Research
Database

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

Showing page of 162484 results, sorted by

“Let Us Help Them at Home”: Policies and Misunderstandings on Migrant Flows Across the Mediterranean Border

Authors Marco Caselli
Year 2019
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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42301 Journal Article

Theoretical and methodological approaches and problems of migration studies on Latin America: the case of Catalan emigration to Paraguay (1870-1932)

Authors Eva Morales Raya
Year 2019
Journal Name JOURNAL OF IBERIAN AND LATIN AMERICAN RESEARCH
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42302 Journal Article

Israel, Zionism and emigration anxiety: the case of Israeli academia

Authors Hila Amit
Year 2019
Journal Name Settler Colonial Studies
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42303 Journal Article

Interculturality: a position on training of nursing professionals

Authors Adriana Lucia Valdez Fernandez
Year 2019
Journal Name CULTURA DE LOS CUIDADOS
Citations (WoS) 2
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42304 Journal Article

Return or Remittances? Diaspora Economic Policies of Latin American and Caribbean States

Authors Luicy Pedroza, Pau Palop-Garcia
Year 2019
Journal Name Apuntes: Revista de Ciencias Sociales
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42305 Journal Article

Refugees across borders: The Colombo-Venezuelan migration reality in the first decade of the XXI century

Authors Raquel Alvarez de Flores
Year 2019
Journal Name ESPACIO ABIERTO
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42309 Journal Article

Migrants' lives matter: biographical research, recognition and social participation

Authors Elsa Lechner
Year 2019
Citations (WoS) 5
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42310 Journal Article

Bilingualism and Multilingualism Development in Republic of Bashkortostan

Authors Elena A. Kondrashkina
Year 2019
Journal Name NAUCHNYI DIALOG
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42311 Journal Article

Migration and Mobility in the Modern Age: Refugees, Travelers, and Traffickers in Europe and Eurasia

Authors Christian Koller
Year 2019
Journal Name Laboratorium: Russian Review of Social Research
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42312 Journal Article

THE POLICY OF MONOLINGUALISM AND MULTILINGUALISM IN LATVIA AND KAZAKHSTAN

Authors Liu Juan, Gong Lei
Year 2019
Journal Name QUAESTIO ROSSICA
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42313 Journal Article

KAZAKH DIASPORA IN KYRGYZSTAN: HISTORY OF SETTLEMENT AND ETHNOGRAPHIC PECULIARITIES

Authors Bibiziya Kalshabayeva, Gulnara Dadabayeva, Dauren Eskekbaev
Year 2019
Journal Name FOLKLORE-ELECTRONIC JOURNAL OF FOLKLORE
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42314 Journal Article

THE FUTURE OF COAL MINING HISTORY. MIGRATION, CULTURAL MEMORY AND THE TRANSNATIONAL DUTCH STUDIES

Authors Marco Prandoni
Year 2019
Journal Name SKANDINAVSKAYA FILOLOGIYA
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42315 Journal Article

ALGERIA, FROM OPERATIVE IMMIGRATION TO THE MOBILITY OF COMPETENCES IN THE LIGHT OF GLOBALIZATION? LOGIC AND DRIVING FACTORS OF TRANSNATIONAL MOBILITIES

Authors Zahir Hadibi
Year 2019
Journal Name AREAS-REVISTA INTERNACIONAL DE CIENCIAS SOCIALES
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42316 Journal Article

LATVIANS DOWN AND OUT IN ENGLAND AND IRELAND: CONTEMPORARY MIGRATION TALES

Authors Ojars Lams, Dens Dimins
Year 2019
Journal Name TRAMES-JOURNAL OF THE HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES
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42317 Journal Article

History of Lidia: ethnic-biographical outline of a Pankararu, between Aldeia and Metropoli

Authors Jose Mauricio Arruti
Year 2019
Journal Name Immigrant Youth and Employment: Lessons Learned from the Analysis of LSIC and 82 Lived Stories
Citations (WoS) 1
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42318 Journal Article

Nationalising minority ethnic athletes: Danish media representations of Nadia Nadim around the UEFA women's Euro 2017

Authors Sine Agergaard
Year 2019
Journal Name SPORT IN HISTORY
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42319 Journal Article

TRANSNATIONAL SOLIDARITY OF CIRCASSIANS IN-BETWEEN CAUCASUS AND MIDDLE EAST

Authors Ulas Sunata
Year 2019
Journal Name CONFLICT AND FORCED MIGRATION: ESCAPE FROM OPPRESSION AND STORIES OF SURVIVAL, RESILIENCE, AND HOPE
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42320 Journal Article

A COMPARATIVE APPROACH OF DEALING WITH DIVERSITY: THE MANAGING OF IMMIGRATION AND EDUCATION IN SPAIN AND IMMIGRATION AND HEALTH IN USA

Authors Antonia Olmos Alcaraz, Raquel Martinez Chicon
Year 2019
Journal Name NOESIS-REVISTA DE CIENCIAS SOCIALES Y HUMANIDADES
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42321 Journal Article

Snakes or Ladders? Job Quality Assessment among Temp Workers from Ukraine in Hungarian Electronics

Authors Tibor T. Meszmann, Olena Fedyuk
Year 2019
Citations (WoS) 11
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42322 Journal Article

BEHIND A PAIR OF PULLED EYES AND A FIFTY PERCENT FACE: A CULTURAL HERITAGE IN HANOI AND RAKUSHISHA

Authors Mirian Cardoso da Silva, Rafael Zeferino de Souza
Year 2019
Journal Name ANTARES-LETRAS E HUMANIDADES
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42323 Journal Article

THE MUSLIM MORO CONFLICT IN SOUTHERN PHILIPPINES: EFFECTS ON PHILIPPINES-MALAYSIA BILATERAL TIES, 1970-2010

Authors Rammani Karupiah, Danny Wong Tze Ken
Year 2019
Citations (WoS) 1
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42324 Journal Article

Emigration and alcohol consumption among migrant household members staying behind: Evidence from Kyrgyzstan

Authors Sara Paulone, Artjoms Ivlevs
Year 2019
Journal Name Social Science & Medicine
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42325 Journal Article

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

Authors Ognjen Obucina
Year 2019
Journal Name Population
Citations (WoS) 1
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42326 Journal Article

International migration and universal healthcare access: evidence from Mexico’s ‘Seguro Popular’

Authors Ana Isabel López García, Pedro P. Orraca-Romano
Year 2019
Journal Name Oxford Development Studies
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42327 Journal Article

Refugees and citizens: Understanding Eritrean refugees’ ambivalence towards homeland politics

Authors Milena Belloni
Year 2019
Journal Name International Journal of Comparative Sociology
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42328 Journal Article

Losing the Right to Stay: Revocation of immigrant residence permits and citizenship in Norway — Experiences and effects

Authors Brekke Jan-Paul, Simon Roland Birkvad, Marta Bivand Erdal
Description
In recent years, the Directorate of Immigration’s (UDI) handling of so-called revocation cases has received increased attention. These are cases where the authorities first grant residence permits and citizenship to migrants but later consider revoking these. Immigrants can have their right to stay in Norway revoked for a range of reasons, including having provided incorrect information when they were granted permits and in the case of refugees, because conditions improve in their home country. This report describes how those affected experience the process of revocation. The report is based on multiple data sources: statistics from the UDI’s data base; interviews with affected individuals from Afghanistan and Somalia, including representatives of their communities in Norway; and interviews with employees of the UDI and the police. After presenting descriptive statistics, we describe how the informants experienced the revocation process, including the effects of the revocation process on integration. Furthermore, we analyze how revocation affects the outlook and life strategies of those interviewed. This report provides a number of recommendations for improving the government’s handling of revocation, including developing a coherent communication strategy and reducing case processing time.
Year 2019
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42329 Report

Decoupling Peripheries from the Center: The Dangers of Diaspora in Chinese Migration Studies

Authors Madeline Hsu
Year 2019
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
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42330 Journal Article

International Migrants in China's Global City

Authors James Farrer
Year 2019
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42331 Book

The new immigrants Global trends in migration towards OECD countries between 2000/01 and 2015/16

Authors Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
Year 2019
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42332 Policy Brief

Asylum-to-Work transition: typical trajectories of refugees in Germany

Principal investigator Lidwina Gundacker (Principal Investigator), Yuliya Trübswetter (Principal Investigator), Parvati Kosyakova (Principal Investigator)
Description
Since 2015, more than 3 million people have sought humanitarian refuge in Germany. Although the country has traditionally been a country of immigration, the integration of refugees has posed a challenge to its society and policy-makers. Given the disadvantageous position of refugees in terms of resources and legal status, the first years after arrival may shape their social and economic participation in the long run. Yet, only scarce empirical evidence exists on the early biographical trajectories of refugees in Germany. Based on the first representative survey of refugees in Germany, the IAB-BAMF-SOEP survey with more than 7,000 respondents, this paper seeks to shed light on the trajectories of refugees in the first years after their arrival. We apply sequence analysis and cluster typical trajectories of different refugee groups in Germany. As main events, we consider posing an asylum application, receiving the asylum result, picking up education, starting a job and having a baby. How many individuals in fact follow the “ideal” path starting with the asylum process, followed by education and, ultimately, labor market participation? Which groups deviate most from this pattern? The obtained groups of typical post-migration biographies will provide the basis for future inferential analyses on the effects of the early trajectories on latter integration. At the same time, the main drivers of recurring structures in the sequences (such as legal security, human capital or the family context) can be explored. Projektmethode - sequence analyses - cluster analyses Projektziel - identification of typical Integration patterns of refugees and their determinants
Year 2019
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42333 Project

Roots, Return Narratives, Reclaiming “European Americans”: A Review Essay

Authors Yiorgos Anagnostou
Year 2019
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
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42334 Journal Article

Prozesse der Subjektivierung und Selbst-Bildung von mit Familie geflüchteten Mädchen in Deutschland

Principal investigator Martin Sökefeld (Principal Investigator)
Description
Das ethnologische Forschungsprojekt betrachtet die Subjektivierung (Butler, Foucault) und Selbst-Bildung geflüchteter Mädchen zwischen 15 und 21 Jahren, die in der (ethnologischen) Forschung unterrepräsentiert sind. In ihrem Alltag begegnen ihnen teils miteinander verknüpfte Vorstellungen sozialer Differenz wie Alter, Klasse, Geschlecht, Ethnizität bzw. Nationalität oder Religion. Damit verbunden begegnen ihnen Erwartungen, wie sie sich entsprechend dieser Zuschreibungen zu verhalten haben. Ihr individuelles Selbstverständnis wird dabei selten erfragt und berücksichtigt. Besondere Aufmerksamkeit wird dabei der Verknüpfung von Genderstereotypen mit Kulturalisierungen bzw. Ethnisierungen in alltäglichen Praktiken des everyday bordering gewidmet. In der Forschung werden Ansätze aus der Theorie der Subjektivierung zum Zusammenspiel von Anrufung und Selbst-Bildung, Überlegungen zur Produktion von Differenz in Intersektionalitäts- und kritischer Migrationsforschung sowie ethnologische Diskussionen um Handlungsmacht als Ausgangspunkte genutzt, um das Geflecht von Anrufungen, in dem sich die Mädchen bewegen, näher zu beschreiben und um über die Möglichkeiten und Grenzen von Handlungsmacht im Rahmen diskursiv vorgegebener Subjektpositionen nachzudenken. Die gezielte Untersuchung der Subjektivität und "alltäglichen" Erfahrung junger geflüchteter Frauen soll dazu dienen, im Sinne einer "cultural critique", Alternativen zu verallgemeinernden Erklärungsversuchen und Homogenisierungen von "Flüchtlingen", insbesondere "Flüchtlingsmädchen", in der deutschen Gesellschaft aufzuzeigen. Methodisch stützt ich das Projekt auf ethnografische Methoden wie teilnehmende Beobachtung in Verbindung mit informellen Gesprächen, offenen und semi-strukturierten Interviews sowie Expert*inneninterviews. Als Ergänzung klassischer ethnologischer Feldforschungsmethoden werden biographisch-narrative Interviews sowie partizipative Methoden wie Fokusgruppeninterviews und auto-driven photo elicitation ins Forschungsdesign integriert.
Year 2019
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42335 Project

Strategic litigation: the role of EU and international law in criminalising humanitarianism

Authors Carmine Conte, Seán Binder, Migration Policy Group (MPG)
Year 2019
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42336 Policy Brief

The blurry line between smuggling and rescuing migrants according to the international law of the Sea

Authors Rosalinda Cottone
Year 2019
Journal Name UAB QUADERNS DE RECERCA (Bellaterra)
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42337 Journal Article

Justice delayed is assimilation denied: Right-wing terror and immigrants' assimilation in Germany

Authors Sumit S. Deole
Year 2019
Journal Name Labour Economics
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42339 Journal Article

Irregular Migration by Sea: Interception and Rescue Interventions in Light of International Law and the EU Sea Borders Regulation

Authors Enkelejda Koka, Denard Veshi
Year 2019
Journal Name European Journal of Migration and Law
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42340 Journal Article

Future EU funding to support the integration of refugees and migrants

Authors Alexander Wolffhardt
Description
Funding support through EU programmes and their objectives is the EU’s main lever to promote the integration of migrants and refugees. Next to the soft law embodied in policy guidelines like the Common Basic Principles of immigrant integration, it is the amounts, binding provisions and concrete spending rules of instruments such as the Asylum-, Migration and Integration Fund (AMIF) or the structural funds including the European Social Fund (ESF) that define EU policy and a joint European approach in the integration domain. In a number of Member States, EU funds are even the sole or nearly only source of support for integration measures and -policies, rendering them crucially important for the outlook and opportunities of migrants and refugees in many places across Europe. Against this background, the proposals and negotiations on the upcoming Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF), i.e. the 2021 to 2027 EU programme and funding period, have become the focal point of the EU integration debate since 2018. Local level integration actors including cities and civil society organisations are key stakeholders in these policy debates, whose oucomes will be decisive for the availability of means both for early and longer-term integration, and on local level as much as for mainstreaming integration across all relevant policy areas. This report synthesizes previous ReSOMA briefs in the area of integration that have focused on the unfolding MFF debate. Following an overview of the 2018 Commission proposals which set out scope and structure of the future EU instruments (chapter 1.2), it presents twelve policy debates related to the ‘what’ and the ‘how’ of EU support for integratin and their stickicking points from a local level and civil society perspective (chapter 2). Partly refering to the discourse responding to recent policy trends and how they became incorporated in the Commission proposals, partly referring to long-standing debates between stakeholders and EU institutions, the chapter offers an abridged version of key topics of debate as identified in the previous ReSOMA Discussion Briefs on ‘Cities as providers of services to * By Alexander Wollfhardt, Migration Policy Group 4 migrant populations’, ‘Sustaining mainstreaming of immigrant integration’ and ‘The social inclusion of undocumented migrants’. Against the background of these conversations and controversies, stakeholders came forward with numerous proposals to improve and amend the Commission proposals to better address their concerns. The European Parliament in 2018 has been the key arena of decision-making towards the 2021 to 2027 MFF, with MEPs able to amend the proposed legislation based on the concerns driving the policy controversies and offering stakeholders the opportunity to advocate for their own proposals. Chapter 3 shows how the suggestions for alternative solutions brought forward converge around four mayor policy options for the future of EU spending on integration:  Adequate funding – to ensure sufficient and flexible spending on integration according to changing needs across all Member States  Meaningful needs assessment – to base AM(I)F national programming and Partnership Agreements on structured and standalone assessment of needs and challenges  Mainstreamed, longer-term policies – to promote comprehensive integration policies with a long-term orientation and mainstreaming them on Member State and EU level  Broader participation – to ensure funds can be accessed by civil society and local/ regional authorities, and that these actors are fully involved in the funds’ governance For each of these options main proposals are listed as voiced by stakeholder organisations in the field, including the ReSOMA partners ECRE, EUROCITIES, PICUM and Social Platform. The chapter also shows, in each of the options, how the European Parliament has amended the Commission proposals, thus illustrating the uptake by Parliament of solutions advocated for by stakeholders. References to the previous ReSOMA Policy Options Briefs on ‘High levels of EU support for migrant integration, implemented by civil society and local authorities’ and ‘Comprehensive and mainstreamed, longer-term support for the integration of migrants’ point to more in-depth information on the evidence base supporting these proposals, the details of the various stakeholders positions and a mapping of the EP amendments. Chapter 4.1 sheds light on the state of play as of spring 2019, with the EP positions on the key EU instruments all decided before the EP elections and clarified at time when MFF negotiations are gearing up in the intergovernmental Council arena. Compromises among Member States and with the European Parliament are expected to be reached in late 2019/early 2020. Next to highlighting current debate among governments, the chapter stresses the importance of the preparations taking place already now on Member State level in terms of programming and priority setting. How the national AM(I)F and ESF+ programmes are shaping up even now, in advance of final EU-level decisions on the scope of the instruments, is crucially important for the future availability of EU means for integration support and the possibilities of key actors to benefit from 5 programmes. Across all levels, governments, the Commission, European Parliament and integration stakeholder are called upon to act accordingly, to ensure full exploitation of the new instruments’ potential for integration support, complementarity in programme planning, comprehensive compliance with the partnership principle and a need-based approach to the services funded. Drawing the consequence from the lack of realtime evidence on the actual uptake of EU instruments supporting integration and on the practice of partnershipled implementation, the Synthetic Report culminates in a proposal for a new, independent EU-wide quality monitoring mechanism (chapter 4.2). Led by civil society and local level stakeholders across the EU, the mechanism would provide for ongoing, regular monitoring of how the partnership principle is observed, national programmes are implemented, different funds are used, and of the quality of coordination and coherence among the instruments. Quality assessment of content and effectiveness of projects funded would improve the evidence base for future AM(I)F midterm reviews and allocation decisions for the second tranches of the fund. The new mechanism would thus aim to generate the necessary knowledge for pushing towards  compliance with the partnership principle,  purposeful use of AM(I)F and structural (ESF+) funds to support integration,  coordination and collaboration among the implementing authorities,  robust mid-term review procedures. This recommendation to set up a new, enhanced quality monitoring mechanism not only responds to a core gap identified in activities and analyses of stakeholders, but also builds on ReSOMA’s dialogue with local level and civil society experts, policymakers and researchers. In a very concrete way ReSOMA suggests the contours of a transnational mechanism that brings together implementation monitoring, qualitative evaluation, empowerment and capacity building of stakeholders, as well as EU-wide benchmarking and mutual exchange
Year 2019
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42341 Report

Diaspora community in Brunei: culture, ethnicity and integration

Authors AKM Ahsan Ullah, Asiyah Az-Zahra Ahmad Kumpoh
Year 2019
Journal Name Diaspora Studies
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42343 Journal Article

Language, Families, and Society

Description
Building on my previous research on Family Language Policy (FLP), LaFS (‘Language, Families, and Society’) will focus on three types of linguistic minority families—autochthonous, immigrant, and refugee—as a means to elucidating more about how social inequality is perpetuated (or arrested) along linguistic lines, and how policy at the local, national, and international levels can better support linguistic minority families. The project will therefore provide a key means to understanding more about Europe’s three main sociolinguistic challenges: the decline of its many autochthonous minority languages; increased linguistic diversity due to increased mobility among European member states; and the refugee crisis. LaFS will centre on families who speak Irish as a home language (autochthonous); Polish (immigrant); and Arabic (refugee) as a means to understanding the challenges these linguistic minority families face and how these challenges affect their sense of identity, belonging, and overall well-being. This understanding will be broadened by a secondment with the Glasgow Refugee, Asylum, and Migration Network (GRAMNet). LaFS will be hosted by the National University of Ireland, Galway, complementing NUIG’s Centre for Population and Migration Research and UNESCO Child and Family Research Centre. The project will be supervised by Prof. Tadhg Ó hIfearnáin, a leading expert in minority language issues. The secondment will be supervised by Professor Alison Phipps, UNESCO Chair in Refugee Integration through Languages and the Arts. My professional development over the course of the project in terms of innovative research practice; high-impact dissemination and communication skills; and effective project management skills will be invaluable to my long-term goal of embedding sociolinguistics into social justice research.
Year 2019
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42344 Project

Selektivität von Zuwanderern nach Westeuropa: Die Bedeutung des Herkunftskontexts

Principal investigator Cornelia Kristen (Principal Investigator ), Christoph Spörlein (Principal Investigator )
Description
Zuwanderer unterscheiden sich in vielen Fällen von der im Herkunftsland verbleibenden Bevölkerung und stellen insofern keine Zufallsstichprobe dieser Population dar. Das Forschungsvorhaben widmet sich diesem für die Migrationsforschung bedeutsamen Phänomen der selektiven Migration. Die erste Zielsetzung besteht darin, das Ausmaß der Bildungsselektivität für eine Vielzahl wichtiger Migrantengruppen in einer Reihe von westeuropäischen Zielländern zu beschreiben. Zusätzlich zur Selektivität nach Bildung, welche im Zentrum des Projekts steht, soll es um die Selektivität in den Einstellungen von Zuwanderern gehen. Die zweite Zielsetzung richtet sich auf die theoretische und empirische Auseinandersetzung mit der Frage, wie sich derartige Selektivitäten auf die Integration von Migranten auswirken. Hierzu werden zentrale Integrationsdimensionen in den Blick genommen: Die kulturelle Integration (im Hinblick auf den Spracherwerb), die strukturelle Integration (im Hinblick auf die Eingliederung in das Bildungssystem und den Arbeitsmarkt) sowie Aspekte der sozialen und identifikativen Inkorporation (im Hinblick auf interethnische Beziehungen und Einstellungsmuster). Ein zusätzliches methodisches Anliegen besteht darin, optimierte Selektivitätsmessungen zu implementieren. Zu diesem Zweck wird Selektivität – im Gegensatz zur in der Literatur verbreiteten Betrachtung als Gruppenmerkmal – als eine individuelle Charakteristik aufgefasst. Zur Bestimmung der relativen Position wird jedes Individuum in die jeweilige alters- und geschlechtsspezifischen Verteilung des betrachteten Selektivitätsmerkmals in der Herkunftsgesellschaft eingeordnet. Hierüber kann der Tatsache Rechnung getragen werden, dass verschiedene Migrantengruppen nicht per se überwiegend positiv oder negativ selektiert sind, sondern sich typischerweise aus variierenden Anteilen von mehr oder weniger positiv beziehungsweise negativ selektierten Individuen zusammensetzen. Die inzwischen deutlich verbesserte Datenlage ermöglicht die Betrachtung einer größeren Anzahl von Herkunftsgruppen in den wichtigsten Zielländern Europas. Die hierfür erforderliche Aufbereitung und Harmonisierung der unterschiedlichen Datenquellen soll entsprechend dokumentiert und zusammen mit den Skripten, die für Replikationen der zentralen Analysen erforderlich sind, der wissenschaftlichen Gemeinschaft zugänglich gemacht werden.
Year 2019
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42345 Project

Dissimination of Evidence-Based Integration Approaches of Migrant Children Attending Czech Schools

Principal investigator Filip Kachnic (Principal Investigator)
Description
The goal of the project is to collect and dissiminate best practices in immigrant students education from Czech public and private schools. Preliminary project outcomes were dissiminated in the EU Parliament in 2020 to selected MEP and as conference paper at the 8th World Conference on Peace in Schools in Mexico (virtually). The project is being conducted in two phases: - 2020/2021: Dissimination of Evidence-Based Integration Approaches of Migrant Children Attending Czech Schools (project number 52010441) is with EU stakeholders, international research bodies and practitioners. - 2019/2020: Migrant & Refugee Children in Czech Schools: Assessment of School´s Inclusion Approach from Child´s Perspective/Pedagogy (project id 51910372). The project is co-financed by the Governments of Czechia, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia through Visegrad Grants from International Visegrad Fund. The mission of the fund is to advance ideas for sustainable regional cooperation in Central Europe.
Year 2019
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42346 Project

Determinants of ‘Mobilisation’ at Home and Abroad: Analysing the Micro-Foundations of Out-Migration & Mass Protest

Principal investigator Sorana Toma (Principal Investigator)
Description
Le projet MOBILISE demande: Quand mécontents avec le situation economique ou politiquoi, pourquoi certains individus protestent tandis que d'autres quittent les frontieres? En reliant les intuitions théoriques de la littérature sur la migration internationale et de celle sur les mobilisations collectives, nous examinons a) Si des facteurs similaires soustentend le choix de migrer et/ou de protester au niveau individuel b) Comment le contexte influence ces mobilisations c) Dans quelle mesure ces choix sont-ils independants l'un de l'autre ou ils se renforcent / se découragent l'un l'autre. MOBILISE utilise une methodologie mixte (des enquêtes quantitatives representatives au niveau national, des enquêtes en ligne auprés des migrants, des enquêtes auprès des protestataires, des focus groups, des entretiens retrospectifs et de l'analyse des réseaux sociaux) ainsi qu'un design multi-situé. Le projet couvre l'Ukraine, la Pologne, le Maroc et le Bresil, qui ont tous récemment connu des protestations de masse ainsi qu'une forte émigration. Nous suivons des emigrés de ces pays en Allemagne, la Grande Bretagne et l'Espagne. Le projet offre quatre innovations clés 1) Il combine les protestations et la migration 2) Il capture tous les groupes pertinents pour la comparaison (des protestataires, des migrants, des migrants protestataires et des individus qui ne font ni l'un ni l'autre) 3) Il suit des individus au fil du temps en utilisant des methodes de panel 4) Il inclut dans l'analyse l'utilisation des réseaux sociaux en fournissant de l'information sur le role des réseaux et des transferts politiques en temps réel. Ces innovations nous permettent d'apporter une contribution importante au développement théorique autant dans l'étude des migrations que des protestations. De plus, le projet fournit des connaissances centrales aux hommes politiques sur les facteurs qui influencent la stabilité politique et économique.
Year 2019
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42347 Project

We feel better when we speak common language; Affective well-being in bilingual adolescents from three ethnic groups in Indonesia

Authors Betty Tjipta Sari, Athanasios Chasiotis, Fons J. R. van de Vijver, ...
Year 2019
Journal Name International Journal of Intercultural Relations
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42348 Journal Article

Bloody Diaspora Theory for the Twenty-First Century: African and Asian Heritage Migrants Return

Authors Melissa Tandiwe Myambo
Year 2019
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
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42349 Journal Article

Assessing migrants’ satisfaction from health care services in Cyprus: a nationwide study

Authors Christos Panagiotopoulos, Menelaos Apostolou, Agamemnonas Zachariades
Year 2019
Journal Name International Journal of Migration, Health and Social Care
Citations (WoS) 1
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42350 Journal Article

REBUILD - ICT-enabled integration facilitator and life rebuilding guidance

Description
'The REBUILD proposal address immigrant integration through the provision of a toolbox of ICT-based solutions that will improve both the management procedures of the local authorities and the life quality of the migrants. The design approach is user-centered and participated: both target groups (immigrants/refugees and local public services providers) will be part of the user requirement analysis and participants in three 2-days Co-Creation workshops organized in the 3 main piloting countries: Italy, Spain and Greece, chosen also for their being the 'access gates' to Europe for main immigration routes. Users and stakeholders engagement is a key success factor addressed both in the Consortium composition and in its capacity to engage relevant stakeholders external to the project. The key technology solutions proposed are: GDPR-compliant migrants’ integration related background information gathering with user consent and anonymization of personal information; AI-based profile analysis to enable both personalized support and policy making on migration-related issues; AI-based needs matching tool, to match migrant needs and skills with services provided by local authorities in EU countries and labor market needs at local and regional level; a digital companion for migrants enabling personalized two-way communication using chatbots to provide them smart support for easy access to local services (training, health, employment, welfare, etc.) and assessment of the level of integration and understanding of the new society, while providing to local authorities data-driven, easy to use decision supporting tools for enhancing capacities and effectiveness in service provision. Cross-culturality, ethical, accessibility dimensions will be addressed since the very beginning of the project, and validated and assessed in terms of consistency and impact during the project lifespan.'
Year 2019
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42351 Project

Lifestyle migrants or “environmental refugees”?—Resisting urban risks

Authors Linda Persson
Year 2019
Journal Name Population, Space and Place
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42353 Journal Article

Crackdown on NGOs and volunteers helping refugees and other migrants

Authors Lina Vosyliūtė, Carmine Conte, Migration Policy Group (MPG)
Description
This report synthesises previous ReSOMA briefs concerning the crackdown on NGOs and volunteers helping refugees and other migrants. Section 1 captures the main issues and controversies in the debate on the policing of humanitarianism and the potential impacts of EU and national anti-migrant smuggling policies on civil society actors. This section has drawn on academic research in this area, and in particular on CEPS expertise in this field. Section 2 provides an overview of the possible policy options to address this phenomenon taking stock of the ongoing policy debate on solutions and alternatives. Section 3 aims to identify and quantify criminal cases of individuals, volunteers and NGOs providing humanitarian assistance to migrants in the European Union. This monitoring exercise has been carried out by MPG through ReSOMA’s collaborative and participatory process involving experts from NGOs, researchers and other stakeholders. Section 4 provides overall summary conclusions and recommendations to end the crackdown on NGOs and to prevent further policing of civil society. The final section proposes approaches to returning responsibility to EU actors, to be further explored by the ReSOMA platform, with a focus on good governance, human rights defenders, and the protection of humanitarian space inside the EU.
Year 2019
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42354 Report

Controversial social representations about migrants from multi- voice and multi-agents (scientific, institutional and lay people) discourses and immigrant’s experiences

Authors Annamaria Silvana de Rosa, et Al
Year 2019
Book Title Controversial social representations about migrants from multi-voice and multi-agent(scientific, institutional and lay people) discourses and immingrant’s experiences
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42355 Book Chapter

Public opinion on migration

Authors James DENNISON
Year 2018
Journal Name Data bulletin : informing a global compact for migration, 2018, No. 16, pp. 1-4
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42356 Journal Article

Predicting Unauthorized Salvadoran Migrants’ First Migration to the United States between 1965 and 2007

Authors Nadia Y. Flores-Yeffal, Karen A. Pren
Year 2018
Journal Name Journal on Migration and Human Security
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42357 Journal Article

Erratum

Year 2018
Journal Name Journal on Migration and Human Security
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42358 Journal Article

"Our riches are our family", the changing family dynamics & social capital for new migrant families in Australia

Authors Nidhi Wali, Andre M. N. Renzaho
Year 2018
Journal Name PLOS ONE
Citations (WoS) 1
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42361 Journal Article

The absent rewards of assimilation : how ethnic penalties persist in the Swiss labour market

Authors Daniel AUER, Flavia FOSSATI
Year 2018
Journal Name Journal of economic inequality
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42363 Journal Article

The Politics of Irregular Migration, Human Trafficking and People Smuggling in the United Kingdom

Authors Andrew Geddes
Year 2018
Book Title Immigration and Criminal Law in the European Union
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42365 Book Chapter

European Readmission Policy

Authors Nils Philip Coleman
Year 2018
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42366 Book

EU Immigration and Asylum Law (Text and Commentary): Second Revised Edition

Authors Violeta Moreno-Lax, Steve Peers, Madeline Garlick, ...
Year 2018
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42367 Book

EU Immigration and Asylum Law (Text and Commentary): Second Revised Edition

Authors Elspeth Guild, Steve Peers, Diego Acosta Arcarazo, ...
Year 2018
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42368 Book

The Reconceptualization of European Union Citizenship

Authors Cristina Gortázar Rotaeche, Elspeth Guild, Dora Kostakopoulou
Year 2018
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42369 Book

Extraterritorial Immigration Control

Authors Valsamis Mitsilegas, Bernard Ryan
Year 2018
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42370 Book

Controlling Immigration and Organized Crime in the Netherlands. Dutch Developments and Debates on Human Smuggling and Trafficking

Authors Richard Staring
Year 2018
Book Title Immigration and Criminal Law in the European Union
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42371 Book Chapter

Rumors, encounters, collaborations, and survival : the migrant smuggling-drug trafficking nexus in the us Southwest

Authors Gabriella E. Sanchez, Sheldon X. Zhang
Year 2018
Journal Name The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science
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42372 Journal Article

Commemorating Freedom: The Fortieth Anniversary of the "Fall of Saigon" in Canada

Authors Vinh Nguyen
Year 2018
Journal Name CANADIAN REVIEW OF AMERICAN STUDIES
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42373 Journal Article

No Time for Church: School, Family and Filipino-Japanese Children's Acculturation

Authors Alec R. Lemay
Year 2018
Journal Name Social Science Japan Journal
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42374 Journal Article

The problem of bilingualism and tolerance in the multiethnic regional community

Authors Madina M. Shakhbanova, Elena V. Susimenko, Viktor V. Shalin, ...
Year 2018
Journal Name REVISTA SAN GREGORIO
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42375 Journal Article

An Ideology of Crossing Nation: From Conflict to Emergence

Authors T. Abirami, C. Alamelu
Year 2018
Journal Name PERTANIKA JOURNAL OF SOCIAL SCIENCE AND HUMANITIES
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42376 Journal Article

The smartphone as a lifeline: an exploration of refugees’ use of mobile communication technologies during their flight

Authors Amanda Alencar, Katerina Kondova, Wannes Ribbens
Year 2018
Journal Name Media, Culture & Society
Citations (WoS) 2
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42377 Journal Article

Virtualizing diaspora: new digital technologies in the emerging transnational space

Authors DAIVI RODIMA‐TAYLOR, WILLIAM W. GRIMES
Year 2018
Journal Name Global Networks
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42378 Journal Article

The securitisation of migration: Its limits and consequences

Authors Krzysztof Jaskulowski
Year 2018
Journal Name International Political Science Review
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42379 Journal Article

Rescaling belonging in “Brexit Britain”: Spatial identities and practices of Polish nationals in Scotland after the U.K. Referendum on European Union membership

Authors Kate Botterill, Jonathan Hancock
Year 2018
Journal Name Population, Space and Place
Citations (WoS) 1
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42380 Journal Article

Bridging the Communication Gap in Multilingual Service Encounters: A Brussels Case Study

Authors Koen Kerremans, Laurent-Philippe De Ryck, Vanessa De Tobel, ...
Year 2018
Journal Name EUROPEAN LEGACY-TOWARD NEW PARADIGMS
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42381 Journal Article

Introduction to Special Section on: Precarity, Illegality and Temporariness: Implications and Consequences of Canadian Migration Management

Authors Amrita Hari, Jamie Chai Yun Liew
Year 2018
Journal Name International Migration
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42382 Journal Article

The making of four ideologies of globalization

Authors Pieter de Wilde
Year 2018
Journal Name European Political Science Review
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42383 Journal Article

Tour-guiding as a pious place-making practice: The case of the Sehitlik Mosque, Berlin

Authors Elisabeth Becker
Year 2018
Journal Name Annals of Tourism Research
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42384 Journal Article

Syrian Refugees as Seasonal Migrant Workers: Re-Construction of Unequal Power Relations in Turkish Agriculture

Authors Deniz Pelek
Year 2018
Journal Name Journal of Refugee Studies
Citations (WoS) 21
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42385 Journal Article

Advancing knowledge on international migration : data and research needs

Authors Philippe FARGUES
Description
From the sheer numbers of migrants to the complex processes that set people on the move and the multiple changes they bring to both origin and destination countries, international migration suffers considerable deficits of knowledge. As international migration connects each country of the world with all the others, addressing knowledge gaps will require international consensus on definitions and methods of data collection. There is a long way to go before this most challenging objective will be reached. The current study describes some of the steps that need to be taken. Defining international migration A proper assessment of international migration data at the world level must be based on a systematic inventory of what exists and what does not in each country. For lack of such an inventory, this report provides an overview assessment of the various criteria used by public administrations to define and produce data on international migration. Documenting international migration Data are generally collected by national administrations to serve their own needs and not those of scientific research or evidence-based policymaking, with the result that data on international migration are too often insufficient and lacking in quality. Policymakers often lack the minimal statistical evidence necessary to make informed decisions, while academics lack the basic data needed for scientific research. This report identifies key issues that should be addressed to improve migration data for policymaking and scientific research. These include: disentangling migrants from travellers and differentiating between short-term mobility and migration; matching entry and exit data; counting emigrants, i.e. absent individuals; counting circular, seasonal and temporary migrants; and measuring irregular migration. These issues often require ad hoc measurement methods such as specialized surveys. Mapping research on international migration Research addresses the causes of international migration, the process of migration itself as well as its consequences; it does so in the countries of origin and destination, as well as in the transnational space spanning origin and destination. This paper outlines 7 priority areas for research on international migration: Determinants of migration in countries of origin; Pull factors in countries of destination; Linkages between countries of origin and destination; Migration stages; Emigrants, as actors of change in countries of origin; The inclusion of migrants and their contribution to development in destination countries; And finally, the global consequences of migration. Conclusions To significantly improve our understanding of international migration, including its multiple determinants, complex processes and diverse impacts, the following challenges need to be addressed: All countries should acknowledge that international migration is defined; by border crossing. Equating immigrants with foreign citizens confuses a geographic notion with a legal one and indirectly serves policies of exclusion; All countries should agree on producing population data by detailed country of birth using the same unified list of world countries; International organizations should make all possible efforts to extend the coverage of migration surveys to all the countries that host sizeable migrant populations in the Global North as well as in the Global South; The scientific community should organize itself at a global level to develop and disseminate methodologies to fill the huge knowledge gaps that are the result of the currently patchy, mostly administrative data.
Year 2018
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42386 Report

Identity, Belonging and Intentions to Leave of First and 1.5 Generation FSU Immigrants in Israel

Authors Karin Amit
Year 2018
Journal Name Social Indicators Research
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42387 Journal Article

Greek Immigration to the United States, 2010-2015: A Descriptive Analysis

Authors Grigoris Argeros
Year 2018
Journal Name Journal of Modern Greek Studies
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42388 Journal Article

Why Curious George Did Not Speak: The Conspicuous Multilingualism of Margret and HA Rey

Authors Yuliya Komska
Year 2018
Journal Name GERMAN STUDIES REVIEW
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42389 Journal Article

Contextual factors and prejudice at the beginning of the migrant influx: The Moroccan case in Seville, Spain

Authors Ricardo Iglesias‐Pascual, Virginia Paloma, Manuel García‐Ramírez
Year 2018
Journal Name Population, Space and Place
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42390 Journal Article

Determinants of county migrant regularization policymaking in the United States: Understanding temporal and spatial realities

Authors M.Anne Visser, Sheryl-Ann Simpson
Year 2018
Journal Name Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space
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42391 Journal Article

Commentary on "The number of undocumented immigrants in the United States: Estimates based on demographic modeling with data from 1990-2016"

Authors R Capps, Jennifer Van Hook, Julia Gelatt, ...
Year 2018
Journal Name PLOS ONE
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42392 Journal Article

Youth and Their Challenge to Promote a Fairer Multicultural Society: a Qualitative Study of African Immigrant Activists

Authors Daniela Marzana, Sara Martinez Damia, Sara Alfieri, ...
Year 2018
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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42394 Journal Article

Punitiveness and Perceptions of Criminality

Authors Michael Costelloe, Madeline Stenger, Christine Arazan
Year 2018
Journal Name Race and Justice
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42395 Journal Article

Refugee Migration and Electoral Outcomes

Authors Christian Dustmann, Kristine Vasiljeva, Anna Piil Damm
Year 2018
Journal Name Review of Economic Studies
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42396 Journal Article

STRATEGIC APPROACH TO THE IMMIGRANTS' PROBLEMS IN EUROPE

Authors Armeania Androniceanu, Oana Vasile
Year 2018
Journal Name Economics, Management and Financial Markets
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42397 Journal Article

"THE POLISH WAY IS A LITTLE DIFFERENT FROM THE BRAZILIAN ONE": MANIFESTATION OS ETHNIC-LINGUISTIC IDENTITIES OF POLES DESCENDANTS IN SOUTH OF PARANA

Authors Silvia Regina Delong, Dorotea Frank Kersch
Year 2018
Journal Name ANTARES-LETRAS E HUMANIDADES
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42398 Journal Article

A Migration Project in Retrospect: The Case of the Ageing Zero Generation in Emirdağ

Authors Christiane Timmerman, Meia Walravens, Joris Michielsen, ...
Year 2018
Journal Name Social Inclusion
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42399 Journal Article

Migrants, Ancestors, and Foreign Investments

Authors Konrad B Burchardi, Thomas Chaney, Tarek A Hassan
Year 2018
Journal Name Review of Economic Studies
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42400 Journal Article
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