Research
Database

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

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Human trafficking in Moldova

Authors Vladimir GANTA
Description
Since Moldova declared its independence in 1992 and people gained the right to travel freely abroad, illegal migration and human trafficking became an important problem for the Government and its international partners. After the war against Russia, in Transnistria (1992) the Government lost control over the most industrialized part of the country and almost all the eastern border. Constant fights between prowestern and pro-russian parties, corruption created an environment where officials could use their positions to make fortunes by protecting organized crime. Poverty and lack of employment opportunities in Moldova made people desperately search for solutions in other countries. In this environment, many desperate people became victims of criminals (often protected by officials) who made fortunes by selling other humans for sex, begging, labour.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
45001 Report

Refugees and displaced persons in Georgia

Authors Mirian TUKHASHVILI
Description
Forced migration is the most pressing problem in terms of the territorial mobility of the Georgian population. Forced migration has varied over time. Mass-scale transfer of the local population by conquerors and forced migration to other countries (Iran, Turkey and Russia) took place in the past. But there was also further organized and disorganized migrations from these countries and individuals sought asylum in Georgia. Of course, we will examine only those flows that currently present a significant problem.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
45002 Report

Information on foreigners deported, expelled and voluntarily repatriated from Belarus

Authors Liudmila SHAKHOTSKA, Anastacia BOBROVA
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
45003 Report

Return and readmission: the case of Armenia

Authors Ruber YEGANYAN
Description
There is, for the last five years, virtually no reliable statistical and research data available in Armenia on emigrants returning to Armenia: much as in the case of other migration processes.The numbers and structure of returning migrants,the reasons and the nature of their return, and information about how well they reintegrate in Armenia are all obscure.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
45004 Report

Human trafficking : Russia

Authors Irina IVAKHNUK, Vladimir IONTSEV
Description
In Russia the problem of human trafficking was acknowledged as a national security issue in the early 2000s, above all, in relation to the threat of terrorism. In March 2004 Russia ratified the UN Convention against Transnational Organized Crime and Palermo Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and Children. In doing so Russia undertook a number of commitments against human trafficking. By that time there were already alarming estimates warning that Central and Eastern Europe, including the former Soviet Union, ranked second in the world in terms of human trafficking after south-east Asia [1] and every year around 175,000 women (1997 estimate) were taken from the region in human trafficking schemes [2]. Russia, according to expert estimates, may account for 20-30% of this flow [3], i.e. at least tens of thousands a year. These estimates do not take into account human trafficking in both women and men within the CIS region, i.e. large-scale flows of migrants illegally transferred from CIS countries to Russia for labor and sexual exploitation.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
45005 Report

Refugees and forced migrants in Azerbaijan : the political context

Authors Sergey RUMYANSEV
Description
In the context of a conflict discourse, the factor of the existence of refugees and IDPs in the country becomes an important political resource. The authorities and the opposition actively use this factor in political fights and to strengthen their own positions. As a certain homogenous group, refugees and IDPS do not exist outside of the political discourse. Over the past 20 years, the refugee population has become strongly differentiated. A full resolution of issues related to this category of persons, and their de-politicization, is possible only in a situation of a lesser relevance of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
45006 Report

Forced migration in Belarus

Authors Liudmila SHAKHOTSKA, Anastacia BOBROVA
Description
There is limited information on the number of forced migrants from Belarus. Key information can be found in the statistical publications of the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). Belarusian office of this organization gives the following explanation: “countries are guided by the principle of confidentiality of information submitted by an applicant. Public bodies of the asylum country have no right to transfer or provide any personal information about an application to his/her state of citizenship” (Delovaya Gazeta, 2013). According to UNHCR, the total number of persons from Belarus applying for refugee status, asylum or complementary protection was 6839 in 2011 and 6194 in 2012 (UNHCR, 2012; UNHCR, 2013). European countries (the Netherlands, Sweden, and Switzerland) and the USA were their countries of preference. Some estimates are available at the websites of Eurostat and US National Security Agency. According to the data for 1998-2007, 16255 citizens of Belarus sought asylum in EU member states (Eurostat Statistics). The main recipient countries were Germany, the United Kingdom, Sweden, France, the Czech Republic and Austria. The US National Security Agency also posts data on Belarusian refugees who arrived in the US territory. According to its estimates, there were 2844 of them 2003-2012 (Department of Homeland Security: 2012)
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
45007 Report

Return, readmission and reintegration : the legal framework in Georgia

Authors Gaga GABRICHIDZE
Description
Georgian legislation in the field of migration is generally very liberal. This kind of approach finds its expression in the provisions on return from Georgia too. Though the legislation imposes an obligation on foreign citizens to leave the territory of Georgia before the expiry of the term of legal stay in Georgia, they get an additional 10 days within which they may leave Georgia without any legal consequences. Even after the 10 days term foreigners are allowed to leave Georgia voluntarily with the payment of a fine. Legislation establishes only two levels of fine: overstay for the period of 10 days up to 3 months and overstaying for over 3 months. The fact there is this option and the low fine in place (180 GEL/360 GEL is equal to 82 Eur/164 Eur) undermines the deterrent effect of these provisions. Besides, as to the consequences there are no difference between expulsion and forced expulsion. In both cases, a foreign citizen who has been expelled from Georgia will be denied a visa and a residence permit and refused entry to Georgia for one year. This provision does not facilitate voluntary departure within the term set by the Ministry of Justice.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
45008 Report

Relationship policy with diaspora : Georgia

Authors Natia CHELIDZE
Description
Over 200 Georgian Diaspora organizations are operating abroad today. The majority of them take part in public and political life of the recipient country. At the same time, they are actively engaged in promoting and developing the Georgian culture, including the establishment of centers of culture, organization of Georgian language courses and creative associations, etc. Following the establishment of the Governmental Commission for migration issues1 in the fall of 2010, the institutional competencies of the state bodies in the area of migration have broadened. The improvement of the legislative base and the elaboration of relevant policy have followed. The national strategy for migration drafted by the Commission was approved in March 2013. Maintaining the relationship with the Diaspora has become an essential part of the Georgian migration policy.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
45009 Report

Readmission, return and reintegration of migrants in Ukraine : socio-political context

Authors Ekateryna IVASCHENKO-STADNIK
Description
The ambivalent socio-political processes that have accompanied the formulation of the Ukrainianposition on the readmission of various migrant groups from the EU, CIS and other countries havedetermined a high risk of the formation of a marginalized readmission space33 in its territory. Despitethe slow but steady progress made in the discussion on and development of a multilateral legal framework in this field, the institutional and implementation gap between what is currently in place inUkraine and internationally accepted standards for readmission,return and reintegration remainsessential. The high levels of xenophobia among the population of Ukraine in relation to certain ethnic groups,35 heated by the radical nationalist movements gaining popularity, have created geopoliticaland societal conditions for the diversion of public perception in a direction unfavorable to the future ofthe Ukrainian state and society. The current actualization of the strategic goals of the ‘EasternPartnership’ could be an incentiefor Ukraine to harmonize its political and legal systems, as well asto mobilize public resources for the implementation of comprehensive reforms related to migration.36
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
45010 Report

Preventing human trafficking : the Republic of Moldova

Authors Valeriu MOSNEAGA
Description
The integration of the Republic of Moldova into international migration processes was accompanied by the development of human trafficking. Moldova, moreover, witnessed multiple forms of trafficking: for the purposes of labour exploitation, for sexual exploitation, trafficking of women and children for exploitation (for begging), and trafficking of human organs for sale.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
45011 Report

Legal regulation of combat against human trafficking in the Russian Federation

Authors Vadim VOINICOV
Description
Human trafficking is a social phenomenon characterized by high public danger. Individual states and international community develop a set of legal and organizational measures to combat it. For instance, in accordance with the UN Protocol on prevention and suppression of human trafficking, measures aimed at combat against human trafficking include criminalization of this deed; protection of crime victims; assistance in repatriation; encouragement of international cooperation etc. The legal system regulating the fight against human trafficking in the Russian Federation comprises various legal measures; however most of them are of general nature, i.e. focused not only on prevention of human trafficking, but also on combat against other illegal acts. The only special measure is criminalization of deeds associated with human trafficking and use of slave labor. Therefore, analysis of the Russian national legislation indicates that the main emphasis in the fight against human trafficking is made on the use of criminal law mechanisms.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
45012 Report

Readmission, return and reintegration in Georgia

Authors Mirian TUKHASHVILI
Description
The issue of regulating migratory processes has drawn increasing attention in Georgia over the last few years. Entities are being established within different ministries and normative acts for regulating this sphere are being published. Recipient countries have to deport illegal immigrants back to their countries of origin. However, there are now attempts to make their return to the homeland, including, inter alia, their deportation, as humane as possible complying with internationally recognized human rights principles.
Year 2013
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45013 Report

Not Just the Facts: Adjudicator Bias and Decisions of the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (2006–2011)

Authors Innessa Colaiacovo
Year 2013
Journal Name Journal on Migration and Human Security
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45016 Journal Article

Group Conflict Theory in a Longitudinal Perspective: Analyzing the Dynamic Side of Ethnic Competition

Authors Bram Lancee, Sergi Pardos-Prado
Year 2013
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 29
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
45017 Journal Article

Looking down or Looking Up: Status and Subjective Well-Being among Asian and Latino Immigrants in the United States

Authors Julia Gelatt
Year 2013
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 22
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
45018 Journal Article

Smuggled versus Not Smuggled across the Czech Border

Authors Dušan Drbohlav, D Drbohlav, Premek Stych, ...
Year 2013
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 2
45019 Journal Article

Book Review: Illicit Flirtations: Labor, Migration, and Sex Trafficking in Tokyo

Authors Emily Mitchell-Eaton
Year 2013
Journal Name International Migration Review
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45020 Journal Article

When the Border is “Everywhere”: State-level Variation in Migration Control and Changing Settlement Patterns of the Unauthorized Immigrant Population in the United States

Authors Arjen Leerkes, Mark Leach, James D. Bachmeier, ...
Year 2013
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 14
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45021 Journal Article

“The Paper that you Have in Your Hand is My Freedom”: Migrant Domestic Work and the Sponsorship (Kafala) System in Lebanon

Authors Amrita Pande
Year 2013
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 22
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45022 Journal Article

Unauthorized Immigration to the United States: Annual Estimates and Components of Change, by State, 1990 to 2010

Authors Robert Warren, Warren, John Robert Warren
Year 2013
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 44
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45023 Journal Article

Traffickers, Brokers, Employment Agents, and Social Networks: The Regulation of Intermediaries in the Migration of Ethiopian Domestic Workers to the Middle East

Authors Bina Fernandez
Year 2013
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 15
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45024 Journal Article

Needed but Not Liked – The Impact of Labor Market Policies on Natives’ Opinions about Immigrants

Authors Romana Careja, HJ Andress, Hans-Jürgen Andreß
Year 2013
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 6
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45025 Journal Article

Rainfall Patterns and U.S. Migration from Rural Mexico

Authors Lori M. Hunter, LM Hunter, Fernando Riosmena, ...
Year 2013
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 48
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45026 Journal Article

“The Politics of the HealthCare Reform Debate: Public Support of Including Undocumented Immigrants and Their Children in Reform Efforts in the U.S.”

Authors Gabriel R. Sanchez, Shannon Sanchez-Youngman
Year 2013
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 1
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45027 Journal Article

Where and when was Europe? : Europeanness and its relationship migration

Authors Kiran Klaus PATEL
Year 2013
Journal Name NATIONAL IDENTITIES
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45030 Journal Article

Migration, Development, Gender and the ‘Black Box’ of Remittances: Comparative Findings from Albania and Ecuador

Authors Russell King, Diana Mata-Codesal, Julie Vullnetari
Year 2013
Journal Name Comparative Migration Studies
45035 Journal Article

Naturalization Dynamics in Immigrant Families

Authors Alex Street
Year 2013
Journal Name Comparative Migration Studies
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45036 Journal Article

Venue-Shopping and the Role of Non-governmental Organisations in the Development of the European Union Asylum Policy

Authors Christian Kaunert, Sarah Léonard, Ulrike Hoffmann
Year 2013
Journal Name Comparative Migration Studies
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45037 Journal Article

Un regard vers le Sud

Year 2013
45048 Book

Food Practices and Transnational Identities

Authors Gwen E. Chapman, Brenda L. Beagan
Year 2013
Journal Name Food, Culture & Society
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45074 Journal Article

Why does child trafficking policy need to be reformed? : the moral economy of children’s movement in Benin and Ethiopia

Authors Jo BOYDEN, Neil P. HOWARD
Year 2013
Journal Name Children's Geographies
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45075 Journal Article

Russia and Kazakhstan in Eurasian migration system : development trends, socio-economic consequences of migration and approaches to regulation

Authors Sergey RYAZANTSEV, Oleg KORNEEV
Description
Russia, Kazakhstan and other Central Asian countries formed a strong migration system that is characterized by large-scale labor migration. It is not only economic development of donor countries that depends on labor migration. The same is true for recipient countries (Russia and Kazakhstan), where considerable share of GDP is generated by foreigners. This dependency will keep rising in the context of demographic crisis and shrinking labor resources.Evolution of migration policies of Russia and Kazakhstan, as well as of other Central Asian countries is not coordinated. Although Kazakhstan partially copies many aspects of migration regulation in Russia, their policies are not conceptually linked. As a result there is a need for stronger multilateral and bilateral cooperation between various Central Asian countries, Kazakhstan and Russia.
Year 2013
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45076 Report

Indian migration to Belgium

Authors Sara COSEMANS, Idesbald GODDEERIS
Description
This paper discusses the Indian presence in Belgium. First, it introduces the reader to the different groups by providing a historical overview of their presence in the country. Afterwards, it discusses the diaspora in a more quantitative way and presents the available statistics of recent years. Finally, it focuses on issues such as their associations and religious life.
Year 2013
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45077 Report

Migrant domestic and care workers in circularity

Authors Sabrina MARCHETTI, Anna TRIANDAFYLLIDOU
Year 2013
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45078 Book

A cultural narrative on the twice migrated Hindustanis of the Netherlands

Authors Limanungla LONGKUMER
Description
This study undertakes a socio- cultural analysis to examine how the twice migrated Hindustani identify with both the societies, that is, ancestral India and the Netherlands as home. The paper aims to facilitate a disaggregated understanding of how the PIOs perceive their ‘Indian identity’, being part of the Indian Diaspora and their level of engagement with India. More specifically, the paper deals with the present generation of twice migrated Hindustanis who were born in the Netherlands to one (or both) parents who belong to the first generation Surinamese Hindustanis either born or migrated from Suriname (Indian origin).
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
45080 Report

From traders to workers : Indian immigration in Spain

Authors Ana LÓPEZ-SALA
Description
The Indian community currently residing in Spain is the result of various differentiated migration currents in two very different stages of migration. The first, which began at the end of the 19th Century and reached its peak in the 1970s, was sparked by investment opportunities in the Canary Islands and the Spanish enclaves in northern Africa for the commercial activities of the Sindhis settled in other areas of the Maghreb and the Mediterranean. Over the decades this flow has created a small, distinctive community of common Indian descent that includes very diverse national and legal affiliations, and also an involvement in business activities. This community is highly visible in the business sectors of the locations in which it settled and enjoys a good reputation and strong institutional relations, despite maintaining weak social ties with the host society. At the end of the 1980s a new flow began to arrive from northern India, especially Punjab and Haryana producing a growing internal diversification of the Indians community in Spain, a traditionally homogenous group. In addition to religious and geographic diversity, there are also differences in migration plans and expectations and legal status, caused by factors such as date of arrival, migration expectations and opportunity to enter the Spanish labor market.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
45081 Report

'Sweet jail' : the Indian community in Greece

Authors Nadina CHRISTOPOULOU
Description
Seen within the context of the rising Asian migration to Europe, the Indian community in Greece dates back to the early seventies. Contrary to most other migrant communities however, it is not concentrated in the capital Athens, but is mostly dispersed in various areas around Greece. Although the current crisis has slightly decreased its population, this predominantly male community finds employment in agriculture and manufacturing. The vast majority are Sikhs mainly from Punjab, who maintain tight links with each other through their various associations and gurudwaras, while at the same time they are in close contact with their homeland as well as with their diaspora networks worldwide.
Year 2013
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45082 Report

Indian diversity in the UK : an overview of a complex and varied population

Authors Leonard WILLIAMS
Description
This country report of Indian migration the UK broaches this broad and wide ranging topic through a variety of perspectives. To begin with, the historical migration of Indians to Britain is treated in order to understand the long term trends which set in motion the later waves of migration to the country we have seen since WWII. A demographic and socio-economic portrait of the UK’s Indian population is then built using a variety of statistical and qualitative sources, while the internal complexities of this group are continuously highlighted in order to avoid a simplification of the differences within the British-Indian community. Immigration to the UK has undoubtedly been influenced by over a century of fluctuating immigration policies and law, thus to truly understand the context of India-UK migration, the legal framework is explored in the following section which is then followed by chapters on the way Indian migrants have been treated by the British media and a summary of the most important religious centres and cultural associations they have produced. A report of this size could never be exhaustive, but through these various lenses the reader will gain a general picture of the ways Indians have migrated to Britain and how they have got by there.
Year 2013
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45083 Report

Isolation, uncertainty and change: Indian immigrant women and the family in northern Italy

Authors Meenakshi THAPAN
Description
Based on fieldwork with immigrants of Indian origin and with Italian doctors, social workers, teachers, and employers around Fidenza and Parma in northern Italy, this paper seeks to understand the social and cultural dilemmas of being an immigrant in Europe. The dilemma of isolation and uncertainty is most starkly understood by migrant women in their fraught experience of being marginalised and excluded in both the domestic sphere as well as in the social worlds they inhabit. This paper seeks to decipher the multiplicity of experience in bounded urban spaces as well as in rural farms in the region.
Year 2013
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45084 Report

Comparative study on integration policies in CARIM-East countries

Authors Kristine KRUMA
Description
The study focuses on a comparative analysis of the integration policies and practices in the CARIM-East countries: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova and Russia. It is conducted within the framework of an EU funded project “Creating an Observatory of Migration East of Europe” (CARIM-East project). This comparative study is based on the individual country reports, which were drafted by the national rapporteurs of the CARIM-East project. The methodology follows the legal standards and policy objectives adopted by the EU on immigrant integration in various sources. It has been taken into account that integration is a relatively recent phenomenon for the EU and for CARIM-East countries.
Year 2013
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45085 Report

Facilitating migration between India and the EU : a policy perspective

Authors Pralok GUPTA
Description
Global migration to the European Union (EU) has expanded significantly since the 1990s and is being considered as an important tool to resolve domestic labour shortages in many of its Member States. Migration from India to the EU has so far not been significant except in the case of a few Member States and a few sectors. Nonetheless, there is a growing trend of Indians emigrating to the EU and the governments on both sides have also started looking at facilitating migration between the two regions. The emigration policies of the Indian Government and the policy orientation of the EU governments towards Indian migrants are important not only in deciding the quantum of Indian emigrants going to the EU but also their choice of destination country within the EU. Policy facilitation is also important for preventing exploitation of Indian emigrants both before and after leaving India.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
45086 Report

Socio-economic problems of returning migrants' reintegration in Georgia

Authors Mirian TUKHASHVILI
Description
The present work of research reveals that despite an economic revival, the labour market infrastructure in Georgia and the cost of labour force do not contribute to any reduction in labour emigration. Therefore, great emphasis is placed on the facilitation of return migration back to the homeland and the socio-economic efficiency of this process. The results of the sampling survey of return migrants in the capital of Georgia and two large industrial cities – Kutaisi and Rustavi – show that social and economic reintegration is shot through with contradictions, which in turn determine the low efficiency of reintegration. Significant numbers of return migrants are unemployed or work in discriminatory labour conditions, which do not correspond to their education and work experience. A significant share of these will be forced to migrate in the near future. Many subjective factors prevent return migrants from implementing their business projects. They accumulate savings, which they brought for this purpose, and target these savings. Research has established that it is necessary to enforce state support for return migrants by introducing institutional changes. This should increase the efficiency of investment activity on the basis of migrants’ remittances and this should create new jobs.
Year 2013
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45087 Report

Chinese investment strategies and migration : does diaspora matter? : a Case study on Germany

Authors Margot SCHÜLLER, Yun SCHÜLER-ZHOU
Description
This paper studies the role that Chinese migrants play in the development of investment relations between China and Germany. We assume that Chinese migrants can help to overcome the psychic distance that exists between the two countries, a distance that esults in high information costs for Chinese companies with regard to investment opportunities, government regulations and/or the trustworthiness of potential business partners in Germany. We also look at Chinese diaspora networks assuming that they can educe transactions costs and can have foreign direct investment (FDI)-creating effects.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
45088 Report

Migration costs and determinants of bilateral migration flows

Authors Dmytro VIKHRIV
Description
In this paper I research economic, non-economic and the institutional determinants of bilateral migration flows into OECD countries. My contribution to the growing literature is two-fold. First, I explicitly account for the panel structure of migration costs information acquisition, physical costs of the move and social exclusion). Second, building upon Beine et al. (2011b), I proceed with the analysis of determinants of bilateral migration flows disaggregated by educational attainments in the panel data environment. The preliminary results show that the defined cost variables are significant in explaining the volume and composition of the flow of migrants, the result not being sensitive to the model specification. Network effects promote negative self-selection and the quality of migrants positively correlates, while the physical distance, existence of a common language and colonial links between countries are insignificant in explaining the educational composition of migrants. I further conclude that the restrictive and skill selective immigration policies of the major destination countries bias the conventional role of the economic push and pull factors.
Year 2013
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45089 Report

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

Authors Rupa CHANDA, Sriparna GHOCH
Description
The recognition of diaspora contributions towards their home country through remittances, investments and networks has facilitated a shift in attitude and thinking regarding migration, from brain drain to “brain bank”, “brain gain”, “brain trust” and “brain circulation”. This shift in thinking is also evident in India in recognition of the manifold contributions being made by the Indian diaspora to the home country. This paper examines the historical and socio-economic characteristics of one important Indian diaspora community, the Punjabis in the UK and discusses the latter’s contributions to India and to its home state of Punjab.
Year 2013
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45090 Report

India-EU migration : the social security rights of Indian nationals moving to and within the European Union

Authors A. P. (Anne Pieter) VAN DER MEI
Description
With the intensification of the economic relationships between India and the European Union (EU) labour mobility from India to the EU is bound to increase in the forthcoming years. This mobility raises numerous questions not only as regards immigration and labour market access, but also in relation to social social security. This paper focuses on the social security status of Indian nationals moving to EU Member States for employment reasons. It presents and analyses, first, the EU’s internal social security coordination regime with a view to establishing the social security status of third country nationals, and Indian workers in particular, moving between EU Member States and, second, the external coordination applicable to Indian nationals, moving from India to individual EU Member States (Belgium and the Netherlands) for employment reasons.
Year 2013
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45091 Report

Publishing strategies of young, highly mobile academics : the question of language in the European context

Authors Laurie ANDERSON
Year 2013
Journal Name Language Policy
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45092 Journal Article

THE COLORS OF SOCIAL CITIZENSHIP

Authors Alice O'Connor
Year 2013
Journal Name Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race
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45093 Journal Article

Vamos a aguantar: Observations on how Arizona’s SB 1070 has affected one community

Authors Seline Szkupinski Quiroga
Year 2013
Journal Name Latino Studies
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45094 Journal Article

What Part of "Illegal" Don't You Understand? The Social Consequences of Criminalizing Unauthorized Mexican Migrants in the United States

Authors Daniel Martinez, Jeremy Slack
Year 2013
Journal Name Social & Legal Studies
45095 Journal Article

Intolerance Toward Immigrants in Switzerland: Diminished Threat Through Social Contacts?

Authors Markus Freitag, Carolin Rapp
Year 2013
Journal Name Swiss Political Science Review
Citations (WoS) 31
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45096 Journal Article

From 1727 Bedford Street to 1839 Wylie Avenue: Home in August Wilson's Pittsburgh Cycle

Authors Anissa Janine Wardi
Year 2013
Journal Name UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO QUARTERLY
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45097 Journal Article

How to Overcome Deadlock in EU Immigration Politics

Authors Christof Roos
Year 2013
Journal Name International Migration
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45099 Journal Article

Working for Legality: Employment and Migrant Regularization in Europe

Authors Sebastien Chauvin, Blanca Garces-Mascarenas, Albert Kraler
Year 2013
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
45100 Journal Article
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