy Index (LMPI)

Description
The Labour Migration Policy Index (LMPI) aims to assess on a national level the mechanisms which allow employers to meet their labour needs, and which provide favourable conditions for migrant workers. The LMPI focuses on assessing the formal rules and regulations of labour migration programmes, as opposed to actual policy implementation and migration outcomes, which are more difficult to evaluate. The LMPI considers two fields of labour migration policy -- Administration and Entry Mechanisms, and Migrant Worker Entitlements. Each of these two fields is divided into two ‘macro indicators’, for example, ‘Administrative mechanisms’ and ‘Entry mechanisms’. The LMPI only assesses migration programmes in a limited number of countries. In order to ensure some geographical balance, research has been conducted on the following thirteen countries: Australia, Canada, Germany, India, Italy, Japan, New Zealand, Norway, Singapore, Spain, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom and the United States.
Year 2008
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45 Data Set

Thinking Policy Through Migrant Domestic Workers' Itineraries

Authors Rachel Silvey, Rhacel Parrenas
Year 2020
Journal Name AMERICAN BEHAVIORAL SCIENTIST
Citations (WoS) 6
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46 Journal Article

The Experience of Co-Teaching for Emergent Arabic-English Literacy

Authors Anna M. Dillon, Kay Gallagher
Year 2019
Journal Name QUALITATIVE REPORT
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48 Journal Article

Security in the RedSea: Regional Problems, Power Struggle and Terrorism

Authors N. Nese Kemiksiz
Year 2020
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62 Journal Article

Citizenship in the Gulf states

Authors Martin Baldwin-Edwards
Year 2024
Book Title Encyclopedia of Citizenship Studies
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63 Book Chapter

Demography, migration, and the labour market in the UAE

Authors Françoise DE BEL-AIR
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Year 2015
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67 Report

Elites and Institutions in the Armenian Transnation

Authors Khachig Tölölyan
Year 2000
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
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70 Journal Article

Expatriates' learning: The role of VFR tourism

Authors Christopher S. Dutt, Ivan Ninov
Year 2017
Journal Name JOURNAL OF HOSPITALITY AND TOURISM MANAGEMENT
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72 Journal Article

Editorial

Authors Ibrahim Sirkeci
Year 2019
Journal Name Remittances Review
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75 Journal Article

Exploring the relevance of Social Exchange Theory in the Middle East: A case study of tourism in Dubai, UAE

Authors Christopher S. Dutt, William S. Harvey, Gareth Shaw
Year 2022
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TOURISM RESEARCH
Citations (WoS) 8
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78 Journal Article

Determinants of Innovative Behaviour in the Hotel Industry: A cross-Cultural Study

Authors Riyad Eid, Gomaa Agag
Year 2020
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HOSPITALITY MANAGEMENT
Citations (WoS) 36
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81 Journal Article

Labour immigration and labour markets in the GCC countries: national patterns and trends

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Year 2011
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85 Report

Libanesische globale Dorfgemeinschaften: Praktiken zur Bildung und Erhaltung globaler Gemeinschaften

Principal investigator Anton Escher (Principal Investigator)
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Year 2013
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87 Project

The impact of the novel Coronavirus on migrant workers in the GCC countries

Authors Martin Baldwin-Edwards
Year 2022
Journal Name Studi Emigrazione
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88 Journal Article

MACIMIDE Global Expatriate Dual Citizenship Database

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Year 2018
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89 Data Set

World Population Policies Database

Description
Since the mid-1970s, the World Population Policies Database, last updated in 2015, provides comprehensive and up-to-date information on the population policy situation and trends for all Member States and non-member States of the United Nations. Among several areas, the database shows the evolution of government views and policies with respect to internal and international migration. The migration strand covers internal migration, immigration, emigration, and return. The Database is updated biennially by conducting a detailed country-by-country review of national plans and strategies, programme reports, legislative documents, official statements and various international, Inter-governmental and non-governmental sources, as well as by using official responses to the United Nations Inquiry among Governments on Population and Development.
Year 2015
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90 Data Set

Migrations de diplômés, circulations professionnelles, relation au pays d'origine : le cas du Liban

Principal investigator Kamel Doraï (Coordinator)
Description
Ce projet vise à analyser les mobilités étudiantes et professionnelles libanaises, à comprendre les dynamiques globales qui les sous tendent, autant que les stratégies de ce nouveau type de migrants. Il s’inscrit dans une réflexion plus large sur les processus de mondialisation des marchés et le développement de carrières professionnelles à l’international. Centré sur le Liban, il cherchera à comprendre les spécificités de la situation libanaise, et les ressorts particuliers de l’hémorragie de jeunes diplômés dont souffre ce pays, en s’interrogeant sur la place particulière qu’occupe ce pays dans la région moyen-orientale, et sur la relation entre diaspora et pays d’origine. Le programme de recherche s’organisera sur deux axes, fortement articulés : le premier axe sera centré sur la formation et les mobilités étudiantes, et les projets de carrières, et les trajectoires sociales des étudiants et sur les mobilités socio-professionnelles et cherchera à en comprendre les déterminants ; le second axe s’intéressera à la relation entre les expatriés libanais et leur pays d’origine, à travers les circulations, la fréquence des allers et retours, les formes de communication, le degré d’implication dans la vie sociale et politique libanaise. Réalisé à l’occasion d’une coopération franco-libanaise, ce programme associera des recherches menées en France, au Liban, et le cas échéant dans les pays arabes voisins, le Golfe, ou d’autres pays d’émigration, comme l’Australie.
Year 2011
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91 Project

UN Inquiry on population and development - International Migration

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Year 2010
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92 Data Set

Vikhrov's visa index

Description
The index is based on three types of entry visa restrictions: visa required, visa not required for short stays and visa not required. The author identifies country pairs which changed their visa regime during 1998–2010. This immigration policy index is constructed for all countries and territories in the world for both March 1998 and November 2009. This index is heterogeneous across destination and origin countries as well as over time.
Year 2009
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93 Data Set

Klugman and Pereira’ Assessment of National Migration Policies

Description
This set of indicators compares several dimensions of migration policies as of early 2009. For a selected set of 28 countries, both developed and developing, the indicators address admission criteria, policies on integration and treatment of migrants, and efforts to enforce those policies. Irregular migration is a particular area of focus. The analysis distinguishes between different entry regimes, namely: labour migrants (high or low skilled, with a permanent or a temporary permit), those who move with a family-related visa, humanitarian migrants (asylum seekers and refugees), international visitors and international students. The indicators cover three main areas of policy interest: admission, treatment, and enforcement. Most of the 84 questions were multiple-choice, but there were also open-ended questions to allow comments and explanations. The data is drawn from an assessment by country experts as well as by desk-research of Human Development Report Office staff. Information was collected in two parallel and complementary efforts during early 2009: through a questionnaire answered by International Organization for Migration (IOM) country-level staff and other world-wide migration experts, and through internal desk-web research
Year 2009
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94 Data Set

Global Migration Barometer

Description
Western Union commissioned the Economist Intelligence Unit to compile a migration index that ranks 61 countries by how attractive and accessible they are for migrants (the Global Migration Barometer), with a separate assessment of their need for migrants. The Economist Intelligence Unit developed the methodology behind the index, collected the data and scored the countries, with input from Western Union and an independent panel of migration experts. The index has been produced for 61 developed and emerging markets using a standard analytical framework. The model used to generate the index employs indicators that reflect the standard of living and economic development of a country, legislative policy and attitudes towards migration, and demographics and social welfare commitments. Many of the 32 indicators used to generate the index are based on quantitative data and have been drawn from national and international statistical sources. The others are qualitative in nature and have been produced by the Economist Intelligence Unit. Each of the indicators has been adjusted and weighted to produce a score of 0 to 100, where 100 represents the highest attractiveness, accessibility or need for migrants.
Year 2007
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95 Data Set
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