Research
Database

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

Showing page of 162484 results, sorted by

Talking about Bordering

Authors Nira Yuval-Davis, Louise Ryan
Year 2020
Citations (WoS) 1
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42101 Journal Article

MOTIVATIONS OF VENEZUELAN RECENT IMMIGRATION TO ARGENTINA. THE CASE OF SANTA ROSA-TOAY, LA PAMPA, ARGENTINA

Authors Maria Dolores Linares
Year 2020
Journal Name Immigrant Youth and Employment: Lessons Learned from the Analysis of LSIC and 82 Lived Stories
Citations (WoS) 1
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42102 Journal Article

Photojournalism within the migratory scenario of the maritime coasts of the European Union

Authors Lacette Maria Lehnen Cojocaru, Francisco Jimenez Bautista, Antonio M. Lozano Martin
Year 2020
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42104 Journal Article

SCHOOL CHOICE AND THE CHILDREN OF MIGRANTS: UNVEILING EVERYDAY MIGRANTOPHOBIA IN MOSCOW

Authors Felicie Kempf
Year 2020
Journal Name LABORATORIUM-RUSSIAN REVIEW OF SOCIAL RESEARCH
Citations (WoS) 3
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42105 Journal Article

ETHNO-POLITICAL VALUES OF THE POPULATION OF UDMURTIA (BASED ON THE MATERIALS OF SOCIOLOGICAL RESEARCH)

Authors D. A. Chernienko
Year 2020
Journal Name EZHEGODNIK FINNO-UGORSKIKH ISSLEDOVANII-YEARBOOK OF FINNO-UGRIC STUDIES
Citations (WoS) 1
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42106 Journal Article

The Migration Transition in Poland

Authors Marek Okolski
Year 2020
Citations (WoS) 12
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42107 Journal Article

German Guilt, White Guilt: The Politics of Reforestation and the Return of the Gardening State

Authors Johannes Becke
Year 2020
Journal Name JEWISH STUDIES QUARTERLY
Citations (WoS) 1
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42108 Journal Article

Kazakh Homecomings: Between Politics, Culture and Identity

Authors Ewa Nowicka
Year 2020
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42109 Journal Article

INHABITING THE BRITISH COUNTRY HOUSE IN INDIA: THE INHERITANCE OF LOSS BY KIRAN DESAI

Authors Natacha Lasorak
Year 2020
Citations (WoS) 1
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42110 Journal Article

Sub-Saharan Africans in Morocco, From Underground to the Recognition or Renewal of Cosmopolitanism

Authors Mehdi Alioua
Year 2020
Journal Name Immigrant Youth and Employment: Lessons Learned from the Analysis of LSIC and 82 Lived Stories
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42111 Journal Article

The rights of Lebanese expatriates and their political engagement with the homeland

Authors Aida Casanovas, Nassima Kerras
Year 2020
Citations (WoS) 2
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42112 Journal Article

"Beyond the Horizon": Disconnections in Indonesian War of Independence

Authors Peter Romijn
Year 2020
Citations (WoS) 2
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42114 Journal Article

THE USE OF DICTIONARIES IN SLOVENIAN JUDICIAL PRACTICE

Authors Natasa Logar, Nina Perger, Vojko Gorjanc, ...
Year 2020
Journal Name Immigrant Youth and Employment: Lessons Learned from the Analysis of LSIC and 82 Lived Stories
Citations (WoS) 1
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42115 Journal Article

HOW MANY IMMIGRANTS HAVE LEFT SPAIN BECAUSE OF THE CRISIS? AN (INDIRECT) ESTIMATION THROUGH THE SPANISH LABOUR FORCE SURVEY

Authors Carmen Rodenas, Monica Marti
Year 2020
Journal Name OBETS-REVISTA DE CIENCIAS SOCIALES
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42116 Journal Article

Aesthetics of an Iranian diaspora - politics of belonging and difference in contemporary art photography

Authors Cathrine Bublatzky
Year 2020
Citations (WoS) 1
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42117 Journal Article

Opening the ‘Black Box’ of asylum governance: decision-making and the politics of asylum policy-making

Authors Andrea Pettrachin
Year 2020
Journal Name Italian Political Science Review/Rivista Italiana di Scienza Politica
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42119 Journal Article

Migrants’ long-term residential trajectories in Sweden: persistent neighbourhood deprivation or spatial assimilation?

Authors Louisa Vogiazides, Guilherme Kenji Chihaya
Year 2020
Journal Name Housing Studies
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42120 Journal Article

Linguistic and cultural barriers to access and utilization of mental health care for Farsi-speaking newcomers in Quebec

Authors Fahimeh Mianji, Jann Tomaro, Laurence J. Kirmayer
Year 2020
Journal Name International Journal of Migration, Health and Social Care
Citations (WoS) 2
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42121 Journal Article

Prawica, lewica i postawy wobec imigrantów. Poglądy Polaków na imigrację i ich dynamika na tle trendów europejskich

Authors Katarzyna Andrejuk
Year 2020
Journal Name Studia Migracyjne – Przegląd Polonijny
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42122 Journal Article

Local welfare system response to migrant poverty. Between innovations and inequality

Principal investigator Karolina Łukasiewicz (Principal Investigator), Ewa Cichocka (Researcher), Kamil Matuszczyk (Researcher)
Description
Scholars of international migration pay increasing attention to localities. As a result, we know much about cities being more innovative and efficient in their local immigrant integration policies than central governments. However, less is known about cities’ response to the needs of their most marginalized immigrant populations struggling with poverty, and about the risks related to decentralising policies to the local levels (e.g. creating unequal opportunities). Although migrants in Europe and in the U.S. statistically are more active on the labour market than nationals, they are twice more often affected by poverty, stay longer in poverty, fall back into it more often, face greater barriers to and within employment, and yet, they underutilize welfare services which are available to them. Using a case of Polish immigrants in three EU (London, Berlin, Stockholm) and one U.S. (New York City) cities, LocMig research project aims to examine the response of local welfare system (the system of provisions of welfare resources by local actors) to migrant urban poverty. LocMig will develop a novel theory explaining the role of macro-, mezo- and micro-level factors in shaping various responses to migrant poverty. Polish immigrants will be a focus of this study, as they are the second-largest group among intra-EU migrants (1.1. million in 2016), and the third-largest among European migrants in the U.S. (nearly 425,000 in 2018). A massive interest has been dedicated to Polish immigration particularly post-2004, however, only a handful of studies focus on the less successful stories of Polish immigrants struggling with poverty. A few studies describe Poles experiencing homelessness in London, Oslo and Brussel. A comparative understanding of various poverty experiences and use of services within various local welfare systems is missing. The four cities are selected to the study, as they are all top migrant destinations, operate within different national and local welfare regimes, have different national-level effectiveness in reducing migrant poverty, and are among the top destinations for Polish immigrants. LocMig project will answer three specific research questions: Question 1: For Polish immigrants living in cities and experiencing poverty and for direct service providers who work with them, how does reducing poverty look within different LWSs? Question 2: How do different responses of LWSs enable or impede reducing poverty? Question 3: How do macro, meso and micro-level factors shape various types of LWSs responses to migrant poverty? Research methodology: In order to answer these questions, we propose to conduct a comparative-case study (CCS, Yin, 2017) with qualitative longitudinal research component (Neale, 2019; Derrington, 2019) and based on so called community collaborative approach (McKay, Bell, Blake, 2010). CCS will allow to compare cases using a high level of scientific rigour. The longitudinal research will allow to maximize opportunities for understanding how overcoming poverty occurs (or is hindered) in “real-time” as participants enter local welfare systems. Finally, the community collaborative approach involves key stakeholders in the research process and that way, the research design and process is culturally and contextually relevant to the participating communities. The data collection process will include 72 interviews with Polish migrants and native-born who experienced poverty, and with direct service providers; Longitudinal research will be based on 48 interviews and 4 shadowing observations conducted in three waves of interviews with LWS migrant participants and persons directly providing services. Additionally, 8 expert interviews will be conducted, two in each city. Interviewed immigrants will also fill a demographic and social network survey. The project will also use secondary data collected in each city: national and city-level legislation related to the local welfare system, principal texts produced by non-state actors involved in the local welfare systems, and qualitative and quantitative indicators of local welfare system response to migrant poverty (e.g. multilingual provision of various welfare programs in cities, access to services for undocumented migrants etc.). The data analysis process will combine elements of grounded theory approach, deductive qualitative analysis, and inductive thematic analysis; and social network analysis. Dedoose and SPSS software will support data analysis process. LocMig contributes to the field of sociology of international migration and social welfare studies by addressing the following gaps existed in these fields: limited knowledge on migrants utilizing local welfare systems; successful LWSs responses to migrant poverty; Polish immigrants struggling with poverty and accessing welfare systems in comparative contexts. Scientific impact of the project will be achieved by means of advancement of state-of-the-art, preparing and submitting articles to peer-reviewed international journals, preparation of a book manuscript, participation in international conferences, presenting and consulting the research during public lectures, and popularizing project findings on social and professional media.
Year 2020
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
42123 Project

What does it take to become “one of us?” Redefining ethnic-civic citizenship using markers of everyday nationhood

Authors Chan-Hoong Leong, Adam Komisarof, Justine Dandy, ...
Year 2020
Journal Name International Journal of Intercultural Relations
Citations (WoS) 16
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42124 Journal Article

Local welfare system response to migrant poverty. Between innovations and inequality

Principal investigator Karolina Łukasiewicz (Principal Investigator)
Description
Scholars of international migration pay increasing attention to localities. As a result, we know much about cities being more innovative and efficient in their local immigrant integration policies than central governments. However, less is known about cities’ response to the needs of their most marginalized immigrant populations struggling with poverty, and about the risks related to decentralising policies to the local levels (e.g. creating unequal opportunities). Although migrants in Europe and in the U.S. statistically are more active on the labour market than nationals, they are twice more often affected by poverty, stay longer in poverty, fall back into it more often, face greater barriers to and within employment, and yet, they underutilize welfare services which are available to them. Using a case of Polish immigrants in three EU (London, Berlin, Stockholm) and one U.S. (New York City) cities, LocMig research project aims to examine the response of local welfare system (the system of provisions of welfare resources by local actors) to migrant urban poverty. LocMig will develop a novel theory explaining the role of macro-, mezo- and micro-level factors in shaping various responses to migrant poverty. Polish immigrants will be a focus of this study, as they are the second-largest group among intra-EU migrants (1.1. million in 2016), and the third-largest among European migrants in the U.S. (nearly 425,000 in 2018). A massive interest has been dedicated to Polish immigration particularly post-2004, however, only a handful of studies focus on the less successful stories of Polish immigrants struggling with poverty. A few studies describe Poles experiencing homelessness in London, Oslo and Brussel. A comparative understanding of various poverty experiences and use of services within various local welfare systems is missing. The four cities are selected to the study, as they are all top migrant destinations, operate within different national and local welfare regimes, have different national-level effectiveness in reducing migrant poverty, and are among the top destinations for Polish immigrants. LocMig project will answer three specific research questions: Question 1: For Polish immigrants living in cities and experiencing poverty and for direct service providers who work with them, how does reducing poverty look within different LWSs? Question 2: How do different responses of LWSs enable or impede reducing poverty? Question 3: How do macro, meso and micro-level factors shape various types of LWSs responses to migrant poverty? Research methodology: In order to answer these questions, we propose to conduct a comparative-case study (CCS, Yin, 2017) with qualitative longitudinal research component (Neale, 2019; Derrington, 2019) and based on so called community collaborative approach (McKay, Bell, Blake, 2010). CCS will allow to compare cases using a high level of scientific rigour. The longitudinal research will allow to maximize opportunities for understanding how overcoming poverty occurs (or is hindered) in “real-time” as participants enter local welfare systems. Finally, the community collaborative approach involves key stakeholders in the research process and that way, the research design and process is culturally and contextually relevant to the participating communities. The data collection process will include 72 interviews with Polish migrants and native-born who experienced poverty, and with direct service providers; Longitudinal research will be based on 48 interviews and 4 shadowing observations conducted in three waves of interviews with LWS migrant participants and persons directly providing services. Additionally, 8 expert interviews will be conducted, two in each city. Interviewed immigrants will also fill a demographic and social network survey. The project will also use secondary data collected in each city: national and city-level legislation related to the local welfare system, principal texts produced by non-state actors involved in the local welfare systems, and qualitative and quantitative indicators of local welfare system response to migrant poverty (e.g. multilingual provision of various welfare programs in cities, access to services for undocumented migrants etc.). The data analysis process will combine elements of grounded theory approach, deductive qualitative analysis, and inductive thematic analysis; and social network analysis. Dedoose and SPSS software will support data analysis process. LocMig contributes to the field of sociology of international migration and social welfare studies by addressing the following gaps existed in these fields: limited knowledge on migrants utilizing local welfare systems; successful LWSs responses to migrant poverty; Polish immigrants struggling with poverty and accessing welfare systems in comparative contexts. Scientific impact of the project will be achieved by means of advancement of state-of-the-art, preparing and submitting articles to peer-reviewed international journals, preparation of a book manuscript, participation in international conferences, presenting and consulting the research during public lectures, and popularizing project findings on social and professional media.
Year 2020
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
42126 Project

Local welfare system response to migrant poverty. Between innovations and inequality

Principal investigator Karolina Łukasiewicz (Principal Investigator), Ewa Cichocka (Researcher), Kamil Matuszczyk (Researcher)
Description
Scholars of international migration pay increasing attention to localities. As a result, we know much about cities being more innovative and efficient in their local immigrant integration policies than central governments. However, less is known about cities’ response to the needs of their most marginalized immigrant populations struggling with poverty, and about the risks related to decentralising policies to the local levels (e.g. creating unequal opportunities). Although migrants in Europe and in the U.S. statistically are more active on the labour market than nationals, they are twice more often affected by poverty, stay longer in poverty, fall back into it more often, face greater barriers to and within employment, and yet, they underutilize welfare services which are available to them. Using a case of Polish immigrants in three EU (London, Berlin, Stockholm) and one U.S. (New York City) cities, LocMig research project aims to examine the response of local welfare system (the system of provisions of welfare resources by local actors) to migrant urban poverty. LocMig will develop a novel theory explaining the role of macro-, mezo- and micro-level factors in shaping various responses to migrant poverty. Polish immigrants will be a focus of this study, as they are the second-largest group among intra-EU migrants (1.1. million in 2016), and the third-largest among European migrants in the U.S. (nearly 425,000 in 2018). A massive interest has been dedicated to Polish immigration particularly post-2004, however, only a handful of studies focus on the less successful stories of Polish immigrants struggling with poverty. A few studies describe Poles experiencing homelessness in London, Oslo and Brussel. A comparative understanding of various poverty experiences and use of services within various local welfare systems is missing. The four cities are selected to the study, as they are all top migrant destinations, operate within different national and local welfare regimes, have different national-level effectiveness in reducing migrant poverty, and are among the top destinations for Polish immigrants. LocMig project will answer three specific research questions: Question 1: For Polish immigrants living in cities and experiencing poverty and for direct service providers who work with them, how does reducing poverty look within different LWSs? Question 2: How do different responses of LWSs enable or impede reducing poverty? Question 3: How do macro, meso and micro-level factors shape various types of LWSs responses to migrant poverty? Research methodology: In order to answer these questions, we propose to conduct a comparative-case study (CCS, Yin, 2017) with qualitative longitudinal research component (Neale, 2019; Derrington, 2019) and based on so called community collaborative approach (McKay, Bell, Blake, 2010). CCS will allow to compare cases using a high level of scientific rigour. The longitudinal research will allow to maximize opportunities for understanding how overcoming poverty occurs (or is hindered) in “real-time” as participants enter local welfare systems. Finally, the community collaborative approach involves key stakeholders in the research process and that way, the research design and process is culturally and contextually relevant to the participating communities. The data collection process will include 72 interviews with Polish migrants and native-born who experienced poverty, and with direct service providers; Longitudinal research will be based on 48 interviews and 4 shadowing observations conducted in three waves of interviews with LWS migrant participants and persons directly providing services. Additionally, 8 expert interviews will be conducted, two in each city. Interviewed immigrants will also fill a demographic and social network survey. The project will also use secondary data collected in each city: national and city-level legislation related to the local welfare system, principal texts produced by non-state actors involved in the local welfare systems, and qualitative and quantitative indicators of local welfare system response to migrant poverty (e.g. multilingual provision of various welfare programs in cities, access to services for undocumented migrants etc.). The data analysis process will combine elements of grounded theory approach, deductive qualitative analysis, and inductive thematic analysis; and social network analysis. Dedoose and SPSS software will support data analysis process. LocMig contributes to the field of sociology of international migration and social welfare studies by addressing the following gaps existed in these fields: limited knowledge on migrants utilizing local welfare systems; successful LWSs responses to migrant poverty; Polish immigrants struggling with poverty and accessing welfare systems in comparative contexts. Scientific impact of the project will be achieved by means of advancement of state-of-the-art, preparing and submitting articles to peer-reviewed international journals, preparation of a book manuscript, participation in international conferences, presenting and consulting the research during public lectures, and popularizing project findings on social and professional media.
Year 2020
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
42127 Project

(Un)dignified migration: Representations of the refugee in Helon Habila’s Travellers

Authors Lena Englund
Year 2020
Journal Name Crossings: Journal of Migration & Culture
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42130 Journal Article

The Transits and Transactions of Migritude in Bay Mademba’s Il mio viaggio della speranza (My Voyage of Hope)

Authors Eleanor Paynter
Year 2020
Journal Name the minnesota review
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42132 Journal Article

Mindsets about language learning and support for immigrants’ integration

Authors Nigel Mantou Lou, Kimberly A. Noels
Year 2020
Journal Name International Journal of Intercultural Relations
Citations (WoS) 10
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42133 Journal Article

At the Nexus of Refugee and Labour Migration: US Refugee Policy Formulation after the Second World War

Authors Ruth Ellen Wasem
Year 2020
Journal Name Journal of Migration History
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42134 Journal Article

Displacement & Domesticity Since 1945: Refugees, Migrants and Expats Making Homes, Following the EAHN’s Sixth Thematic Conference (Brussels, 27–28 March 2019)

Authors Ashika L. Singh, Alessandra Gola, Luce Beeckmans, ...
Year 2020
Journal Name Architectural Histories
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42135 Journal Article

The economics of migration: Labour market impacts and migration policies

Authors Francesco Fasani, Joan Llull, Cristina Tealdi
Year 2020
Journal Name Labour Economics
Citations (WoS) 13
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42136 Journal Article

Institutional Discrimination and Workplace Racism

Authors Yong Li (李永)
Year 2020
Journal Name Journal of Chinese Overseas
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42137 Journal Article

Ethnic and Immigrant Businesses Taxonomy and Its Impacts Towards Entrepreneurial Education

Authors Eduardo Picanço Cruz, Roberto Pessoa de Queiroz Falcão
Year 2020
Book Title Multidisciplinary Approach to Entrepreneurship Education for Migrants
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42138 Book Chapter

Social pedagogues as migrants’ companionsin acculturation, integrationand social inclusion

Authors Marta Pietrusińska
Year 2020
Journal Name Culture - Education - Society
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42139 Journal Article

ALBANIAN IMMIGRATION TO ITALY IN THE 1990's

Authors V. Savaryn
Year 2020
Journal Name Bulletin of Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv. History
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42140 Journal Article

Religiosity and natives’ social contact with new refugees. Explaining differences between East and West Germany

Authors Jan-Philip Steinmann
Year 2020
Journal Name International Journal of Intercultural Relations
Citations (WoS) 9
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42142 Journal Article

"My Body Trembles with Fear": Okinawans Remember World War II in Davao

Authors Edith M. Kaneshiro
Year 2019
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42143 Journal Article

Marriage in the ruins of war: Intergenerational hauntings in the Afghan diaspora

Authors Mikkel Rytter, Andreas G Nielsen
Year 2019
Journal Name Ethnicities
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42146 Journal Article

“We will Manage It” – Did Chancellor Merkel's Dictum Increase or Even Cause the Refugee Movement in 2015?

Authors Ludger Pries
Year 2019
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 7
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42147 Journal Article

Contacts between Natives and Migrants in Germany: Perceptions of the Native Population since 1980 and an Examination of the Contact Hypotheses

Authors Bryan Bohrer, Maria-Therese Friehs, Peter Schmidt, ...
Year 2019
Journal Name Social Inclusion
Citations (WoS) 9
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42149 Journal Article

Trump-induced anxiety among Latina/os

Authors Bradford S. Jones, Jeffrey W. Sherman, Natalie E. Rojas, ...
Year 2019
Journal Name Group Processes & Intergroup Relations
Citations (WoS) 17
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42150 Journal Article

Internal Mobility and Family Commitment of Foreigners in Italy

Authors S. M. L. Rimoldi, E. Barbiano di Belgiojoso, L. Terzera
Year 2019
Journal Name International Migration
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42151 Journal Article

Acculturation and Perceived Ethnic Discrimination Predict Elevated Blood Glucose Level in Sub-Saharan African Immigrants in Australia

Authors P. I. Bilal, C. K. Y. Chan, S. M. Somerset
Year 2019
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
Citations (WoS) 2
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42152 Journal Article

Integration at work: Migrant healthcare professionals in two Spanish hospitals

Authors Claudia Finotelli
Year 2019
Journal Name Migration Studies
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42153 Journal Article

Essex 39: the root causes

Authors Kay Stephens
Year 2019
Journal Name Race & Class
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42154 Journal Article

Perceived Cultural Distance in Healthcare in Immigrant Intercultural Medical Encounters

Authors Somayeh Alizadeh, Meena Chavan
Year 2019
Journal Name International Migration
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42155 Journal Article

The Role of Environmental Perception in the Attitudes of People in Aran and Bidgol Concerning the Presence of Afghan Migrants

Authors Mohsen Shaterian
Year 2019
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
Citations (WoS) 1
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42156 Journal Article

The hostile environment, Brexit, and ‘reactive‐’ or ‘protective transnationalism’

Authors VICTORIA MELANGEDD REDCLIFT, FATIMA BEGUM RAJINA
Year 2019
Journal Name Global Networks
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42157 Journal Article

Overcoming data limitations to obtain migration flows for ASEAN countries

Authors James Raymer, Qing Guan, Jasmine Trang Ha
Year 2019
Journal Name Asian and Pacific Migration Journal
Citations (WoS) 7
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42158 Journal Article

Partizipative Sozialraumforschung mit Menschen mit Flucht- und Zuwanderungsgeschichte aus der Perspektive der Sozialen Arbeit: Methodische Überlegungen und Erfahrungen fördernder wie hemmender Faktoren

Authors Anne van Riessen, Christian Bleck
Year 2019
Journal Name Österreichische Zeitschrift für Soziologie
Citations (WoS) 1
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42160 Journal Article

Sharing the same languages helps us work better together

Authors W. Quin Yow, Tony Zhao Ming Lim
Year 2019
Journal Name PALGRAVE COMMUNICATIONS
Citations (WoS) 8
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42161 Journal Article

Caste, military, migration: Nepali Gurkha communities in Britain

Authors Mitra Pariyar
Year 2019
Journal Name Ethnicities
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42162 Journal Article

Can Terrorism Abroad Influence Migration Attitudes at Home?

Authors Tobias Böhmelt, Vincenzo Bove, Enzo Nussio
Year 2019
Journal Name American Journal of Political Science
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42163 Journal Article

Narrating the Margins and the Center: Kindertransportees' Stories of National and Religious Belonging

Authors Andrea Hammel
Year 2019
Journal Name SHOFAR-AN INTERDISCIPLINARY JOURNAL OF JEWISH STUDIES
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42164 Journal Article

Family Migration and Integration: <i>The Need for a New Research Agenda</i>

Authors Helga Eggebo, Jan-Paul Brekke
Year 2019
Journal Name Nordic Journal of Migration Research
Citations (WoS) 15
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42165 Journal Article

A Comparative Study on Multicultural Attitude of University Students: Austria, Hungary and Turkey Sample

Authors Kadir Karatekin, Mustafa Ozturk Akcaoglu, Muhammed Hayati Taban
Year 2019
Citations (WoS) 2
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42166 Journal Article

An Aesthetic Pattern of Nonbelonging-Immigration and Identity in Contemporary Israeli Art

Authors Emma Gashinsky
Year 2019
Citations (WoS) 2
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42167 Journal Article

Citizens in Motion: Emigration, Immigration, and Re-Migration across China's Borders

Authors Sin Yee Koh
Year 2019
Journal Name Asian Journal of Social Science
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42168 Journal Article

Migrant categorizations and European public opinion: diverging attitudes towards immigrants and refugees

Authors David De Coninck
Year 2019
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
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42169 Journal Article

Immigration Detention under the Global Compacts in the Light of Refugee and Human Rights Law Standards

Authors Izabella Majcher
Year 2019
Journal Name International Migration
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42170 Journal Article

Russian Migration Research in Transnational Discourse: Theoretical and Empirical Aspects

Authors Elena Vladimirovna Khakhalkina, Galina Vasil'evna Grosheva
Year 2019
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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42171 Journal Article

Racist mobilisation and sexualisation in the ‘refugee debate’ in Germany

Authors Michaela Köttig, Johanna Sigl
Year 2019
Journal Name Journal of Sociology
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42172 Journal Article

The Ideal and the Real Dimensions of the European Migration Crisis. The Polish Perspective

Authors Barbara Cieslinska, Malgorzata Dziekonska
Year 2019
Journal Name SOCIAL SCIENCES-BASEL
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42173 Journal Article

A Network-Based Measure of the Socio-Economic Roots of the Migration Flows

Authors Roy Cerqueti, Gian Paolo Clemente, Rosanna Grassi
Year 2019
Citations (WoS) 4
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42174 Journal Article

Opening the 'Black Box' of asylum governance : decision-making and the politics of asylum policy-making

Authors Andrea PETTRACHIN
Year 2019
Journal Name Italian political science review ; Rivista italiana di scienza politica, 2019, OnlineFirst
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42175 Journal Article

The Ambivalent U.S. Context of Reception and the Dichotomous Legal Consciousness of Unaccompanied Minors

Authors Chiara Galli
Year 2019
Journal Name Social Problems
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42176 Journal Article

Acculturation strategies and attitudes and their relationship with the identification of descendants of migrants in the Catalan school context

Authors Cristina Petrenas, Adelina Ianos, Cecilio Lapresta, ...
Year 2019
Journal Name Journal of Youth Studies
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42177 Journal Article

Solidarity and Social Networks: The Invisible Backbone That Ethiopians and Eritreans in Washington D.C. used to Transform Adams Morgan and U Street

Authors Mussa Idris
Year 2019
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant &amp; Refugee Studies
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42178 Journal Article

Citizens in motion: emigration, immigration, and re-migration across China’s borders

Authors Johanna L. Waters
Year 2019
Journal Name Social &amp; Cultural Geography
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42180 Journal Article

Does mentoring make immigrants more desirable? A conjoint analysis

Authors Akiva Weiss, Marina Tulin
Year 2019
Journal Name Migration Studies
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42181 Journal Article

Waiting for the smuggler : tales across the border

Authors Luigi ACHILLI
Year 2019
Journal Name [Global Governance Programme], [Cultural Pluralism]
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42184 Journal Article

The Quagmire of Return and Reintegration: Challenges to Multi‐Stakeholder Co‐ordination of Involuntary Returns

Authors Leander Kandilige, Geraldine Adiku
Year 2019
Journal Name International Migration
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42185 Journal Article

Book Review: Migrant Integration in a Changing Europe: Immigrants, European Citizens, and Co-ethnics in Italy and Spain

Authors Francesca Alice Vianello
Year 2019
Journal Name International Migration Review
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42186 Journal Article

Conversation Club: A Group Mentoring Model for Immigrant Youth

Authors Julia M. Pryce, Michael S. Kelly, Mary Lawinger
Year 2019
Journal Name Youth &amp; Society
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42187 Journal Article

Using intercultural videos of direct contact to implement vicarious contact: A school-based intervention that improves intergroup attitudes

Authors Loris Vezzali, Loris Vezzali, Gian Antonio Di Bernardo, ...
Year 2019
Journal Name GROUP PROCESSES & INTERGROUP RELATIONS
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42188 Journal Article

The economic assimilation of Irish Famine migrants to the United States

Authors William J. Collins, Ariell Zimran
Year 2019
Journal Name EXPLORATIONS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
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42189 Journal Article

RUSSIAN-SPEAKING MIGRANTS IN GERMANY: CONNECTIONS WITH THE EXODUS COUNTRIES AND RETURN TENDENCIES

Authors Viacheslav D. Popkov, Ekaterina A. Popkova
Year 2019
Journal Name VESTNIK TOMSKOGO GOSUDARSTVENNOGO UNIVERSITETA-FILOSOFIYA-SOTSIOLOGIYA-POLITOLOGIYA-TOMSK STATE UNIVERSITY JOURNAL OF PHILOSOPHY SOCIOLOGY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE
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42190 Journal Article

Opposition to Syrian Refugees and Immigrants during the Refugee Crisis in Greece

Authors Stefania Kalogeraki
Year 2019
Journal Name Journal of Modern Greek Studies
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42191 Journal Article

THE JAVA DIASPORA IN SURINAME: SOCIO-ECONOMIC AND CONFESSIONAL ASPECTS OF EVERYDAY LIFE

Authors Andrei Andreevich Boltaevsky
Year 2019
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
42192 Journal Article

Exploring the spatial concentration of foreign employment in Poland under the simplified procedure

Authors Agata Górny, Przemysław Śleszyński
Year 2019
Journal Name Geographia Polonica
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42193 Journal Article

Migration trends and dietary patterns in Sub-Saharan African adult immigrants: A comparative analysis of populations in France, the UK, and the USA

Authors Arlette J. Ngoubene-Atioky, John Case, Laetitia Tokplo, ...
Year 2019
Journal Name Migration Studies
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42194 Journal Article

Refugee immigration and the growth of low-wage work in the EU15

Authors Lars Fredrik Andersson, Rikard Eriksson, Sandro Scocco
Year 2019
Journal Name Comparative Migration Studies
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42196 Journal Article

Young people's rural multicultures: researching social relationships among youth in rural contexts

Authors Rose Butler
Year 2019
Journal Name Journal of Youth Studies
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
42199 Journal Article
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