Research
Database

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

Showing page of 125377 results, sorted by

International Migration and the Education of Children: Evidence from Lima, Peru

Authors Veronica Frisancho Robles, RS Oropesa, Verónica Frisancho Robles, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Population Research and Policy Review
Citations (WoS) 12
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36101 Journal Article

'Garang's Seeds': Influences on the Return of Sudanese-Canadian Refugee Physicians to Post-Conflict South Sudan

Authors J. L. Finlay, Juli L. . Finlay, Rodney A. Crutcher, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Refugee Studies
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36102 Journal Article

Approaches to health provision in the age of super-diversity: Accessing the NHS in Britain’s most diverse city

Authors Jenny Phillimore
Year 2011
Journal Name Critical Social Policy
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36103 Journal Article

Measuring immigration stress of first-generation female Korean immigrants in California: psychometric evaluation of Demand of Immigration Scale

Authors Ding Ding, C. Richard Hofstetter, Gregory J. Norman, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Ethnicity & Health
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36104 Journal Article

Haiti, Insecurity, and the Politics of Asylum

Authors Erica Caple James
Year 2011
Journal Name MEDICAL ANTHROPOLOGY QUARTERLY
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36105 Journal Article

Overview of Trends and Policies on International Migration to East Asia: Comparing Japan, Taiwan and South Korea

Authors Yean-Ju Lee
Year 2011
Journal Name Asian and Pacific Migration Journal
Citations (WoS) 5
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36106 Journal Article

Overview of Trends and Policies on International Migration to East Asia: Comparing Japan, Taiwan and South Korea

Authors Yean-Ju Lee
Year 2011
Journal Name Asian and Pacific Migration Journal
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36107 Journal Article

The repatriation of Estonians from Soviet Russia in 1920-1923: a test of Estonian citizenship and immigration policy

Authors Helen Rohtmets
Year 2011
Journal Name JOURNAL OF BALTIC STUDIES
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36108 Journal Article

Babies and Belonging: Reproduction, Citizenship, and Undocumented Nicaraguan Labor Migrant Women in Costa Rica

Authors Kate Goldade
Year 2011
Journal Name MEDICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
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36109 Journal Article

Generous Albion? Portuguese anti-Salazarists in the United Kingdom, c. 1960-74

Authors Pedro Aires Oliveira
Year 2011
Journal Name PORTUGUESE STUDIES
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36110 Journal Article

Contexts of risk and networks of protection: NYC West Indian immigrants' perceptions of migration and vulnerability to sexually transmitted diseases

Authors Susie Hoffman, Jenny Higgins, Tracey E. Wilson, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Culture, Health & Sexuality
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36111 Journal Article

Question of Leonardas Andriekus Identity: Emigrant, Expatriate or Refugee?

Authors Dainius Sobeckis
Year 2011
Journal Name LOGOS-VILNIUS
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36112 Journal Article

"So We Adapt Step by Step": Acculturation experiences affecting diabetes management and perceived health for Chinese American immigrants

Authors Kevin M. Chun, Catherine A. Chesla, Christine M. L. Kwan
Year 2011
Journal Name Social Science & Medicine
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36113 Journal Article

The Intergenerational Transmission of Highbrow Lifestyles in the Context of Migration

Authors Konstanze Jacob, Frank Kalter
Year 2011
Journal Name KZfSS Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie
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36114 Journal Article

Access to HIV community services by vulnerable populations: evidence from an enhanced HIV/AIDS surveillance system

Authors H. C. E. Madden, Penelope A. Phillips-Howard, Roberto Vivancos, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name AIDS CARE-PSYCHOLOGICAL AND SOCIO-MEDICAL ASPECTS OF AIDS/HIV
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36115 Journal Article

The formation of ethnic identity in South Omo: the Dassenech

Authors Neal Sobania
Year 2011
Journal Name JOURNAL OF EASTERN AFRICAN STUDIES
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36116 Journal Article

Identifying the Needs of LGBTQ Immigrants and Refugees in Southern Arizona

Authors Karma R. Chavez
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Homosexuality
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36117 Journal Article

Migration Trajectories of 'Highly Skilled' Middling Transnationals: Singaporean Transmigrants in London

Authors Elaine Lynn-Ee Ho
Year 2011
Journal Name Population, Space and Place
Citations (WoS) 45
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36118 Journal Article

PRIMORSKA SLOVENES IN MARIBOR 1918-1941

Authors Dragan Potocnik
Year 2011
Journal Name ANNALES-ANALI ZA ISTRSKE IN MEDITERANSKE STUDIJE-SERIES HISTORIA ET SOCIOLOGIA
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36119 Journal Article

ECONOMIC MIGRATION AND WORKER MIGRANTS IN THE MIRROR OF PUBLIC OPINION

Authors Ana Kralj
Year 2011
Journal Name ANNALES-ANALI ZA ISTRSKE IN MEDITERANSKE STUDIJE-SERIES HISTORIA ET SOCIOLOGIA
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36120 Journal Article

Circular and Repeat Migration: Counts of Exits and Years Away from the Host Country

Authors Amelie F. Constant, Klaus F. Zimmermann
Year 2011
Journal Name Population Research and Policy Review
Citations (WoS) 34
36121 Journal Article

Nicole Newendorp, Uneasy Reunions: Immigration, Citizenship, and Family Life in Post-1997 Hong Kong

Authors Caren Freeman
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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36122 Journal Article

Subjectivity and Citizenship: Intersections of Space, Ethnicity and Identity Among the Urdu-Speaking Minority in Bangladesh

Authors Victoria Redclift
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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36123 Journal Article

Niklaus Steiner, International Migration and Citizenship Today

Authors Elim Ng
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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36124 Journal Article

The Impact of Immigrant Concentration in Spanish Schools: School, Class, and Composition Effects

Authors H. Cebolla-Boado, Hector Cebolla-Boado, Luis Garrido Medina, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name European Sociological Review
Citations (WoS) 21
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36125 Journal Article

Immigrants assimilate as communities, not just as individuals

Authors Timothy J. Hatton, Andrew Leigh
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
Citations (WoS) 26
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36126 Journal Article

Associations Between Stressful Events and Self-Reported Mental Health Problems Among Non-Western Immigrants in Denmark

Authors J. Singhammer, J. Singhammer, D. Bancila, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
Citations (WoS) 9
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36127 Journal Article

Multicultural Policy Index

Description
The Multiculturalism Policy Index assesses the government commitment to the multicultural accommodation of newcomers. It is designed to monitor the evolution of multicultural policies across 21 Western countries. The Multiculturalism Policy Index is distinctive in focusing exclusively on multicultural policies designed to recognize, accommodate and support the cultural differences of minority groups. To capture change over time, the Index provides all three indices at three points in time: 1980, 2000 and 2010. Multicultural Policy Index is based on eight indicators: (i) constitutional, legislative or parliamentary affirmation of multiculturalism, at the central and/or regional and municipal levels; (ii) the adoption of multiculturalism in school curriculum; (iii) the inclusion of ethnic representation/sensitivity in the mandate of public media or media licensing; (iv) exemptions from dress codes, either by statute or by court cases; (v) allowing of dual citizenship; (vi) the funding of ethnic group organizations to support cultural activities; (vii) the funding of bilingual education or mother-tongue instruction; (viii) affirmative action for disadvantaged immigrant groups On each indicator, countries are scored as 0 (no such policy), 0.5 (partial) or 1.0 (clear policy). The scores are then aggregated, with equal weighting for each area (‘recognition’ (Indicators 1–3), ‘accommodation’(Indicators 4–5) and ‘support’ (Indicators 6–8), and producing a country score ranging from 0 to 8.
Year 2011
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36128 Data Set

African states, global migration, and transformations in citizenship politics

Authors Okechukwu C. Iheduru
Year 2011
Journal Name Citizenship Studies
Citations (WoS) 6
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36129 Journal Article

Social Work and Migration: Immigrant and Refugee Settlement and Integration

Authors Östen Wahlbeck
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
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36130 Journal Article

Climate Refugees Study

Principal investigator Albert Kraler (Project Coordinator)
Description
Against the background of climate change, the study of environmentally induced displacement has become increasingly significant. Objectives • to provide a systematic review of the legal aspects of climate related displacement. • to analyse to what extent the current EU framework for immigration and asulum in general and the specific instruments in regard to asylum in particular already offer adequate responses to climate induced displacement. • to assess how the legal framework could evolve in order to provide an improved response to the phenomenon of climate refugees. • to clarify in which way such a modified legal framework can be rooted in the Lisbon Treaty. Outcomes The analysis reviews both the status quo as well as the possible evolution of the policy framework in place in order to arrive at more comprehensive responses to environmentally induced migration, while establishing the possible legal bases of different types of responses within the Treaty of Lisbon. • The first part of the study aims to develop a typology of environmentally induced migration which serves as a basis for identifying adequate policy responses, and in particular for different forms and dimensions of this phenomenon. • The second part focuses on a revision of the global debates on policy responses to environmentally induced displacement, which embeds the analysis of the European policy context in wider global policy debates and provides the framework under which the European policy framework is analysed. • The third and core part of the study looks at the policy framework in place at the level of the European Union to identify possible policy responses under the current EU policy framework that would address environmentally induced displacement as well as gaps and possible directions how this framework can evolve.
Year 2011
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36131 Project

Nabywanie kompetencji kulturowych a możliwości integracji migrantów – wymiar kulturowy i międzypokoleniowy

Year 2011
Journal Name Studia Migracyjne - Przegląd Polonijny
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36132 Journal Article

Security and the Politics of Belonging: Homegrown terrorism, counter-radicalization and the “end” of multiculturalism?

Description
What is the impact of counter-radicalization policies on multiculturalism and migrant membership in Europe? Many observers see state responses to homegrown terrorist threats as emphasizing assimilation in a way that marks the end of multiculturalism. This project argues instead that current anti-terror practices are producing an increased division of European societies along ethno-religious lines. Media and political discourse in European countries have announced the “end” of multiculturalism. The main reason behind this “backlash” being the need of fighting “homegrown terrorism”, a danger understood as linked to diaspora ghettoization and ethnic and religious separateness. In this sense, counter-radicalization policies and practices should be at the vanguard of an assimilationist and anti-multiculturalist turn. Yet is it the case? Several recent studies have shown that multicultural practices continue under different guises. Building on these findings, and through a comparison of Britain, France and the Netherlands, the project explores the hypothesis that counter-radicalization policies do not mark a return to assimilationist policies. Instead, through everyday practices of policing, they perpetuate and reinforce the ethno-religious division of national “communities”. The consequence of these policies is to remove fundamental questions about pluralism and citizenship from the political debate, casting them instead in the technical and depoliticized language of security. The proposed research is based on a discourse analysis of policy documents, in-depth qualitative interviews and ethnographic observation.
Year 2011
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36133 Project

Immigrant Performance in the Labour Market: The Role of Bonding and Bridging Social Capital

Principal investigator Bram Lancee (Principal Investigator )
Description
"Theoretical background and objectives There is a growing body of research that examines the relation between immigrants’ social capital and their labour market performance. More specifically, the difference between bonding and bridging social capital is addressed. The general conclusion is that social capital, especially that of the bridging type, contributes to a better position on the labour market. However, it is not clear to what extent this relation can be generalized to other European countries, or whether it is rather subject to contextual characteristics. In other words, it is not known to what extent macro-level determinants influence the returns to one’s individual social capital. To date, no cross-national study on the economic returns of immigrants’ social capital exits. The current proposal aims to carry out such a study. Secondly, an ongoing question in integration research is how ethnic minorities perform in the labour market in comparison to the native population. Such relative disadvantages are often referred to as ethnic penalties. Net ethnic penalties signal ethnic inequality and are often interpreted as evidence for discrimination (but see for a discussion Phalet & Heath 2010). Previous work shows that net penalties are considerable, both for the first and subsequent generations. A pressing question in migration studies is how features of the receiving society matter for the incorporation of immigrants and their descendants. This project contributes to the existing literature by empirically testing explanations for cross-national variation in ethnic penalties."
Year 2011
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36134 Project

Family Reunification - barrier or facilitator to integration?

Description
Family related migration has been a main mode of immigration into the EU over the past few decades. The EU’s Family Reunification Directive for third country nationals and their family members (IRL and UK failing to opt into same) aims to ensure the fair treatment of legally residing migrants from non-EU/EEA countries. Paragraph 4 of the Directive states that family reunification ‘helps to create sociocultural stability, facilitating the integration of third country nationals in the MS which also serves to promote economic and social cohesion’. Despite these aims, government discretion and wide interpretation have resulted in anomalies, unnecessary delays, discriminatory practices, many refusals and in cases, no independent appeals mechanisms for redress. Project aims Although there is a large body of knowledge on the legal framework for family reunification, the impact of legal and administrative rules on the actual reunification process and on the integration more generally remains under-researched. Before this background the project aims to study in depth a) the application of the respective laws in practice, b) the impact on family life and c) compliance with EU and Human Rights Standards. The research will consider how immigration law can present obstacles to or assist integration of third country nationals and their families. As a specific objective, the project will promote admission policies that favor integration. Outcomes The project covers seven countries (UK, IRE, AT, DE, BG, PT, NL). The outputs are based on empirical research on: • The legal and policy framework in the respective countries, • European and national case law, • The impact of regulations and policies on the admission of family members from third countries, • The impact of regulations and policies on the integration of third country nationals and their families. Project partners: Immigrant Council of Ireland, The Aire Centre, Centre for Migration Law Nijmegen, Johann Daniel Lawaetz Foundation Hamburg, High Commissioner for Immigration and Intercultural Dialogue Portugal (AICIDI), Institute for Legal Studies Bulgaria, International Centre for Migration Policy Development (ICMPD)
Year 2011
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36135 Project

EUmagine

Description
EUMAGINE is a collaborative European research project aimed at investigating the impact of perceptions of human rights and democracy on migration aspirations and decisions. Project description The EUMAGINE project aims to study how Europe is perceived from outside the EU, and how these perceptions affect migration aspirations and decisions. The project focuses on how people’s perceptions on democracy and human rights – in relation to their regions and countries of origin as well as places abroad – affect their perceptions on and attitudes to migration. We are also interested in investigating how perceptions on human rights and democracy interact with other determinants of migration aspirations, to what extent migration is perceived as a valuable life project, and how potential migrants compare Europe to other migration destinations. EUMAGINE studies migration-related perceptions among people aged 18-39 in four countries of origin and transit: Morocco, Senegal, Turkey and Ukraine. Conceptual framework The theoretical starting point for the project is two-fold: First, we assume that different types of discourses on human rights and democracy influence how individuals in countries of origin and transit perceive issues of human rights and democracy. Secondly, we expect that individuals’ perceptions in turn influence their migratory aspirations and decisions. The EUMAGINE project explores two types of imaginations: “migratory imaginations” and “geographical imaginations.” The term “migratory imaginations” refers to people’s attitude to migration as a valuable life project. Migration-related perceptions and aspirations develop within a specific cultural, political-juridical and economic setting, known as the “emigration environment.” Migration aspirations are linked with socially and culturally constructed perceptions. These include ideas and meanings attached to the migration project, subjective images of one’s current environment, and thoughts about potential destinations. We assume that perceptions on human rights and democracy have an impact on what Massey (1998) has termed “cultures of emigration,” where migration becomes deeply rooted into people’s behavioral repertoires. By “geographical imaginations” we refer to the meanings and images that make up people’s subjective conception of particular places, including Europe. We assume that migratory and geographical imaginations are influenced by different types of discourses: macro-level discourses (e.g. from policy and media sources) and meso-level discourses, (e.g. disseminated through popular culture and social networks). We also expect migratory and geographical imaginations to be shaped by individual-level factors, such as gender or age. Research questions The project is informed by five overarching research questions: 1) How are human rights and democracy related to imaginations in migrant sending countries constructed? 2) How are perceptions on human rights, democracy, migration and possible destination countries affected by various factors? 3) How do perceptions on human rights and democracy and ‘geographical imaginations’ relate to migration aspirations and migration? 4) How to develop a better informed migration policy, taking into account human rights and democracy as important migration determinants? 5) How to contribute to local capacity building in source countries, in order to prepare the ground for locally based research initiatives in the future? Methodology The project systematically analyzes migration aspirations and decisions, following a case-study approach: it compares and contrasts a diversity of important international emigration countries; various types of regions within these countries; several modes of migration; various types of influential discourses; and different profiles of potential migrants. This allows the project to make analytical generalizations about how migration-related perceptions, aspirations and decisions are formed. EUMAGINE has a multidisciplinary approach and combines the varied disciplinary background of its researchers: sociology, law, anthropology, economics, human geography and political science. The field research follows a mixed-method approach with three main methodological components: 1) ethnographic fieldwork in the community, 2) a large-scale quantitative survey, and 3) semi-structured qualitative interviews with selected survey respondents, directed by an interview guide. The research uses between- as well as within-method triangulation. Between-method triangulation is reached through combining qualitative as well as quantitative research methodologies. For within-method triangulation, we use two types of qualitative research, namely in-depth interviews and observation in communities. In each country, fieldwork is undertaken in four diverse regions, selected on the basis of the following model: 1) An area characterized by high emigration rates; 2) A second, comparable socio-economic area with low emigration; 3) A comparable area with a strong immigration history; and 4) A location with a specific human rights situation.
Year 2011
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36136 Project

Acceptable and Unacceptable Immigrants: How Opposition to Immigration in Britain is Affected by Migrants' Region of Origin

Authors Robert Ford
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
Citations (WoS) 78
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36138 Journal Article

The Limits of the Liberal State: Migration, Identity and Belonging in Europe

Authors Fiona B. Adamson, AR Zolberg, T Triadafilopoulos, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
Citations (WoS) 33
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36139 Journal Article

Analiza sytuacji uchodźców w Polsce w aspekcie realizacji wspólnej polityki azylowej Unii Europejskiej

Year 2011
Journal Name Zeszyty Naukowe. Uniwersytet Ekonomiczny w Krakowie
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36140 Journal Article

Playing Hard(er) to Get: The State, International Couples, and the Income Requirement

Authors Isik Kulu-Glasgow, Arjen Leerkes
Year 2011
Journal Name European Journal of Migration and Law
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36141 Journal Article

ConnectIEM: ICT to support everyday life integration of immigrants and ethnic minority people

Description
The research study "ICT to support the everyday life integration of immigrants or ethnic minority people (IEM)" (ConnectIEM) which was co-funded by JRC-IPTS and DG INFSO, European Commission. The following external research teams collaborated in the study: the Migration and Network Society Programme (MNS) hosted by the Internet Interdisciplinary Institute (IN3) of the Open University of Catalonia (UOC), the Technological and Social Change Group (TASCHA) hosted by the University of Washington, and a network of local researchers based in the target countries. The study gathered through an on-line survey statistically representative and comparable cross-country data on the ICT skills, access and usage of “connected migrants” from the main migration groups living in 8 EU Member States. It then explored the relationship between internet usage and integration processes and developed evidence-based policy options.
Year 2011
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36142 Project

New friends in new places: Network formation during the migration process among Poles in the UK

Authors Nick Gill, Paula Bialski
Year 2011
Journal Name Geoforum
Citations (WoS) 34
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36143 Journal Article

Experiencing Ethnic Economies: Brazilian Immigrants and Returnees

Authors Alan P. Marcus
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies
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36146 Journal Article

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

Description
Using the latest statistical data from six GCC states and recent publications of the GCC Secretariat, a detailed profile is presented of immigration and employment across the region. Evaluation is made of the available data sources (listed in the appendix) and the actual extent of immigrant presence in both population and labour market is critically examined. Employment according to public/private sector, and also for fifteen economic sectors, is shown for each country (where available) by citizenship type and gender. Previously unpublished indicators, such as unemployment and participation rates, are calculated where possible by citizenship type, gender and age groups; a few countries provide data on actual nationalities or regional groupings of foreign employees, and these are reproduced here. Previously neglected issues that receive some attention are foreign births, family presence, foreign schoolchildren and duration of residence (the latter available only for the UAE). The emergence of the kafala system is examined in historical context; in particular, emphasis is placed on its role in promoting irregularities in the migration, residence and employment of foreigners across the GCC. Trends in government policies are described, including the recent and significant doubts in some countries about the ability of the kafala system to produce satisfactory outcomes. Some attention is paid to the important policies of nationalization’ of GCC labour markets: a conceptual categorization of such policies is made, according to five different policy objectives. Using both the broad and more detailed sectoral employment data previously presented, evaluation is then made of the degree of success of each country’s initiatives in this area. The paper concludes with an exposition of the commonalities and differences across the GCC in managing their labour markets and immigration. The structural specificities of each country are outlined, along with tentative prognoses of their future needs for immigrant workers.
Year 2011
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36147 Report

Mediation of Migration: Media impacts on Norwegian immigration policy, public administration and public opinion.

Principal investigator Kjersti Thorbjørnsrud (Coordinator), Øyvind Ihlen (), Tine Ustad Figenschou (), Audun Beyer ()
Description
Mediation of Migration maps news on migration. We explore their typical form and content, how they are produced and what impacts they have on public opinion and politics. We further compare the Norwegian coverage of immigration with corresponding news in France and USA. The comparative part of the study provides a contrasting background for the Norwegian case, allowing a grasp both of the particular and the typical traits of the Norwegian mediated debate. Finally we examine the role of the news media in the loops of information between Diasporas in Norway and networks in sending countries of migrants, adding to the knowledge of migration flows and the globalization of information.
Year 2011
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36148 Project

Social inclusion and metrolingual practices

Authors Emi Otsuji, Alastair Pennycook
Year 2011
Journal Name International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism
Citations (WoS) 39
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36149 Journal Article

Voluntary and involuntary immigrants and adolescents’ endorsement of multiculturalism

Authors Maike Gieling, Maykel Verkuyten, J Thijs, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name International Journal of Intercultural Relations
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36150 Journal Article

The model of pre-acculturative stress—A pre-migration study of potential migrants from Russia to Finland

Authors Inga Jasinskaja-Lahti, Jasinskaja-Lahti, Anu Yijala, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name International Journal of Intercultural Relations
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36151 Journal Article

Acculturative stress in Latino Immigrants: The impact of social, socio-psychological and migration-related factors

Authors Kerstin Lueck, Machelle Wilson
Year 2011
Journal Name International Journal of Intercultural Relations
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36154 Journal Article

Iran and British Muslims: A Study of State-Sponsored Religious and Political Transnationalism

Description
This research examines the religious and political ties between 'official' Iran and UK-based Muslim communities. Based on a case study of Iran's institutional presence in the UK that will discuss its multifaceted religious, educational, and political programmes for coreligionists, it seeks to analyse how the Islamic Republic transfers, negotiates, and reformulates its norms and values transnationally. The British scene offers an interesting case study primarily because it is host to many Sunni and Shi‘i Muslims from different ethnic and national backgrounds, communities to which the Islamic Republic of Iran has paid particular attention from the 1980s onwards. Looking specifically at the effect of transnationalism on the state, this research will analyse the Islamic Republic’s use of cross-border activism as a soft power resource. In general terms, Iran’s transnational interactions with Muslim communities have mainly been studied with regard to Islamic political movements in Arab and Central Asian countries, while its reach to coreligionists living away from their country of origin has largely been overlooked in the literature. Yet, Iran’s involvement in the lives of Muslim migrants, refugees, and exiles is characteristic of its quest for religious and political leadership outside the country’s borders and, I argue, has much to say about the use of religion to advance state interests. As such, the benefits of state-sponsored transnationalism cannot only consider the direct ties Iran creates and maintains with Muslim believers, but also its relations with both their country of origin and the state hosting them (namely the UK), as well as with other transnational actors involved in transnational activities on the British scene.
Year 2011
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36155 Project

Citizenship values and asset accumulation: the case of Argentine migrants

Authors Jorge Ginieniewicz
Year 2011
Journal Name Citizenship Studies
Citations (WoS) 1
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36156 Journal Article

Wages Differences between Temporary and Permanent Immigrants

Authors Peter B. Brownell
Year 2010
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 6
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36157 Journal Article

Methodological Developments in Nationalism, Ethnicity, and Migration Research

Authors Victor Asal, Stephen Shellman, Tiffiany Howard
Year 2010
Journal Name Oxford Research Encyclopedia of International Studies
36158 Journal Article

Diaspora by design? : multiple allegiances and belonging in contemporary global Catholicism

Authors Ester GALLO
Year 2010
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
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36159 Journal Article

Swedish Parliament's Recognition of the "Genocide Resolution" and its Impact on the Turkish Community in Sweden

Authors Bahar BASER
Year 2010
Journal Name Diaspora Studies
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36166 Journal Article

Cadre général des migrations sénégalaises

Authors Papa SAKHO, Fatou Binetou DIAL
Description
Au cours des années 2000, l’étude des migrations sénégalaises a pâti du manque de données actualisées et suffisamment conceptualisées. Néanmoins, leur analyse montre une reconfiguration géographique des espaces de départ au profit de la région de Dakar devenue pôle principal d’émigration. Par ailleurs, les migrations internationales se sont redirigées depuis des pays africains vers l’Europe – en particulier l’Italie – ainsi que le Maroc et les Etats-Unis. Enfin, la baisse de l’émigration forcée est toujours tributaire d’une éventuelle amélioration de la situation en Casamance. Le Sénégal accueille des immigrés de proximité issus des pays frontaliers (Guinée, Gambie, Mauritanie). L’immigration évolue en fonction des crises politiques sous-régionales. Les flux de migrations internes d’Est en Ouest demeurent significatifs du fait de la littoralisation des activités et de la périphérisation de vastes régions internes marquées par l’enclavement et le sous-équipement. Elles ont pour effet le renforcement de la macrocéphalie de l’armature urbaine. La gestion des migrations fait l’objet d’interférences et de compétitions entre les différentes branches de l’Etat. En l’absence d’une politique cohérente, les interventions du gouvernement sont souvent influencées par les pays de destination, en particulier européens, en dépit des efforts de la société civile. / In the 2000s, the study of Senegalese migration has suffered from a lack of thoroughly conceptualized and up-to-date data. Nevertheless, analyses show a reshuffling of departing areas and a reconfiguration in favour of migration to Dakar which has become the main pole of emigration. International destinations have changed from Africa mainly to Europe and particularly to Italy, but also to Morocco and the US. Furthermore, forced emigration is a result of the atmosphere of instability prevailing in Casamance. Senegal still receives migration flows from neighbouring states (Guinea and Mauritania). Immigration evolves according to sub-regional political crises. Internal migration is east-western due to the flow of activities in coastal areas and the peripherization of large internal regions stricken by their enclosure and lack of infrastructure. These internal migrations reinforce the macrocephalic urban framework of the country. Due to its various components, the state has difficulties in distributing roles. Thus, the management of migration is subject to interference and competition and policies are often directed by European destination countries.
Year 2010
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36167 Report

Le cadre juridique des migrations internationales au Sénégal

Authors Adrien DIOH
Description
La présente contribution se propose d’appréhender le cadre législatif et institutionnel des migrations internationales au Sénégal. Il a permis de noter que malgré l’absence d’une politique migratoire nationale, la problématique a fait l’objet d’une réglementation. Sur le plan législatif, le pays adhère à un certain nombre de normes internationales émanant soit de l’Oit, soit des Nations Unies et qui n’ont pas manqué d’impacter sur l’ordre juridique interne. Au plan institutionnel, il a été constaté que le ministère de l’Intérieur, à travers quelques unes de ces directions, joue un rôle important. L’autre enseignement est que l’émigration occupe la portion congrue et que la réglementation concerne surtout le phénomène de l’immigration. Enfin, pour l’essentiel, les règles régissant la migration sont anciennes et de ce fait s’avèrent incapables de prendre en charge les nouvelles mutations que connaît le phénomène migratoire. / This contribution sets out the legislative and institutional framework governing international migration in Senegal. Despite the absence of a national migratory policy, migration has been regulated. At the legislative level, Senegal accepts a number of international rules from the ILO and the United Nations that affect the internal legal system. At the institutional level, the Ministry of Interior plays an important role through its services. Emigration is largely unregulated. Indeed, migration regulation mainly concerns immigration. Finally, migration regulation is dated and is, therefore, unable to deal with recent changes in migration.
Year 2010
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
36168 Report

Crossing over, heading West and South : mobility, citizenship and employment in the enlarged Europe

Authors Ettore RECCHI, Anna TRIANDAFYLLIDOU
Year 2010
Book Title [Global Governance Programme], [Cultural Pluralism]
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36169 Book Chapter

Gender and Migration in Palestine

Authors Asem KHALIL
Description
This paper is concerned with legal rules and institutions in Palestine directly or indirectly affecting migrant women. In particular, this paper sheds light on family reunification, personal status, and nationality laws. Despite the Palestinian Authority’s apparent commitment to rejecting sex discrimination and in combating violence directed against women, there are still social and legal obstacles that hinder full equality. In fact, legal rules and institutions have not always been – and, indeed, are still not – gender-neutral. It is not evident if and how such legal rules and institutions hinder or encourage female migration. It is nonetheless fair to say that this legal context is an important factor in determining women’s decisions to emigrate from, and may affect women’s willingness to immigrate to, Palestine. This is particularly true given that such legal provisions are accompanied by social norms that are often discriminatory towards women. The Palestinian Authority’s lack of sovereign control over borders in the occupied Palestinian territory as much as its population register hinders the adoption of rules, and the implementation of policies, related to migration, including those that target female migrants. Cet article porte sur les règles et institutions, en Palestine, qui affectent directement ou indirectement les femmes migrantes. Il met particulièrement en lumière le cadre juridique régissant le regroupement familial, le statut personnel et la nationalité. En dépit d’un engagement apparent de l’Autorité palestinienne à l’encontre de toute discrimination fondée sur le sexe et pour combattre la violence faite aux femmes, des obstacles sociaux et juridiques empêchent toujours une pleine égalité. En réalité, les règles et institutions ne sont toujours pas neutres en matière de genre, mais il n’est pas évident d’en conclure qu’elles entravent ou encouragent la migration féminine. Il paraît néanmoins juste de penser qu’un tel contexte est un facteur déterminant dans les décisions des femmes d’émigrer de la Palestine, ou de venir immigrer en Palestine. Ceci est particulièrement vrai du fait que ces règles s’accompagnent de normes sociales qui sont souvent discriminantes à l’égard des femmes. Enfin, le manque de contrôle souverain de l’Autorité palestinienne sur les frontières du territoire palestinien occupé ainsi que sur l’enregistrement de sa population freinent l’adoption de règles et l’application de politiques concernant la migration, y compris celles qui viseraient les femmes en particulier.
Year 2010
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36170 Report

Migration et Féminisation au Liban

Authors Choghig KASPARIAN
Description
Les mouvements migratoires sous différentes formes s’inscrivent dans l’histoire du peuple libanais. Ces mouvements ont pris et continuent de prendre de multiples aspects et sont d’ampleur différente suivant la période, la cause du déplacement, le pays d’origine et le pays de destination, la forme de la migration, l’appartenance sociale, l’âge et le genre des personnes en mobilité. S’agissant de l’émigration récente des femmes libanaises, l’analyse des données montre que l’importance des départs récents des Libanais des deux genres suit cette même tendance avec toutefois un écart d’intensité. Bien que les destinations qui attirent les hommes et les femmes tendent plus ou moins à se rapprocher, les principales raisons ayant entrainé ces départs restent elles distinctes. Quant aux modalités de départs, très différentes au début de la période observée, elles évoluent pour les femmes de manière à réduire les écarts importants notés avec les hommes. La migration indépendante des femmes devient un phénomène toujours croissant dans la société libanaise, quoique les hommes jouent encore un rôle important dans le projet migratoire. S’agissant d’immigration par genre, des données récentes élaborées par le ministère du Travail montrent la prédominance de la main d’œuvre féminine parmi les immigrés ayant une situation régulière. Néanmoins, en l’absence d’estimations sur la migration irrégulière, ils restent bien loin de la réalité. Abstract Migratory movements in their various forms are a fundamental part of the history of the Lebanese people. These movements have taken and continue to take many forms and have acquired different magnitudes depending on the period, the cause of displacement, the country of origin and destination, the social class, and the age and gender of those on the move. Regarding the recent emigration of Lebanese women, data analysis shows that recent emigration has followed the same trend for men and women with differences only in intensity. The main reasons which lead to male and female departure, notwithstanding a certain similarity, remains distinct while the destinations that attract men and women tend to be similar. As for the types of departures, which were very different at the beginning of the period in question, these have tended to converge for men and women. The independent migration of women is a phenomenon which is continuosly increasing in Lebanese society, though men still play an important role in the migratory project. Regarding the immigration of women, recent data collected by the Ministry of Labor show the predominance of female workers among immigrants. However, these data have to be used with caution since, in the absence of estimates on undocumented migration, they likely fail to grasp the realities of migrant work in Lebanon.
Year 2010
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36171 Report

Social cohesion and the transformation from ethnic to multicultural society: The Case of Denmark

Authors Niels Kærgård, Niels Kaergard
Year 2010
Journal Name Ethnicities
Citations (WoS) 5
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36172 Journal Article

The holistic ambition: Social cohesion and the culturalization of citizenship

Authors Yngve Lithman
Year 2010
Journal Name Ethnicities
Citations (WoS) 10
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36173 Journal Article

Genre et migration au Sénégal : approche juridique

Authors Adrien DIOH
Description
A l’instar de beaucoup d’autres, la réglementation sénégalaise de la migration féminine ne tient pas compte de la spécificité des femmes. Il n’est donc pas opéré une distinction en fonction du sexe. C’est que le principe constitutionnel d’égalité de traitement s’accommode difficilement avec un traitement différentiel. Or l’application d’une même règle à des personnes présentant des caractéristiques différentes peut s’avérer discriminatoire dans certaines situations en fin de compte. Toujours-est-il que certaines dispositions légales destinées à la fois aux hommes et aux femmes présentent un intérêt particulier pour ces dernières. Ainsi en est-il de la loi sur la traite des personnes particulièrement protectrice vis-à vis de ceux qui sont dans une situation d’extrême vulnérabilité dont les femmes réfugiées. Abstract As in many other countries, Senegal does not take female specificity into account in its migration legislation: there is no gender distinction there. Indeed, the constitutional principle of equality of treatment leaves no space for special treatment. Yet, the implementation of a common rule for persons with different characteristics may, in certain cases, be discriminatory. Some legal dispositions addressed to men and women are of particular interest for the latter. This is the case with the law against trafficking in persons, which aims at protecting vulnerable persons, among which are female refugees.
Year 2010
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36174 Report

Getting Home Alive (1986): Urgency and polyphony in the figuration of the “diasporican”

Authors Inmaculada Lara-Bonilla
Year 2010
Journal Name Latino Studies
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36175 Journal Article

Brain Gain to Brain Waste: Individual Biases, Prejudice, and Discounting of Migrant Skills

Authors Doha Shinnaoui, Renu Narchal
Year 2010
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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36176 Journal Article

Africa's Development beyond Aid: Getting Out of the Box

Authors Julius Gatune
Year 2010
Journal Name The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science
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36177 Journal Article

Migration clandestine féminine. Etude de cas de Dakar et sa banlieue.

Authors Papa SAKHO, Fatou Binetou DIAL
Description
L’émigration clandestine des femmes est un phénomène peu exploré dans la littérature existante sur les migrations internationales. Aujourd’hui, les femmes sont davantage amenées à seconder ou se substituer aux hommes (mari, frère ou père) pour subvenir aux besoins du ménage et font, dès lors, face à des difficultés économiques majeures. Par conséquent, certaines d’entre elles tentent d’émigrer en Europe même si la seule solution pour réaliser cet objectif est de rejoindre le continent en pirogue. Au-delà de l’illégalité et des risques liés au voyage, la migration clandestine féminine modifie le regard que l’on peut porter sur les femmes, leur place et les rôles qui leur étaient traditionnellement confiés. Elle permet d’interroger en profondeur les rapports entre les hommes et les femmes au sein de la société. La présente étude montre que le rôle des femmes restées au pays, souvent négligé dans l’étude de la migration, a souvent été déterminant dans le départ du migrant. Dans bien des cas, le rôle de soutien psychologique peut aussi prendre une dimension économique lorsqu’elles financent le voyage de l’émigré. En réalité, la mère, la grand-mère ou même la sœur contribuent régulièrement au financement du départ. Les femmes jouent donc un rôle fondamental aussi bien dans la migration légale que clandestine. Abstract Female illegal immigration is a new field in the study of international migration. Women have to face today’s inescapable economic difficulties, particularly as they are often called upon to assist or replace men (husbands, brothers or fathers) in meeting household expenses. This leads some women to consider traveling to Europe and, indeed, they try to do so by every means at their disposal. Apart from this illegal journey and all the risks pertaining to it, the clandestine illegal migration of women is changing the way in which we look at women and the place and the roles that have traditionally been assigned to them. This means a re-examination of male-female relations in society. Those women who are left behind by migrants, are often overlooked in migration studies, but they are presented here as genuine agents of migration in the sense that they have often played decisive roles in the departure of migrants. This psychological support women give can also, in many cases, become economic, for instance in funding emigrants. In fact, migration funding is often provided by mothers, grandmothers and even by sisters. Women are now playing key roles both in legal and illegal migration.
Year 2010
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36179 Report

Migration clandestine féminine. Etude de cas de Dakar et sa banlieue.

Authors Papa SAKHO, Fatou Binetou DIAL
Description
L’émigration clandestine des femmes est un phénomène peu exploré dans la littérature existante sur les migrations internationales. Aujourd’hui, les femmes sont davantage amenées à seconder ou se substituer aux hommes (mari, frère ou père) pour subvenir aux besoins du ménage et font, dès lors, face à des difficultés économiques majeures. Par conséquent, certaines d’entre elles tentent d’émigrer en Europe même si la seule solution pour réaliser cet objectif est de rejoindre le continent en pirogue. Au-delà de l’illégalité et des risques liés au voyage, la migration clandestine féminine modifie le regard que l’on peut porter sur les femmes, leur place et les rôles qui leur étaient traditionnellement confiés. Elle permet d’interroger en profondeur les rapports entre les hommes et les femmes au sein de la société. La présente étude montre que le rôle des femmes restées au pays, souvent négligé dans l’étude de la migration, a souvent été déterminant dans le départ du migrant. Dans bien des cas, le rôle de soutien psychologique peut aussi prendre une dimension économique lorsqu’elles financent le voyage de l’émigré. En réalité, la mère, la grand-mère ou même la sœur contribuent régulièrement au financement du départ. Les femmes jouent donc un rôle fondamental aussi bien dans la migration légale que clandestine. Abstract Female illegal immigration is a new field in the study of international migration. Women have to face today’s inescapable economic difficulties, particularly as they are often called upon to assist or replace men (husbands, brothers or fathers) in meeting household expenses. This leads some women to consider traveling to Europe and, indeed, they try to do so by every means at their disposal. Apart from this illegal journey and all the risks pertaining to it, the clandestine illegal migration of women is changing the way in which we look at women and the place and the roles that have traditionally been assigned to them. This means a re-examination of male-female relations in society. Those women who are left behind by migrants, are often overlooked in migration studies, but they are presented here as genuine agents of migration in the sense that they have often played decisive roles in the departure of migrants. This psychological support women give can also, in many cases, become economic, for instance in funding emigrants. In fact, migration funding is often provided by mothers, grandmothers and even by sisters. Women are now playing key roles both in legal and illegal migration.
Year 2010
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36180 Report

La migration hautement qualifiée algérienne. Tentative d’étiologie d’un sinistre

Authors Ali MEBROUKINE
Description
Résumé La question de la migration hautement qualifiée en Algérie mérite d’être appréhendée sous plusieurs angles. Le premier est la situation objective de développement économique et culturel atteint par l’Algérie, 50 ans après son indépendance. Les retards scientifiques, techniques et culturels accumulés (y compris du fait de la généralisation de l’arabisation) expliquent largement le départ du fleuron de l’intelligentsia algérienne entre 1975 et 2009. La deuxième est la dévalorisation du statut symbolique et matériel des cadres, à partir de 1984 jusqu’à ce jour, qui a contraint nombre d’entre eux à s’expatrier. La troisième est l’absence de sollicitude concrète des pouvoirs publics algériens à l’égard de la communauté nationale à l’étranger. Il existe désormais deux catégories d’Algériens hautement qualifiés expatriés. Celle qui exclut toute participation avec l’Algérie, lui préférant le Maroc, la Tunisie ou les pays arabes du Golfe pour des raisons essentiellement dues aux incertitudes et aux contradictions de la politique algérienne à l’égard de la communauté nationale installée à l’étranger. Et il y a celle qui appelle de ses vœux l’institution de relations régulières avec le pays d’origine, pour autant qu’elle ait exactement le même statut que les experts et coopérants étrangers sollicités par les institutions algériennes ; autrement dit, il est exclu que cette communauté s’investisse moralement, a fortiori politiquement, dans les politiques publiques que le gouvernement dit vouloir mettre en place. Il serait vain de spéculer sur une participation effective de la diaspora algérienne à l’effort de redressement de l’Algérie sur les plans économique, culturel et scientifique aussi longtemps que l’Algérie sera un pays très faiblement attractif pour les investissements étrangers. Ce n’est que du jour où l’Algérie deviendra une terre d’accueil des investissements étrangers, qu’elle pourra solliciter dans des conditions optimales la diaspora nationale. Abstract The issue of highly qualified migration in Algeria ought to be treated from three points of view. The first one concerns the objective situation of development reached by Algeria, 50 years after its independence. All the delays accumulated in many fields, such as scientific, technical and cultural domains (among them the arabisation’s generalization), largely explain the departure of Algerian intelligentsia’s fleuron between 1975 and 2008. The second one is the depreciation of symbolic and material statute of all the managerial staff from 1984 till today, which constrains many of them to expatriation. The third one is the absence of concrete solicitude from Algerian authorities towards national community established abroad. Henceforth, there are two categories of Algerian expatriates among highly qualified migration established abroad. One category excludes any participation with its country of origin, and prefers to be in Morocco, Tunisia and some other Arabic countries for reasons due to all the uncertainties and contradictions of Algerian Policy towards Algerian residents abroad. Another category wishes to participate to national scientific projects, under the condition to benefit from the same statute as the statute delivered to foreign experts who regularly intervene in Algeria. In other words, this kind of migration does not want to be involved in Algerian public policies that the government pretends to set up. It would be unavailing to expect the national community’s participation to Algeria’s economic recovery, as long as Algeria remains weakly attractive for foreign investments. Algeria will be able to attract its diaspora in optimal conditions when it becomes an attractive territory for foreign investors.
Year 2010
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36181 Report

Ethnic fractionalisation, migration and growth

Authors Dana Schueler, Julian Weisbrod
Year 2010
Journal Name EMPIRICAL ECONOMICS
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36182 Journal Article

Open Borders: Absurd Chimera or Inevitable Future Policy?

Authors John P. Casey
Year 2010
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
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36183 Journal Article

The Peruvian Diaspora

Authors Jorge Durand
Year 2010
Journal Name Latin American Perspectives
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36185 Journal Article

Explaining the Refugee Gap: Economic Outcomes of Refugees versus Other Immigrants

Authors P. Connor, Phillip Connor
Year 2010
Journal Name Journal of Refugee Studies
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36187 Journal Article

The Subjective Well-Being of Immigrants Aged 50 and Older in Israel

Authors Karin Amit, Howard Litwin
Year 2010
Journal Name Social Indicators Research
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36188 Journal Article

Report on Highly Skilled Migration in Egypt

Authors Tarek BADAWY
Description
This paper provides an analysis of the relevant laws that cover the migration of highly skilled persons who originate from, or settle in, Egypt. Highly skilled foreign nationals with unique professional skills are given advantages (in investment, property ownership for investors and taxation) that make their settlement in Egypt relatively easy when compared to the treatment given to non-skilled foreign workers. Non-skilled workers usually do not obtain work permits, they are employed in the informal sector and thus are not eligible for naturalization. Despite the advantages given to highly skilled foreign migrants, some professions are restricted to Egyptians. In order to deal with overpopulation, Egypt encourages its citizens to emigrate. This can be demonstrated by the tax benefits that the law offers to Egyptian emigrants, their right to retain Egyptian citizenship and confer it upon their children, the exemption of their children from military service if the children have other citizenships, the opportunity of public-sector employees to return to their former place of employment if they decide to return to Egypt, and finally, the negotiation of agreements with foreign governments to improve the status of Egyptian workers overseas as well as to counter organized crime and people smuggling across borders. Résumé Cette note fournit une analyse des lois couvrant la migration des personnes hautement qualifiées originaires d’Egypte ou s’y installant. Les étrangers hautement qualifiés pourvus de compétences uniques bénéficient de privilèges (dans le domaine de l’investissement, de la propriété et de l’imposition) qui rend leur installation plus facile que pour les travailleurs étrangers non qualifiés. Ces derniers n’obtiennent généralement pas de permis de travail, sont employés dans le secteur informel et ne peuvent ainsi accéder à la naturalisation. En dépit des privilèges offerts aux migrants hautement qualifiés, certaines professions demeurent réservées aux nationaux. Pour gérer la surpopulation, l’Egypte encourage ses citoyens à émigrer. Ceci est démontré par divers facteurs, tels que les avantages fiscaux offerts aux émigrés, leur droit de garder leur nationalité et de la transmettre à leurs enfants, l’exemption du service militaire pour leurs enfants dotés d’une autre nationalité, la possibilité pour les employés du secteur public de retrouver leur poste à leur retour en Egypte, et enfin la négociations d’accords bilatéraux visant à améliorer le statut des travailleurs égyptiens à l’étranger, ainsi qu’à lutter contre le crime organisé et le traffic transnational des personnes.
Year 2010
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36189 Report

MEXICAN MIGRATION AND SETTLEMENT

Authors Jessica M. Vasquez
Year 2010
Journal Name Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race
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36191 Journal Article

Invisisbility and selectivity. Introduction to the special issue on Dutch overseas migration in the nineteenth and twentieth century

Authors Marlou Schrover, Marijke Van Faassen
Year 2010
Journal Name Tijdschrift voor Sociale en Economische Geschiedenis,
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36192 Journal Article

Africa in Europe: narrating black British history in contemporary fiction

Authors Sofía Muñoz-Valdivieso, Sofia Munoz-Valdivieso
Year 2010
Journal Name Journal of European Studies
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36193 Journal Article

Immigrant generation and physical activity among Mexican, Chinese & Filipino adults in the US

Authors Aimee Afable-Munsuz, Ninez A. Ponce, EJ Perez-Stable, ...
Year 2010
Journal Name Social Science & Medicine
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36195 Journal Article

La migration hautement qualifiée depuis et vers le Mali

Authors Baba TRAORÉ
Description
Résumé Au Mali la plupart des diplômés sans emploi sont issus des facultés de sciences économiques et juridiques, des lettres, des arts et des sciences humaines. Mais les employeurs domestiques recherchent avant tout des professionnels de la construction. L’émigration hautement qualifiée est donc principalement la conséquence de l’inadéquation entre la formation académique et l’emploi. Cependant les apports des émigrés à leur pays d’origine par le biais de transfert de fonds, de biens, de services et de compétences peuvent au moins partiellement compenser la perte occasionnée par leur départ du marché de l’emploi. Les contacts de la diaspora malienne avec le pays sont évalués à travers des actions individuelles réalisées au profit des personnes physiques et des ménages de parents restés dans le pays d’origine et à travers des actions collectives d’associations, de jumelage ou de programmes d’assistance dirigés. Les transferts de fonds et les réalisations communautaires et individuelles sont assez significatifs pour affirmer que les migrants maliens hautement qualifiés gardent des contacts fréquents et très utiles avec leur pays d’origine. Abstract In Mali, the most brilliant graduates on the job market are in extractive work or construction, whereas most unemployed graduates have a degree in Economics, Law, Arts or in the Humanities. Highly-skilled emigration seems then to be related to an imbalance between academic formation and employment. However, from Mali’s perspective, the transfer of money, goods, services and competencies on the part of emigrants seem to make up for the loss of highly-skilled workers. Moreover, emigrants tend to maintain a strong link with their country of origin both at an individual level – e.g providing concrete aid to their relatives – and at the collective level – e.g by promoting associations, twinnings or assistance programs. Indeed, highly-skilled emigration represents an important resource for Mali.
Year 2010
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36196 Report

Immigrant Participation in the Transnational Era: Latin Americans' Experiences with Collective Organising in Toronto

Authors Luisa Veronis
Year 2010
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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36197 Journal Article

Migrant Entrepreneurship in Greece: Diversity of Pathways for Emerging Ethnic Business Communities in Thessaloniki

Authors Lois Labrianidis, Panos Hatziprokopiou
Year 2010
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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36198 Journal Article

Compétences marocaines expatriées : Quelles politiques de mobilisation suivies pour le développement du Maroc ? Du TOKTEN au FINCOME

Authors Abdelkrim BELGUENDOUZ
Description
Centrée sur les compétences marocaines résidant à l’étranger et les diverses tentatives de leur mobilisation par les gouvernements successifs, depuis une vingtaine d'années au service du développement économique, social et technologique du Maroc, la présente note d’analyse et de synthèse, actualisée à fin janvier 2010, aborde quelques aspects institutionnels et politiques de la thématique sur l’émigration marocaine hautement qualifiée. Se focalisant sur les aspects pragmatiques, concrets et fonctionnels, l’analyse retenue met en exergue et évalue les politiques publiques suivies et les éléments de stratégies (Transfert des connaissances par l'intermédiaire des expatriés (TOKTEN), Forum international des compétences marocaines à l’étranger ou FINCOME), qui aident à comprendre pour le Maroc, exportateur de matière grise et de talents, les enjeux sociopolitiques cristallisés à l'intérieur comme à l'extérieur du pays par la migration hautement qualifiée, en liaison spécifiquement avec l'évolution quantitative et qualitative de la communauté marocaine résidant à l’étranger. This analytical note (updated at the end of January 2010) frames highly-skilled emigration patterns in Morocco in institutional and political terms, focusing on the skills of Moroccan expatriates and the attempts of Moroccan governments to involve these migrant communities in the development of the country in the last twenty years. While looking at pragmatic, concrete and functional aspects, the note analyses governmental policies, national strategies and initiatives – Transfer of Knowledge through Expatriate Professionals (TOKTEN) and the International Forum of Moroccan Competences abroad (FINCOME) – that have played a crucial role in determining highly-skilled emigration in Morocco, a country increasingly known for exporting its skills and talents. This gives a sense of the socio-political stakes and the implications for both external and internal highly-skilled migration, while taking the quantitative as well as the qualitative evolution of the Moroccan community established abroad into account.
Year 2010
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36199 Report

La migration des personnes hautement qualifiées : le cas du Maroc

Authors Mohamed KHACHANI
Description
Au Maroc, l’émigration des cadres hautement qualifiés a pris, en ce début de XXIème siècle une importance considérable. Le schéma explicatif du phénomène est assez complexe, la fuite des compétences se révélant être le produit de plusieurs facteurs inhérents à l’environnement professionnel, économique, social et politique. Cet article analyse les différents aspects de cette migration, en mettant l’accent sur les axes suivants: le contexte international, très favorable à l’exode des compétences; l’ampleur du phénomène et les caractéristiques principales des compétences marocaines expatriés; son incidence dans le pays d’origine, notamment le coût qu’il représente pour le Maroc. Cet article vise d’abord a montrer que, si pour l’individu et sa famille le bénéfice est évident dans la sphère socio-économique, l’exode des compétences conduit à d’immenses pertes pour les pays d’origine. Ensuite, il introduit les perspectives d’avenir et les solutions à envisager afin de faire de ces compétences expatriées une richesse mutuelle, tant pour les pays de destination que pour les pays d’origine, confrontés, sous le poids de la mondialisation, aux contraintes de la mise à niveau de leurs systèmes productifs. Since the 2000s, the emigration of highly-skilled Moroccans has become significant. The explanation for this phenomenon is quite complex: brain drain is, in fact, the consequence of the interplay of several factors including the occupational, economic, social and the political. This paper aims to highlight the following aspects of this kind of migration: the international context, which is very favourable to brain-drain dynamics; the magnitude of these emigration flows and the main characteristics of Moroccan highly-skilled migrants; and the effects of this phenomenon on Morocco. We show, in fact, that while emigration brings a net socio-economic gain at the individual level (both for emigrants and their families), it represents, from the macro-perspective, a huge loss for the country of origin. Finally, we discuss the perspectives and solutions that would make highly-skilled migration flows beneficial both for the origin and for the destination country.
Year 2010
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36200 Report
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