Fuite des cerveaux et gain de cerveaux/retour des cerveaux

Brain drain and brain gain both refer to consequences of migration for the host and sending societies in terms of the transfer of human capital. Brain drain involves the departure of a society’s high-skilled or well-trained individuals through emigration. Brain gain in turn refers to the phenomenon of such individuals contributing human capital to a host society, or eventually returning to their country/region of origin and bringing new skills or capital with them. These phenomena are also collectively known as ‘brain circulation’.

This topic includes literature on skilled migration, academic mobility, remittances, return intentions, transnationalism, and educational segregation.

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Brain drain, brain gain and brain waste

Year 2009
Book Title Labour mobility within the EU in the context of enlargement and the functioning of the transitional arrangements
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1 Book Chapter

Trends in Latin American Skilled Migration: “Brain Drain” or “Brain Exchange”?

Authors Adela Pellegrino
Year 2001
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 34
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2 Journal Article

Brain drain or brain gain: A revisit

Authors Donald Lien, Yan Wang
Year 2005
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
Citations (WoS) 10
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4 Journal Article

Ability drain

Authors Maurice SCHIFF
Year 2015
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5 Working Paper

Highly Skilled Egyptian Migrants in Austria: A Case of Brain Drain or Brain Gain?

Authors Alessia Bacchi
Year 2016
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies
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6 Journal Article

A brain gain with a brain drain

Authors Oded Stark, Christian Helmenstein, Alexia Prskawetz
Year 1997
Journal Name Economics Letters
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7 Journal Article

A brain gain with a brain drain

Year 1977
Journal Name Economics Letters
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8 Journal Article

The Punjabi diaspora in the UK : an overview of characteristics and contributions to India

Authors Rupa CHANDA, Sriparna GHOCH
Description
The recognition of diaspora contributions towards their home country through remittances, investments and networks has facilitated a shift in attitude and thinking regarding migration, from brain drain to “brain bank”, “brain gain”, “brain trust” and “brain circulation”. This shift in thinking is also evident in India in recognition of the manifold contributions being made by the Indian diaspora to the home country. This paper examines the historical and socio-economic characteristics of one important Indian diaspora community, the Punjabis in the UK and discusses the latter’s contributions to India and to its home state of Punjab.
Year 2013
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9 Report

A Cultural Analysis of China’s Scientific Brain Drain: the Case of Chinese Immigrant Scientists in Canadian Academia

Authors Meirong Fu
Year 2013
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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10 Journal Article

World Migration in Historical Perspective

Year 2015
Book Title Handbook of the Economics of International Migration
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11 Book Chapter

The Reverse and Return Transfer of Technology (RRTT): Towards a Comprehensive Model of the Migration of African Experts

Authors B. Ikubolajeh Logan
Year 2009
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 9
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12 Journal Article

Conceptualizing Professional Diaspora: International Medical Graduates in Canada

Authors Elena Neiterman, Ivy Lynn Bourgeault
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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13 Journal Article

Indian Human Resources Mobility: Brain drain versus brain gain

Authors Natalia BUGA, Jean-Baptiste MEYER
Description
India is a major source of migrants, especially of highly-skilled and well-trained workers. This paper attempts to show that even with a high number of Indian talents abroad, India – as well as destination countries – takes advantage of the resources generated by this population. Traditionally the flows of Indian professionals have been directed towards the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom and other similar destinations. Recently, however, Western European countries are being selected as migration options. In this paper, the growing diversification of receiving countries is explained as a consequence of European immigration policies focusing on highly-skilled migrants, demographic trends which raise several questions related to labour shortages and, finally, the effects of the global economic crisis on mobility. The migration of highly-skilled Indians is analyzed and put in the context of globalization and the intensification of the knowledge-based economy. The paper shows that what has happened in India might stand as a win-win scenario with wider application where a brain drain may be converted into a brain gain.
Year 2012
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14 Report

Dynamic Wage Effects of Brain Gain and Brain Drain - Analyzing Changes in the Regional Concentration of High-Skilled Workers

Principal investigator Johann Eppelsheimer (Principal Investigator), Joachim Möller (Principal Investigator)
Description
Löhne werden nicht nur von den individuellen Eigenschaften von Arbeitnehmern und Arbeitgebern bestimmt, auch lokale Gegebenheiten spielen eine Rolle. Dabei ist insbesondere der regionale Anteil an hochqualifizierten Arbeitskräften von Bedeutung. Hochqualifizierte tragen zur technischen Weiterentwicklung bei und regen den Wissensaustausch an. Dadurch steigern sie nicht nur ihre eigene Produktivität, sondern auch die anderer Beschäftigter in ihrem Umfeld. Eine gesteigerte Produktivität hat wiederum höhere Löhne zur Folge. Innerhalb des Forschungsprojekts wird daher untersucht, wie sich der regionale Zuzug (Brain-Gain) und Fortzug (Brain-Drain) Hochqualifizierter auf die Löhne ansässiger Arbeiternehmerinnen und Arbeitnehmer auswirkt. Ob ein regionaler Brain-Drain durch einen gleich großen Brain-Gain ausgeglichen werden kann, hängt von unterschiedlichen Effekten ab: Einerseits bereichern Hochqualifizierte, die als Wissensträger neu in eine Region kommen, den lokalen Wissenspool in besonderem Maße, was für einen relativ höheren Effekt von Brain-Gain im Vergleich zu Brain-Drain spricht. Andererseits basiert der Wissensaustausch stark auf sozialen Netzwerken. Geht man davon aus, dass Wegziehende verhältnismäßig große Netzwerke verlassen und Zuziehende zu Beginn verhältnismäßig kleine Netzwerke vorfinden, könnten wiederum die Effekte durch Brain-Drain überwiegen. Im Zuge des Forschungsprojekts werden die genauen Effekte anhand von regionalen Mikrodaten mit ökonometrischen Verfahren bestimmt. Projektziel Das Forschungsprojekt untersucht Effekte auf Löhne, welche durch den Zuzug (Brain-Gain) und den Fortzug (Brain-Drain) von hochqualifizierten Arbeitern hervorgerufen werden.
Year 2015
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15 Project

Temporary versus Permanent Youth Brain Drain: Economic Implications

Authors Balaz, AM Williams, D Kollar
Year 2004
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 45
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16 Journal Article

Brain Circulation of South Korean Students in Japan and China

Authors In-Jin Yoon, Kyung-Soo Rha, Jongtae Kim, ...
Year 2013
Journal Name Asian and Pacific Migration Journal
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17 Journal Article

Age, wage and vintage: Empirical validation of brain drain in the migration of Indian knowledge workers to the United States of America

Authors Narender Thakur, Narender Thakur, Binod Khadria, ...
Year 2022
Journal Name Asian and Pacific Migration Journal
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18 Journal Article

Migration, Return, and Development: An Institutional Perspective

Authors Henrik Olesen
Year 2002
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 59
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19 Journal Article

Network Approach versus Brain Drain: Lessons from the Diaspora

Authors JB Meyer
Year 2001
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 179
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20 Journal Article

Ability drain: size, impact, and comparison with brain drain under alternative immigration policies

Authors Maurice Schiff
Year 2017
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
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21 Journal Article

Skilled Labour Migration and Positive Externality: The Case of Turkish Engineers Working Abroad

Authors Senay Gokbayrak
Year 2012
Journal Name International Migration
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22 Journal Article

Regional Organizations and Intra‐Regional Migration in Sub‐Saharan Africa: Challenges and Prospects

Authors A Adepoju
Year 2001
Journal Name International Migration
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23 Journal Article

The Contributions of highly-skilled migrants to the development of their country of origin : highly-skilled Egyptian migrants in the OECD countries

Authors Alessia BACCHI
Description
This paper studies the potential impact of Egyptian highly-skilled migrants (HSMs) residing in the OECD countries on the development of Egypt, their country of origin. The paper discussed the following questions: a) is Egyptian highly-skilled migration to OECD countries a case of brain drain? b) Could it generate brain gain? c) What is the overall potential impact of Egyptian HSMs on the development of their homeland?
Year 2014
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24 Report

Globale ökonomische Eliten? Eine Globalisierungsthese auf dem Prüfstand der Empirie

Authors Markus Pohlmann
Year 2009
Journal Name KZfSS Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie
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26 Journal Article

Optimal education policy and human capital accumulation in the context of brain drain

Authors Slobodan Djajić, Frédéric Docquier, Michael S. Michael
Year 2019
Journal Name Journal of Demographic Economics
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27 Journal Article

Losses and Gains to Developing Countries from the Migration of Educated Workers: An Overview of Recent Research, and New Reflections

Authors Oded STARK, Simon C. FAN
Description
This paper synthesizes and extends recent research on “The New Economics of the Brain Drain.” In a unified framework, the paper shows that while recently identified adverse repercussions of the brain drain exacerbate the long-recognized negative impact of the brain drain, longer-term consequences turn the brain drain into the harbinger of powerful gains. These gains have been studied already in recent research, or merit attention in future research.
Year 2007
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28 Report

Italian Scientists Abroad in Europe's Scientific Research Scenario: High skill migration as a resource for development in Italy

Authors Stefano Sbalchiero, Arjuna Tuzzi
Year 2017
Journal Name International Migration
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30 Journal Article

Theoretical Considerations and Empirical Evidence on Brain Drain Grounding the Review of Albania’s and Bulgaria’s Experience1

Authors Nicholas P. Glytsos
Year 2010
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 5
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31 Journal Article

EU Policies and African Human Capital Development

Authors Yaw NYARKO
Year 2010
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32 Working Paper

Caring about ‘brain drain’ migration in a postcolonial world

Authors Parvati Raghuram
Year 2009
Journal Name Geoforum
Citations (WoS) 53
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33 Journal Article

Can Brain Drain Justify Immigration Restrictions?

Authors Kieran Oberman
Year 2013
Journal Name ETHICS
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34 Journal Article

Brain Drain and Brain Gain: Rising Educational Segregation in the United States, 1940–2000

Authors Thurston Domina
Year 2006
Journal Name City & Community
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35 Journal Article

A Sociology of Diaspora Knowledge Networks

Authors Jean-Baptiste Meyer
Book Title The Migration-Development Nexus
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36 Book Chapter

La migration hautement qualifiée de, vers et à travers les paysde l’Est et du Sud de la Méditerranée et d`Afrique subsaharienne. Recherche Transversale

Authors Rafik BOUKLIA-HASSANE
Description
Au cours de la décennie ’90, l’Algérie faisait partie des dix pays ayant connu les plus forts taux d’émigration des compétences au monde. Aujourd’hui, même si toute la documentation statistique nécessaire fait défaut, la question du brain drain et du rôle de l’émigration dans le développement du pays sont des sujets bien présents dans le débat public. Ce papier contribue à alimenter ce débat à plusieurs niveaux. Tout d’abord, il propose une présentation systématique du mouvement des compétences algériennes et de son évolution. Par ailleurs, il passe en revue certains facteurs susceptibles d’expliquer l’évolution du brain drain en Algérie ; une décomposition originale des causes du brain drain a également été effectuée afin de mettre en exergue la contribution de la pression migratoire et celle de la sélection positive à l’augmentation de l’émigration des compétences sur la période récente. Enfin, la note analytique aborde les conséquences de l’émigration des compétences sur la croissance économique de l’Algérie. In the 1990s, Algeria ranked among the top 10 countries in terms of its highly- skilled emigration rate. Today, despite insufficient statistical documentation, the brain-drain issue and the role of emigration in the development of the country are both much debated. This paper aims to contribute to this debate at several levels of analysis. First, we present the recent evolution of Algerian brain drain highlighting the role of destination countries. Moreover, an attempt to understand the causes of this phenomenon is provided through an original analysis of brain-drain push-factors, which helps individuate the relative contribution of 1) migratory pressure and 2) positive selection in increasing highly-skilled emigration flows. Finally, emphasis is put on the consequences of brain drain for economic growth in Algeria.
Year 2010
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37 Report

Towards a Socio‐Economics of the Brain Drain and Distributed Human Capital

Authors Carolina Canibano, Richard Woolley
Year 2012
Journal Name International Migration
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38 Journal Article

Fear of Brain Drain: Russian Academic Community on Internationalization of Education

Authors Dmitry Lanko
Year 2021
Journal Name Journal of Studies in International Education
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39 Journal Article

Brain drain and technological relationship between skilled and unskilled labor: brain gain or brain loss?

Authors Xiaofeng Fan, Akira Yakita
Year 2010
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
Citations (WoS) 4
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40 Journal Article

The within-country distribution of brain drain and brain gain effects: A case study on Senegal

Authors Philippe Bocquier, Narcisse Cha'ngom, Frédéric Docquier, ...
Year 2024
Journal Name Journal of Demographic Economics
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41 Journal Article

Skilled Immigrants in Rome

Authors M. Carolina Brandi
Year 2001
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 9
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42 Journal Article

The impact of brain drain in underserved countries: implementing a global ethical leadership approach

Authors Marie-Lyne Grenier
Year 2015
Journal Name International Journal of Migration, Health and Social Care
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43 Journal Article

International migration and the Rainbow Nation

Authors David Lucas, Acheampong Yaw Amoateng, Ishmael Kalule‐Sabiti
Year 2005
Journal Name Population, Space and Place
Citations (WoS) 9
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44 Journal Article

Die IAB brain-drain Daten

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

Brain drain and brain gain in Europe - An evaluation of the East-European migration to Germany

Authors T Straubhaar, MR Wolburg
Year 1999
Journal Name Jahrbücher für Nationalökonomie und Statistik
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46 Journal Article

Highly-skilled Migration (Libya): Legal aspects

Authors Azza K. MAGHUR
Description
Libya, a country that gained independence in 1951, has known only two contradictory regimes: a monarchy from 1951-1969, and a revolution since 1969. With oil as its main source of revenue, and after ten years of UN backed-sanctions, in addition to a decade of public sector dominance, Libya suffers from both brain drain and brain waste. The active Libyan market of today, after its return to the international community, and given decades of economic and administrative instability, requires skilled and unskilled labour. Libya’s labour policies have always been motivated by politics. There has not been a labour strategy, and the need for skilled labour has been a constant in a rich country with only six million inhabitants.Libya today is country full of promise that offers opportunities to its own citizens. It is still, however, unable either to contain brain waste, or to stop brain drain, especially in the medical field. The private sector which has been reactivated after years of public sector dominance is hungry for labour and regulation is imminent. Economic activities, in infrastructure and building for example, need the labour market, private and public, to be properly regulated. La Libye, devenue indépendante en 1951, n’a connu que deux régimes opposés : une monarchie de 1951 à 1969 et une révolution depuis 1969. Avec le pétrole comme principale source de revenu, après dix ans de sanctions onusiennes, et une décennie de prédominance du secteur public, la Libye subit à la fois une fuite et un gaspillage des cerveaux. Le marché du travail libyen actuel requiert de la main d’oeuvre qualifiée et non qualifiée depuis son retour sur la scène internationale après des décennies d’instabilité économique et administrative. Les politiques de l’emploi libyennes ont toujours été motivées par la politique. En l’absence de stratégie de l’emploi, le besoin de main d’œuvre est une constante dans ce pays riche pourvu de seulement six millions d’habitants.La Libye d’aujourd’hui est un pays plein de promesses, porteur d’opportunités pour ses citoyens. Elle est cependant encore incapable de réduire le gaspillage des cerveaux et de stopper la fuite des cerveaux, surtout dans le domaine médical. Le secteur privé, réactivé après des décennies de domination publique, a faim de main d’œuvre et la régulation est imminente. Les activités économiques, dans les infrastructures ou le bâtiment par exemple, ont besoin d’un marché du travail, public comme privé, réglementé.
Year 2010
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47 Report

The Punjabi Diaspora in the UK: An overview of characteristics and contributions to India

Authors Rupa CHANDA, Sriparna GHOSH
Description
The recognition of diaspora contributions towards their home country through remittances, investments and networks has facilitated a shift in attitude and thinking regarding migration, from brain drain to “brain bank”, “brain gain”, “brain trust” and “brain circulation”. This shift in thinking is also evident in India in recognition of the manifold contributions being made by the Indian diaspora to the home country. This paper examines the historical and socio-economic characteristics of one important Indian diaspora community, the Punjabis in the UK and discusses the latter’s contributions to India and to its home state of Punjab. The evidence reveals that the NRI Punjabi diaspora in the UK is quite old, dating back to the colonial period. It is a heterogeneous community, divided by castes and sub-castes which influence the institutions through which its subgroups engage with the homeland. The secondary and primary evidence collected for this study indicate a wide variety of contributions economic, social, philanthropic, cultural and political. Some of the main sectors of contribution are health, education and rural infrastructure. However, the evidence also reveals that there is much greater potential for diaspora engagement and that large scale investments by the diaspora are deterred by corruption, an inefficient bureaucracy, lack of streamlined procedures and lack of supportive diaspora policies at the state and central levels. The study thus concludes that greater thrust is needed, especially at the state level to facilitate the Punjabi diaspora’s engagement with India and with its home regions and state.
Year 2012
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48 Report

The internal brain drain: foreign aid, hiring practices, and international migration

Authors Nicolas Lemay-Hebert, Louis Herns Marcelin, Stephane Pallage, ...
Year 2020
Journal Name DISASTERS
Citations (WoS) 9
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49 Journal Article

Brain circulation, diaspora and scientific progress: A study of the international migration of Chinese scientists, 1998–2006

Authors Tian Fangmeng
Year 2016
Journal Name Asian and Pacific Migration Journal
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51 Journal Article

The brain drain as exploitation

Authors Paul Bou-Habib
Year 2021
Journal Name POLITICS PHILOSOPHY & ECONOMICS
Citations (WoS) 1
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52 Journal Article

Brain drain, gain and circulation

Authors Zovanga Kone, Çağlar Özden
Year 2017
Book Title Handbook of Globalisation and Development
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53 Book Chapter

The IAB brain-drain data

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

Transatlantic Roundtable on High–skilled Migration and Sending Countries Issues

Authors Said Ouaked
Year 2002
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 27
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55 Journal Article

Contributing Factors to Migration Growth Among Iranian Students: Drivers of Migration to Malaysia

Authors Ali Kazemi, Abdolvahab Baghbanian, Mohammad Mahmoudi Maymand, ...
Year 2018
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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56 Journal Article

Documenting the Brain Drain of "La Creme de la Creme" Three Case-Studies on International Migration at the Upper Tail of the Education Distribution

Authors Frederic Docquier, Hillel Rapoport
Year 2009
Journal Name Jahrbücher für Nationalökonomie und Statistik
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57 Journal Article

Of Skilled Migration, Brain Drains and Policy Responses*

Authors Ronald Skeldon
Year 2009
Journal Name International Migration
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58 Journal Article

The Brain Drain: Emigration and Return.

Authors Edwin P. Reubens, William A. Glaser, G. Christopher Habers
Year 1980
Journal Name International Migration Review
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59 Journal Article

Mitigating the costs of departure. Brain drain, disadvantage and fair burden-sharing

Authors Alexandru Volacu, Vlad Terteleac
Year 2021
Journal Name ETHICS & GLOBAL POLITICS
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60 Journal Article

Asymmetric information and the brain drain

Authors Da-HsiangDonald Lien
Year 1993
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
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61 Journal Article

The Brain Drain: Emigration and Return.

Authors Eleanor Meyer Rogg, William A. Glaser
Year 1982
Journal Name International Migration Review
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62 Journal Article

Comparative Analysis of Brain Drain, Brain Circulation and Brain Retain: A Case Study of Indian Institutes of Technology

Authors Roli Varma, Deepak Kapur
Year 2013
Journal Name Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis: Research and Practice
Citations (WoS) 6
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63 Journal Article

Adding insult to injury: the healthcare brain drain

Authors C. R. Hooper
Year 2008
Journal Name JOURNAL OF MEDICAL ETHICS
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64 Journal Article

From “brain drain” to “care drain” : Women's labor migration and methodological sexism

Authors Speranta Dumitru
Year 2014
Journal Name Women's Studies International Forum
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65 Journal Article

Brain Drain from Sri Lankan Universities

Authors Chandra Gunawardena, Rasika Nawaratne
Year 2017
Journal Name SRI LANKA JOURNAL OF SOCIAL SCIENCES
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66 Journal Article

Emigration of High-Skilled Individuals due to Short-Term Contracts

Description
This proposal presents a study of the EXODUS of exceptionally gifted individuals due to the increased utilization of short-term contracts. The primary objective is to study the impact of Italian labour market reforms, specifically those related to the regulation and utilization of short-term employment contracts, on the departure of skilled workers towards other countries, which typically offer more and better opportunities (brain drain). Theoretically, the utilization of short-term contracts could help increase labor force participation, employment, efficiency and labour market opportunities. However, if not regulated in integration with the specific institutional framework, short-term contracts might generate undesired effects. By promoting adverse selection, driving the better workers away from the mother country as the less productive workers take up short-term contracts, short-term contracts might actually increase the brain drain. The purpose of EXODUS is to investigate the validity of these concerns and to analyze the way short-term contracts affect the brain drain phenomenon. In particular, EXODUS will focus on investigating the employment condition and behavioral choices of a specific category of workers: young individuals with a high level of education.
Year 2013
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67 Project

Debating Brain Drain - May Governments Restrict Emigration?

Authors Christine Straehle
Year 2017
Journal Name DEVELOPING WORLD BIOETHICS
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68 Journal Article

African Brain Drain and Its Impact on Source Countries: What Do We Know and What Do We Need to Know?

Authors Stella Capuano, Abdeslam Marfouk
Year 2013
Journal Name Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis: Research and Practice
Citations (WoS) 5
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69 Journal Article

From brain drain to brain gain in emerging markets: exploring the new agenda for global talent management in talent migration

Authors Yanbing Mao, Marina Latukha, Louisa Selivanovskikh
Year 2022
Journal Name European J. of International Management
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70 Journal Article

Policy Responses to Address Student “Brain Drain”

Authors Christopher Ziguras, Cate Gribble
Year 2014
Journal Name Journal of Studies in International Education
Citations (WoS) 7
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71 Journal Article

The new economics of the brain drain

Authors Oded Stark
Year 2005
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72 Working Paper

Albanian Students Abroad: A Potential Brain Drain?

Authors Russell King, Ilir Gedeshi
Year 2023
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73 Journal Article

Debating Brain Drain: May Governments Restrict Emigration

Authors John A. Dick
Year 2016
Journal Name ETHICAL PERSPECTIVES
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76 Journal Article

Physician Brain Drain: Can Nothing Be Done?

Authors Nir Eyal, Samia A. Hurst
Year 2008
Journal Name Public Health Ethics
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77 Journal Article

Transnationality of Migrants: Enduring ties with the home country and integration in the host country

Principal investigator Herbert Brücker (Principal Investigator)
Description
"Bei dem Projekt handelt es sich um ein internationals Kooperationsprojekt mit 15 Partnern das im Rahmen der Marie Curie Actions Research and Training Activities von der Europäischen Kommission finanziert wird. Die Projektlaufzeit beträgt ab dem 1. Januar 2007 4 Jahre. Das Projekt setzt sich aus Forschungs- und Trainingsaktivitäten zusammen. I. Forschungsaktivitäten Das IAB beteiligt sich an zwei Aufgaben im Projekt: Remittances, the skill composition of migration, and social networks und Migrants integration, regional mobility, social and business networks, and trade. Im ersten Teilprojekt untersucht das IAB gemeinsam mit den Partnern von IRES die Folgen der Migration für Humankapitalinvestitionen und ihre Implikationen für die Qualifikationsstruktur der Migranten. Dafür wird ein Paneldatensatz mit Makrodaten herangezogen der von dem IAB gemeinsam mit dem IRES-Team aufgebaut wurde bzw. aufgebaut wird. Das IAB wird darüber hinaus Mikodatensätze wie die IAB-Beschäftigtenstichprobe den Partnern im Projekt zur Verfügung stellen bzw. bei der Arbeit mit den Partnern beraten. Im zweiten Teilprojekt wird das IAB die Effekte der regionalen Verteilung der Migranten über die Länder untersuchen: Die Determinanten und Ursachen der regionalen Konzentration von Migranten in prosperienden urbanen Regionen, die Substitution der regionalen Migration von Inländern durch internationale Migranten, die Lohneffekte der internationalen Migration in verschiedenen Regionen bei zentralen Tarifverhandlungen. Das IAB wird in diesem Teilprojekt mit dem CEPR-Team und der Universität Turin kooperieren. II. Trainingsaktivitäten Im Rahmen des Projektes wird jedes Jahr eine Summer-School für die Junior-Forscher in dem Exzellenznetzwerk sowie externe Teilnehmer durchgeführt. Die Organisation wird von den italienischen Partnern im Projekt übernommen, das IAB wird sich durch Vorträge und Lehrangebote an dem Programm beteiligen. Ferner wird jährlich ein internationaler Workshop durchgeführt, das IAB ist an der Vorbereitung beteiligt. Schließlich wird das IAB einen oder mehrere Junior-Wissenschaftler aus anderen EU-Staaten einstellen, die on-the-job qualifiziert werden. Projektmethode Das empirische Forschungsprogramm stützt sich überwiegend auf Panelregressionen mit Makrodaten. Makrodaten zur Migration, Qualifikationsstruktur der Migranten sowie Löhne und Beschäftigung nach Ländern und Regionen in der EU. Projektziel Die Analyse des Einflusses der Migration auf Humankapitalinvestitionen, Arbeitsmärkte und die Integration der Migranten."
Year 2006
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78 Project

Brain drain in the age of mass migration: Does relative inequality explain migrant selectivity?

Authors Yvonne Stolz, Joerg Baten
Year 2012
Journal Name EXPLORATIONS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
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79 Journal Article

Debating Brain Drain: May Governments Restrict Emigration?

Authors Peter W. Higgins
Year 2016
Journal Name ETHICS
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80 Journal Article

Portrayals of Global Health Worker Migration in Canadian Print News Media: Domestic Concerns vs. Global Awareness

Authors Jen Pylypa
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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82 Journal Article

From brain drain to brain gain in emerging markets: exploring the new agenda for global talent management in talent migration

Authors Louisa Selivanovskikh, Marina Latuka, Mao Yanbing
Year 2020
Journal Name European J. of International Management
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83 Journal Article

Is the medical brain drain beneficial? Evidence from overseas doctors in the UK

Authors Marl Kangasniemi, L. Alan Winters, Simon Commander
Year 2007
Journal Name Social Science & Medicine
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84 Journal Article

Book Review: The Brain Drain: Emigration and Return

Authors Eleanor Meyer Rogg
Year 1982
Journal Name International Migration Review
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85 Journal Article

Return Migration After Brain Drain: A Simulation Approach

Authors Alessio Emanuele Biondo, Alessandro Pluchino, Andrea Rapisarda
Year 2013
Journal Name Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation
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86 Journal Article

Brain Drain and Brain Loss: Immigrants to Greece

Authors Theodore P. Lianos
Year 2007
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
Citations (WoS) 7
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87 Journal Article

Comment on Brock and Blake: debating brain drain

Authors Phil Cole
Year 2017
Journal Name JOURNAL OF MEDICAL ETHICS
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88 Journal Article

Extending the Case for a Beneficial Brain Drain

Authors Simone Bertoli, Herbert Bruecker
Year 2011
Journal Name Jahrbücher für Nationalökonomie und Statistik
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89 Journal Article

Book Review: The Brain Drain: Emigration and Return

Authors Edwin P. Reubens
Year 1980
Journal Name International Migration Review
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90 Journal Article

India: ‘Brain Drain’ or the Migration of Talent?

Authors T. K. OOMMEN
Year 1989
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 17
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92 Journal Article

United States Immigration Laws and the Brain Drain

Authors THOMAS L. BERNARD
Year 1970
Journal Name International Migration
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93 Journal Article

Turning Brain Drain into Brain Network and Brain Exchange: A Case Study of Kosovo Albanian Diaspora in the United States

Authors Mimoza Dushi
Year 2024
Journal Name Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies
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94 Journal Article

Remittances Data. Migration and Remittances Data

Description
Dataset on remittances data including incoming and outgoing flows, monthly remittances data of selected countries, and estimates of bilateral migration and medical ‘brain drain’ for over 200 countries. The factbook is published every 2 to 3 years.
Year 1970
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95 Data Set

Brain Drain Losses – A Case Study of Serbia

Authors Ognjen Radonjic, Mirjana Bobic
Year 2020
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 7
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96 Journal Article

Brain drain and economic growth: theory and evidence

Year 2001
Journal Name Journal of Development Economics
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97 Journal Article

Brain Drain and Brain Gain: The Global Competition to Attract High-skilled Migrants / The Cultural Politics of Talent Migration in East Asia

Authors Daniel Jendrissek
Year 2014
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
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99 Journal Article

Divided by class, connected by work: Class divisions among the new wave of Polish migrants in the UK

Year 2011
Journal Name Studia Migracyjne - Przegląd Polonijny
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100 Journal Article
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