Research
Database

This constantly growing database accumulates and structures
relevant knowledge in the field of migration.

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Translation as a Communication Strategy in Representing National Culture

Authors Aizhan Akkaliyeva, Baktigul Abdykhanova, Lyazat Meirambekova, ...
Year 2021
Journal Name Social Inclusion
Citations (WoS) 1
11201 Journal Article

Reimagining Surf City: surfing and the making of the post-apartheid beach in South Africa

Authors Glen Thompson
Year 2011
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF SPORT
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
11202 Journal Article

"National Minorities at War: Integration, Identity and Combat Motivation among Poles in German and Austro-Hungarian Society, 1914-18"

Description
'The rise of globalisation since the Second World War has entailed not only large movements of goods and capital across European borders but also mass migration. By 2005, 8.6 per cent of the inhabitants in EU-25 countries were foreign-born. The issue of how best to integrate socially these often ethnically and religiously diverse peoples has become an important subject of debate both within individual nations and at the level of the Commission of the European Communities. Often forgotten, however, is the fact that this dilemma is not new. This project will provide original insights into minority integration through a comparative historical case study. It takes as its focus the Polish minorities living within German and Austro-Hungarian borders during the First World War. In the forty years before 1914, these two states had adopted diametrically opposed policies to win Poles’ loyalties: whereas German governments had pursued obtrusive campaigns of cultural and linguistic assimilation, Austria-Hungary had granted extensive political and cultural autonomy. By comparing Poles’ readiness to defend these states in 1914, as well as their subsequent commitment to their rulers’ war efforts, the study will assess which method of integration proved more successful. Two further outcomes, contributing to two interdisciplinary academic debates, are also expected from this research. Firstly, by examining Poles’ attitudes and conduct during the years 1914-18, the project will shed light on the growth of Polish national identity in the early twentieth century and engage with sociological and political scientific literature on the relationship between war and the rise of national consciousnesses. Secondly, by evaluating the performance of Polish troops fighting for Fatherlands which were not their own, the study will help to resolve the longstanding scholarly controversy about the importance of ideological beliefs, especially patriotism, for martial efficiency.'
Year 2011
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
11203 Project

The effect of the intergenerational transmission of noncognitive skills on student performance

Authors Ildefonso Mendez
Year 2015
Journal Name Economics of Education Review
Citations (WoS) 9
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
11204 Journal Article

Prejudice: The status politics of spiro Agnew

Authors Nicholas P Petropoulos
Year 1978
Journal Name International Journal of Intercultural Relations
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
11206 Journal Article

Russian lesbian mothers: Between "traditional values" and human rights

Authors Alisa Zhabenko
Year 2019
Journal Name JOURNAL OF LESBIAN STUDIES
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
11207 Journal Article

Role of European Mobility and its Impacts in Narratives, Debates and EU Reforms

Description
The overarching goal of the project is to understand the economic, social, institutional and policy factors that have shaped the impacts of free movement and public debates about it. It aims to help European policymakers develop policy responses that inspire public trust, ensure the fairness and sustainability of free movement, and maintain inclusive policies that reduce inequalities across the continent. First, the project will generate a deeper understanding of the nature and impacts of intra-EU mobility, focusing in particular on how countries’ institutional and policy environments shape the impacts of free movement on individuals, households, labour markets, public services and public finances. Second, it will assess how political and media narratives about intra-EU mobility are formed, focusing on the role of traditional and social media, political discourse, and influential participants in public debates. Third, it will assess the relationship between real and perceived impacts, examining the factors that drive realities and misperceptions about free movement and why these debates have unfolded in different ways across the EU. A consortium of researchers with deep understanding of policies and institutions across Europe will implement a multi-disciplinary research strategy. Cutting-edge research methods will range from content analysis based on machine-learning techniques to multi-wave panel and survey experiments to theoretical and empirical analysis of the role of institutions and norms in shaping free movement and public debates about it. The project combines qualitative and quantitative approaches, carefully integrating work packages to allow data and results to flow seamlessly between them. Policy specialists will develop concrete options for reforms. An experienced communications team will work with consortium members to develop accessible resources, ensuring wide reach to policymakers, media practitioners and influential stakeholders across Europe.
Year 2017
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
11208 Project

REMINDER: Role of European Mobility and its Impacts in Narratives, Debates and EU Reforms

Description
The overarching goal of the project is to understand the economic, social, institutional and policy factors that have shaped the impacts of free movement and public debates about it. It aims to help European policymakers develop policy responses that inspire public trust, ensure the fairness and sustainability of free movement, and maintain inclusive policies that reduce inequalities across the continent. First, the project will generate a deeper understanding of the nature and impacts of intra-EU mobility, focusing in particular on how countries’ institutional and policy environments shape the impacts of free movement on individuals, households, labour markets, public services and public finances. Second, it will assess how political and media narratives about intra-EU mobility are formed, focusing on the role of traditional and social media, political discourse, and influential participants in public debates. Third, it will assess the relationship between real and perceived impacts, examining the factors that drive realities and misperceptions about free movement and why these debates have unfolded in different ways across the EU. A consortium of researchers with deep understanding of policies and institutions across Europe will implement a multi-disciplinary research strategy. Cutting-edge research methods will range from content analysis based on machine-learning techniques to multi-wave panel and survey experiments to theoretical and empirical analysis of the role of institutions and norms in shaping free movement and public debates about it. The project combines qualitative and quantitative approaches, carefully integrating work packages to allow data and results to flow seamlessly between them. Policy specialists will develop concrete options for reforms. An experienced communications team will work with consortium members to develop accessible resources, ensuring wide reach to policymakers, media practitioners and influential stakeholders across Europe.
Year 2017
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
11209 Project

SUCCESSES AND FAILURES IN POSTDISASTER RESETTLEMENT

Authors A OLIVERSMITH
Year 1991
Journal Name Disasters
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
11212 Journal Article

A note on Syrian refugees in the Gulf : attempting to assess data and policies

Authors Françoise DE BEL-AIR
Description
As the migrant crisis escalates at Europe’s borders, the Gulf States have been blamed for having offered “zero resettlement” to Syrian refugees. In response to these statements, some Gulf States claim that they have actually relaxed their entry and residency laws to accommodate sizeable numbers of Syrian nationals since the start of the conflict. The paper assesses these claims using statistics available from these countries, as well as declarations from official bodies released in the local press. It appears that, besides being major aid donors to Arab countries sheltering Syrian refugees, most Gulf States have passed various measures destined to facilitate the entry and stay of Syrians since 2011.
Year 2015
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
11215 Report

Behavioral intention towards mobile learning in Taiwan, China, Indonesia, and Vietnam

Authors Shu Hsu Lin, Hsing-Chen Lee, Ching-Ter Chang, ...
Year 2020
Journal Name TECHNOLOGY IN SOCIETY
Citations (WoS) 36
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
11216 Journal Article

CHANGE OR MORE OF THE SAME? EVALUATING RACIAL ATTITUDES IN THE OBAMA ERA

Authors Vincent L. Hutchings
Year 2009
Journal Name Public Opinion Quarterly
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
11221 Journal Article

Disruptive diversity: Exploring racial commodification in the Norwegian cultural field

Authors Sabina Tica
Year 2024
Journal Name The British Journal of Sociology
11222 Journal Article

How much does income matter in neighborhood choice?

Authors William A. V. Clark, Valerie Ledwith
Year 2007
Journal Name Population Research and Policy Review
Citations (WoS) 42
11224 Journal Article

“A Good Work for Our Race To-Day”: Interests, Virtues, and the Achievement of Justice in Frederick Douglass's Freedmen's Monument Speech

Authors PETER C. MYERS
Year 2010
Journal Name American Political Science Review
Citations (WoS) 6
11227 Journal Article

Land policy and access to land in Zimbabwe: the Dewure resettlement scheme

Authors L.M. Zinyama, D.J. Campbell, T. Matiza
Year 1990
Journal Name Geoforum
Citations (WoS) 6
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
11229 Journal Article

The Impact of Salmon Bias on the Hispanic Mortality Advantage: New Evidence from Social Security Data

Authors Cassio M. Turra, Irma T. Elo
Year 2008
Journal Name Population Research and Policy Review
Citations (WoS) 150
11230 Journal Article

Desk Review of the Resettlement Programme

Authors Benjamin Harkins
Book Title Resettlement of Displaced Persons on the Thai-Myanmar Border
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
11231 Book Chapter

The struggle for Via Bologna street market: crisis, racial denial and speaking back to power in Naples Italy

Authors Antonia Dawes
Year 2018
Journal Name The British Journal of Sociology
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
11233 Journal Article

RACE, PLACE, AND RELATIONSHIP FORMATION IN THE DIGITAL AGE

Authors Sarah Adeyinka-Skold
Year 2020
Journal Name Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race
11235 Journal Article

The fiscal impact of immigration to welfare states of the Scandinavian type

Authors Marianne Frank Hansen, Marie Louise Schultz-Nielsen, Torben Tranæs
Year 2017
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
Citations (WoS) 1
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
11236 Journal Article

Race/Ethnic and Nativity Disparities in Child Overweight in the United States and England

Authors Melissa L. Martinson, Sara McLanahan, Jeanne Brooks-Gunn
Year 2012
Journal Name The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
11237 Journal Article

“We Do Not Own Our Children”: Transformation of Parental Attitudes and Practices in Two Generations of Russian Israelis

Authors Larissa Remennick
Year 2014
Journal Name JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION AND INTEGRATION
11238 Journal Article

Oral history, colonialist dispossession, and the state: the Palestinian case

Authors Rosemary Sayigh
Year 2015
Journal Name Settler Colonial Studies
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
11241 Journal Article

Race and demographic trends: the employment of minority teachers in California public schools

Authors Craig E. Richards
Year 1986
Journal Name Economics of Education Review
11242 Journal Article

Fabricating black modernity: Fashion and African American womanhood during the first great migration

Authors Einav Rabinovitch-Fox
Year 2019
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF FASHION STUDIES
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
11245 Journal Article

Redefining Racial Categories: The Dynamics of Identity Among Brazilian-Americans

Authors Catarina Fritz
Year 2014
Journal Name Immigrants & Minorities
11248 Journal Article

Re-envisioning community-based heritage tourism in the old city of Nazareth

Authors Alon Gelbman, Daniel Laven
Year 2016
Journal Name Journal of Heritage Tourism
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
11249 Journal Article

Cross-cultural Encounters – the Travels of Gender Theory and Practice to China and the Nordic Countries

Description
This interdisciplinary project is concerned with the cross-cultural translation of knowledge and practices that may or may not take place when different cultures interact, and the resulting production of new knowledge. Taking the travelling routes of gender theory and practice to, and also between, China and the Nordic countries as the empirical object of study, the project will focus on the crucial questions of why and how knowledge travels or fails to travel. The project will explore in which forms and by whom knowledge is sent, received, understood, translated, or even refused. The project then seeks to assess the impact of these travels. The main objective is to develop an interdisciplinary framework in the form of an alternative travelling theory to facilitate an improved understanding of the cross-cultural translation of knowledge and practices. The project is significant for the European Research Area, as well as for governments, civil society and public opinion in light of increased cross-cultural interaction between Europe and Asia.
Year 2015
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
11250 Project
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