Research
Database

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

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POPULATIONS AND DEMOGRAPHIC TRENDS OF EUROPEAN COUNTRIES (1980-2010)

Authors Alexandre Adveev, Patrick Festy, Tatiana Eremenko, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Population
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46201 Journal Article

Immigration without Inclusion: Non-Nationals in Nation-Building in the Gulf States

Authors P Fargues
Year 2011
Journal Name Asian and Pacific Migration Journal
Citations (WoS) 23
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46202 Journal Article

Negotiating Boundaries in the City: Migration, Ethnicity, and Gender in Britain

Authors Olivier Esteves, Philippe Vervaecke
Year 2011
Journal Name Patterns of Prejudice
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46203 Journal Article

Immigration Trends and Policy Changes in Taiwan

Authors Hong-Zen Wang
Year 2011
Journal Name Asian and Pacific Migration Journal
Citations (WoS) 7
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46204 Journal Article

Perceived importance of contact revisited: Anticipated consequences of intergroup contact for the ingroup as predictors of the explicit and implicit ethnic attitudes of youth

Authors Tuuli A. Mahonen, Jasinskaja-Lahti, K Liebkind, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Group Processes & Intergroup Relations
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46205 Journal Article

Cultural discordance and the polarization of identities

Authors Tuuli A. Mahonen, Jasinskaja-Lahti, K Liebkind, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Group Processes & Intergroup Relations
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46206 Journal Article

Pilot of a Diabetes Primary Prevention Program in a Hard-to-Reach, Low-Income, Immigrant Hispanic Population

Authors Ann V. Millard, Ann V. Millard, Margaret A. Graham, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
Citations (WoS) 16
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46207 Journal Article

Health-Related Quality of Life, Subjective Health Complaints, Psychological Distress and Coping in Pakistani Immigrant Women With and Without the Metabolic Syndrome

Authors Victoria T. Hjellset, Victoria Telle Hjellset, Camilla M. Ihlebæk, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
Citations (WoS) 8
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46208 Journal Article

Binge Drinking Among Male Mexican Immigrants in Rural North Carolina

Authors Sharon Loury, Elizabeth Jesse, Qiang Wu
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
Citations (WoS) 12
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46209 Journal Article

Health Literacy, Language, and Ethnicity-Related Factors in Newcomer Asthma Patients to Canada: A Qualitative Study

Authors Iraj Poureslami, Irving Rootman, Mary M. Doyle-Waters, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
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46210 Journal Article

A Pilot Binational Study of Health Behaviors and Immigration

Authors Tamara E. Hennessy-Burt, Maria T. Stoecklin-Marois, Fernando Meneses-Gonzalez, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
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46211 Journal Article

Segregation, entrepreneurship and work values: the case of France

Authors Claudia Senik, Thierry Verdier
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
Citations (WoS) 6
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46212 Journal Article

Anti-Muslim Attitudes in The Netherlands: Tests of Contradictory Hypotheses Derived from Ethnic Competition Theory and Intergroup Contact Theory

Authors Michael Savelkoul, Peer Scheepers, L Hagendoorn, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name European Sociological Review
Citations (WoS) 99
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46213 Journal Article

Measuring Health Literacy Among Immigrants with a Phonetic Primary Language: A Case of Korean American Women

Authors Hae-Ra Han, Jiyun Kim, Miyong T. Kim, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
Citations (WoS) 23
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46214 Journal Article

Cancer Incidence Among Canadian Immigrants, 1980–1998: Results from a National Cohort Study

Authors Sarah McDermott, Marie DesMeules, Roxanne Lewis, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
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46215 Journal Article

The Use of Complementary and Alternative Medicine Among Refugees: A Systematic Review

Authors Sabrina MacDuff, Michael A. Grodin, Paula Gardiner
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
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46216 Journal Article

Fostering the Intercultural Dimensions of Internationalisation in Higher Education: Metaphors and Challenges in the Japanese Context

Authors Craig Whitsed, Simone Volet
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Studies in International Education
Citations (WoS) 19
46217 Journal Article

The savings behavior of temporary and permanent migrants in Germany

Authors Thomas K. Bauer, Mathias G. Sinning
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
Citations (WoS) 19
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46218 Journal Article

Knowledge of Cardiovascular Risk Factors in West African Refugee Women Living in Western Australia

Authors Peter D. Drummond, Ayse Mizan, Amy Burgoyne, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
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46219 Journal Article

Explanatory Models of Health and Disease Among South Asian Immigrants in Chicago

Authors Manasi A. Tirodkar, David W. Baker, Gregory T. Makoul, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
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46220 Journal Article

Stepping stones for the unemployed: the effect of temporary jobs on the duration until (regular) work

Authors Marloes de Graaf-Zijl, Gerard J. van den Berg, Arjan Heyma
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
Citations (WoS) 54
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46221 Journal Article

Should the US have locked heaven’s door?

Authors Xavier Chojnicki, Frédéric Docquier, Lionel Ragot
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
Citations (WoS) 16
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46222 Journal Article

When nature rebels: international migration, climate change, and inequality

Authors Luca Marchiori, Ingmar Schumacher
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
Citations (WoS) 23
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46223 Journal Article

Educational institutions and the integration of migrants

Authors Nicole Schneeweis
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
Citations (WoS) 42
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46224 Journal Article

Risk Factors for Obesity and High Blood Pressure in Chinese American Children: Maternal Acculturation and Children’s Food Choices

Authors Jyu-Lin Chen, Sandra Weiss, Melvin B. Heyman, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
Citations (WoS) 21
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46225 Journal Article

USA immigration policy, source-country social programs, and the skill composition of legal USA immigration

Authors Michael J. Greenwood, John M. McDowell
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
Citations (WoS) 4
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46226 Journal Article

Diabetes Prevalence by Length of Residence Among US Immigrants

Authors Reena Oza-Frank, Rob Stephenson, K. M. Venkat Narayan
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
Citations (WoS) 40
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46227 Journal Article

“Please extinguish all cigarettes”: The effects of acculturation and gender on smoking attitudes and smoking prevalence of Chinese and Russian immigrants

Authors Nan M. Sussman, NM Sussman, Nhan Truong, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name International Journal of Intercultural Relations
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46228 Journal Article

Ethnic Diversity and Social Cohesion in Germany

Principal investigator Bram Lancee (Principal Investigator)
Description
"After more than half a century of mass immigration to Europe, the consequences of increasing ethnic diversity in Europe are far from clear. More specifically, one of the prominent questions on today’s research agenda is how ethnic diversity affects social cohesion and attitudes towards immigrants. This project aims to contribute to answering this question. Recently, ample attention has been paid to the relation between ethnic diversity and social cohesion in the neighbourhood. Putnam (2007), for example, claims that in the short run, immigration and ethnic diversity tend to reduce solidarity and social capital. Several scholars report that ethnic diversity affects social cohesion (Lancee & Dronkers 2011; Letki 2008; Tolsma, Van der Meer & Gesthuizen 2009; Putnam 2007; Gijsberts, van der Meer & Dagevos 2011; Alesina & La Ferrara 2000)and attitudes towards immigrants (Schlueter & Scheepers 2010; Pettigrew & Tropp 2006). To date, little longitudinal research has been done on the relation between ethnic diversity and social cohesion in Germany. The objective of this project is to carry out longitudinal analyses with the German Socio-Economic Panel Survey (GSOEP) and neighbourhood data on the zip code level. In short, I will examine the relation between neighbourhood diversity and indicators of social cohesion and attitudes toward immigration."
Year 2011
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46229 Project

Constructions around body within recent Polish migration to the United Kingdom

Year 2011
Journal Name Studia Migracyjne - Przegląd Polonijny
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46230 Journal Article

Migrants' Social Networks and Weak Ties: Accessing Resources and Constructing Relationships Post-Migration

Authors Louise Ryan, L Ryan
Year 2011
Journal Name The Sociological Review
Citations (WoS) 126
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46231 Journal Article

Polska jako kraj emigracji i imigracji

Year 2011
Book Title Mobility and migrations in the era of transformation, methodological challenges
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46232 Book Chapter

Women, Gender, and Diasporic Lives: Labor, Community, and Identity in Greek Migrations

Authors Evangelia Kindinger
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
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46233 Journal Article

Sәdät, Migration, and Refugeeism as Portrayed in Ethiopian Song Lyrics

Authors Solomon Addis Getahun
Year 2011
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
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46234 Journal Article

Defining cosmopolitan sociability in a transnational age. An introduction

Authors Nina Glick Schiller, NG Schiller, Tsypylma Darieva, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Ethnic and Racial Studies
Citations (WoS) 101
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46235 Journal Article

From policy to practice in the Multilingual Apple: bilingual education in New York City

Authors Kate Menken
Year 2011
Journal Name International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism
Citations (WoS) 7
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46236 Journal Article

Acting Australian and being Chinese: Integration of ethnic Chinese business people

Authors Shuang Liu, S Liu
Year 2011
Journal Name International Journal of Intercultural Relations
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46237 Journal Article

Migration as Protest? Negotiating Gender, Class, and Ethnicity in Urban Bolivia

Authors Tanja Bastia
Year 2011
Journal Name Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space
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46238 Journal Article

Transnational lifestyles as a new form of cosmopolitan social identification? Latin American women in German urban spaces

Authors Sandra Gruner-Domic
Year 2011
Journal Name Ethnic and Racial Studies
Citations (WoS) 8
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46239 Journal Article

Economic returns to speaking ‘standard Mandarin’ among migrants in China's urban labour market

Authors Wenshu Gao, Russell Smyth
Year 2011
Journal Name Economics of Education Review
Citations (WoS) 26
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46240 Journal Article

Transnational family networks: an analysis of care-giving arrangements within migrant families

Description
This project aims to further develop theoretical and empirical knowledge on the interrelationship between geographic distance, care practices and family relations. The specific question this study addresses is the extent to which transnational adult migrants are able to exchange care and support with their geographically distant parents, and the specific role that intrafamilial dynamics play in the exchange of care between adult migrants, their siblings and their parents. This will be done by analyzing the experiences of Dominican migrants in Belgium and their geographically distant kin. The study will focus on three types of care-giving arrangements: long distance care-giving (provision of support from a distance) ; aged migration (permanent or temporary migration of dependent elderly parents in order to be cared for by their child(ren) in the host country) ; and migrants repatriation (migrants moving back home to care for their parents). Particular attention will be paid to gendered dynamics and power relations within the families, as well as other structural factors that influence decisions regarding each type of care-giving arrangement. Fieldwork will include semi-structured interviews and participant observation with Dominican migrants residing in Belgium, their parents (father and/or mother) and up to 2 key siblings.
Year 2011
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46241 Project

Towards multilingual education: Basque educational research from an international perspective (bilingual education and bilingualism), by Cenoz, J.

Authors Gessica De Angelis
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Language, Identity & Education
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46242 Journal Article

Religion and religious education: comparing and contrasting pupils’ and teachers’ views in an English school

Authors Joyce Miller, Ursula McKenna
Year 2011
Journal Name British Journal of Religious Education
Citations (WoS) 9
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46243 Journal Article

Immigration, ethnicity and voluntary association membership in Canada: Individual and contextual effects

Authors Robert Andersen, Scott Milligan
Year 2011
Journal Name Research in Social Stratification and Mobility
Citations (WoS) 8
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46244 Journal Article

The typification of Hispanics as criminals and support for punitive crime control policies

Authors Kelly Welch, Allison Ann Payne, Ted Chiricos, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Social Science Research
Citations (WoS) 49
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46245 Journal Article

Multiple imaginations of the state: understanding a mobile conflict about justice and accountability from the perspective of Assyrian–Syriac communities

Authors Zerrin Özlem Biner, Zerrin Oezlem Biner
Year 2011
Journal Name Citizenship Studies
Citations (WoS) 3
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46246 Journal Article

African language publishing for children in South Africa: challenges for translators

Authors Viv Edwards, Jacob Marriote Ngwaru
Year 2011
Journal Name International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism
Citations (WoS) 8
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46247 Journal Article

Spousal reunification among recent immigrants in Spain: Links with undocumented migration and the labour market

Year 2011
Book Title Gender, generations and the family in international migration
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46248 Book Chapter

European Immigration Policies Outside the Union: An Impact Analysis on Migration Dynamics in North African Transit Areas

Authors Lorenzo Gabrielli
Year 2011
Book Title The Challenge of the Threshold Border Closures and Migration Movements in Africa
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46250 Book Chapter

Who Needs Migrant Workers? The Potential Role an Independent Expert Commission in Future EU Labour Immigration Policy

Authors Martin Ruhs
Year 2011
Book Title Moving Beyond Demographics: Perspectives for a Common European Migration Policy
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46252 Book Chapter

The Political Sociology of Cosmopolitanism and Communitarianism

Principal investigator Ruud Koopmans (Principal Investigator), Wolfgang Merkel (Principal Investigator), Michael Zürn (Principal Investigator)
Description
"Theoretical background and objectives Across many advanced democracies – albeit to varying extents and in different forms – we observe a growing distance between the positions taken by political elites, and those of mass publics and electorates. This elite-mass divide has crystallised in a limited number of issue areas, which are often related to globalisation and denationalisation, in their political, socio-cultural, and economic forms. It shows that the denationalisation of markets, governance structures, and migration flows entails not only an aggregate growth in opportunities and wealth, but also a reconfiguration of power, wealth, and status between different classes of actors within national political systems as well as between supranational and national institutions. In the national political arena, various globalisation processes led to tensions in many countries reflected in the rise of populist movements and parties on the left and right. On the international level, inter­national institutions are not any more seen as just functional agencies to foster coordination between governments, but increasingly as sites of political authority and arenas of political contestation. Against this background, we ask: (1) To which extent do these different conflicts follow a similar logic and can be described as a ""new political cleavage""? (2) Whether the positions of the two sides of such a cleavage are already embedded in encompassing normative foundations which we may label as cosmopolitanism and communitarianism? (3) To what extent does the appropriate handling of such a conflict require a significant change in the landscape of political institutions? This research project feeds into three themes with far-reaching implications for understanding new social conflicts in globalising societies: (1) Part of the success of the modern nation-state was its ability to successfully institutionalise social and political cleavages. To the extent that new political cleavages challenge the role of political institutions of the nation-state as such and that some players use political arenas outside of the traditional nation-state realm for their purposes, the classical patterns of legitimacy and decision-making in national democracies get undermined. (2) International institutions, such as the WTO or environmental regimes, were successful in acting as, more or less, technical agencies under firm control of the executives of the member states. To the extent that these international institutions exercise authority and thus become an arena of political contestation, their ""technical"" foundation of success gets challenged as well. This mechanism applies in general, albeit in different forms, to the EU as well. (3) Migration and integration have been seen for a long time as issues of social relevance, but only with limited impact on the core of national political institutions. To the extent that this cultural component of the new cleavage becomes dominant, migration and integration will move closer to the centre of political competition and will eventually change norms, rules, and procedures within the national political systems. Research design, data and methodology There are three empirical modules in this project: In Module 1 we will investigate the following aspects: ""objective"" representation deficits, the subjective perception of them, the emergence of populist parties and the consequences for political conflict as well as democracy's capacity to reproduce their legitimacy. Moreover, it will extend the cross-country comparison from Europe to Latin America, where a major reaction to globalisation and its socio-economic consequences is not exclusive against immigration, but rather inclusive towards the marginalised underclass of their countries. In Module 2 we address the question why elites tend to have and act according to a more cosmopolitan world view than their citizens/electorates. While it seems plausible to assume that modest cosmopolitan positions are more widespread among political elites than among citizens, it is less obvious that especially economic elites are also widely committed to more ambitious cosmopolitan positions such as the constitutionalisation of global governance. On the one hand, the project seeks to explain why political elites are more cosmopolitan than citizens/electorates but also what the determinants of the emergence of different forms of cosmopolitanism among different elites are and how it clashes with different variants of communitarian inclinations of many ""normal"" citizens. In Module 3 we undertake an inquiry into the question about the relative distribution of (different types of) cosmopolitanism and communitarianism across different political arenas (supranational, international, transnational, national and regional). We assume that cosmopo­litan positions dominate the political arenas beyond the nation-state and use them mainly for purposes of agenda-setting and compliance with international norms within nation-states. In this way, they can strengthen their position in national political arenas without being necessarily in the majority position. At the same time, communitarian political forces are put into the defence and appear parochial. We will develop a distinct type of political sociology covering cosmopolitanism and communi­tarianism along the three mentioned paths of enquiry. The first project component focuses mainly, but not exclusively, on the first research module and will rely primarily on secondary analysis of population surveys and party programme data. We can therefore take a large-N approach and investigate a wide range of countries. Components two and three of the research project require the creation of primary data. We plan to apply three types of analysis in order to investigate the issues mentioned in research modules two and three: (1) A content and frame analysis of pro-cosmopolitan and pro-communitarian opinion articles in elite newspapers and weeklies as well as in opinion articles in tabloid newspapers. (2) An online questionnaire among members of the political elite (local, regional, national politicians/party functionaries and European/international functionaries as well as NGO representatives) measuring cosmopolita­nism and communitarianism items that are also available in existing representative population surveys, allowing a comparison between elite and mass opinions. (3) An analysis of the major focus of political activity when pursuing the cosmopolitan agenda. The hypothesis to be tested here is that cosmopolitans and communitarians act on different playing fields thus making the direct political confrontation impossible."
Year 2011
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46253 Project

La hora de la integración. Anuario de Inmigración en España 2011

Description
Dirigida por Eliseo Aja, Joaquín Arango y Josep Oliver Alonso, el Anuario de Inmigración en España, Edición 2012, presenta un monográfico dedicado a la integración de la inmigración, analizando tanto las políticas como los factores que inciden en el proceso de integración del colectivo inmigrante a la sociedad de acogida. La publicación analiza las principales características y tendencias de la inmigración y las políticas de inmigración en España, a través de un conjunto de estudios realizados desde las perspectivas sociológica, económica y jurídica.
Year 2011
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46255 Report

Possibilities and realities of return migration: perspectives on integration, exclusion and withdrawal

Principal investigator Jørgen Carling (Principal Investigator), Marta Bivand Erdal (Project Member), Rojan Ezzati (Project Member), Marta Bolognani (Project Member), Ceri Oeppen (Project Member), Erlend Paasche (Project Member), Silje Vatne Pettersen (Project Member), Tove Heggli Sagmo (Project Member), Jennifer Wu (Project Member)
Description
REMIG is guided by four research questions: 1. How do immigrants in various situations reflect upon and decide about return migration? 2. How does the possibility of return interact with A) integration in the country of residence and B) transnational relationships? 3. How can we understand and explain the patterns of actual return among immigrants? 4. How is return migration experienced by return migrants and the communities to which they return?
Year 2011
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46256 Project

Alters- und geschlechtsspezifische Migrationsbewegungen in den neuen Bundesländern

Principal investigator Stephan Kühntopf (Principal Investigator)
Description
"Die Abwanderung aus Ostdeutschland dominierte nach der Wiedervereinigung lange das gesamtdeutsche Binnenwanderungsgeschehen und die Bevölkerungsentwicklung. Weit verbreitet waren in den neuen Ländern auch Suburbanisierungsprozesse, Umzüge von den Städten in das Umland. Die Ost-West-Migration hat mittlerweile an Bedeutung verloren, stattdessen steht die kleinräumige Migration innerhalb der ostdeutschen Länder zunehmend im Vordergrund. Dabei zeigen sich regional große Gegensätze, insbesondere zwischen ländlichen Räumen und Hochschulstandorten. Aufgabe des Projektes war es, die Migration innerhalb der ostdeutschen Bundesländer und zwischen Ost- und Westdeutschland näher zu analysieren. Damit sollten alters- und geschlechtsspezifische Charakteristika sowie ihr Einfluss auf die regionale Bevölkerungsentwicklung und -struktur der ostdeutschen Regionen ermittelt werden. Ein besonderes Augenmerk lag dabei auf der Abwanderung junger Frauen."
Year 2011
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46257 Project

Inmigración, contacto de lenguasy planificación social.

Year 2011
Journal Name Revista Internacional de Estudios Migratorios (RIEM)
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46258 Journal Article

Impact Analysis of Integration and Migration Policy Measures on the Integration of Third Country Nationals in Europe

Principal investigator Martin Hofmann (Project Team Member), David Reichel (Project Team Member)
Description
Against the background of intense discussions on the integration of third country nationals, integration policies and integration measures became increasingly important within general migration policies. How the responsible authorities evaluate the effectiveness of their policies has not been researched so far and a systematic comparison of methods used for impact analysis of integration measures and experiences made by the authorities is missing. This study investigates the perspectives and experiences of authorities and experts dealing with integration of immigrants in Austria and in selected EU member states (including Denmark, Germany, France, the Netherlands, Sweden and the United Kingdom). Aim of the study and objectives The goals of the study are (1) to prepare a comparative analysis of methods used for evaluating the effectiveness of integration policy measures in selected member states of the EU, (2) to assess the possibilities and limitations of impact analysis of integration policy measures and (3) to formulate a concrete proposal for the systematic impact analysis of such measures. The main research questions of the study are: • How is the effectiveness of integration policy measures evaluated in EU Member States? Which methods are employed for impact analysis? • What are the main results of those evaluations? Are there plans to adapt or further develop the methods of impact analysis? • To what extent and in which way do the results of evaluations of integration policy measures contribute to the development of integration policies? • What is the contribution of academic research to the development of impact analysis? In how far is it possible to better integrate results of research studies into policy development? Outcomes • Summary report • 7 country reports
Year 2011
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46260 Project

Emigracja zarobkowa i powrót do kraju w doświadczeniach współczesnych Polaków. Studium socjopedagogiczne

Principal investigator Magdalena Piorunek ()
Description
Przez wiele lat Polska była krajem emigracji, krajem wysyłającym do innych krajów Europy Zachodniej. Kiedy Polska stała się członkiem Unii Europejskiej tylko trzy kraje otworzyły od razu swoje rynki pracy, były to Anglia, Irlandia i Szwecja. W 2006 roku polscy obywatele mogli podejmować legalne zatrudnienie w kolejnych krajach- Finlandii, Grecji, Włoszech, Portugalii czy Hiszpanii. Badania podjęte w niniejszej rozprawie dotyczą młodych Polaków pracujących za granicą. Jednym z problemów poruszonych w pracy jest próba odpowiedzi na pytanie czy wyjazd emigracyjny posłużył poprawie ich życia, Co znaczą dla nich emigracyjne doświadczenia? Czy są szczęśliwi i jak często odwiedzają rodzinę pozostającą w Polsce? Jaki rodzaj pracy wykonują na emigracji? I czy wykonywana przez nich praca jest zgodna z uzyskanym przez młodych emigrantów doświadczeniem? Kolejnym zagadnieniem poruszanym w pracy jest aspekt drenażu mózgów w odniesieniu do współczesnego zjawiska „cyrkulacji mózgów” i ich marnotrawstwa. Młodzi Polacy relacjonują w badanych, iż emigracyjny wyjazd spowodował, iż zminimalizowaniu uległy ich finansowe problemy, iż wzrosło ich poczucie sprawstwa. Przyjęta koncepcja pracy powoduje, iż jej struktura składa się z trzech części. W pierwszej (rozdział I i II) zawarto teoretyczne konstrukty opisywanego zjawiska. W drugiej (rozdział III) przedstawione zostały założenia metodologiczne projektu badawczego, w trzeciej zaś części (rozdział IV i V) - uzyskane drogą weryfikacji empirycznych wnioski i ich podsumowanie. Pierwszy rozdział przybliżyć ma, oprócz charakterystycznych dla XXI wieku kwestii związanych z globalizacją, także stricte teoretyczny - terminologiczny aspekt migracji międzynarodowych. Świat doby globalizacji oraz jego relacji wobec migracji międzynarodowych, został ukazany w kontekście społecznym, kulturowym i gospodarczym. Poruszono także kwestię transnacjonalizmu w migracyjnym wymiarze. Zważywszy na fakt, iż przedmiotem zainteresowania niniejszej dysertacji są migracje poakcesyjne, sporo miejsca poświecono także regulacjom związanym z polityką rynku pracy w Unii Europejskiej. Dokonano następnie przeglądu i charakterystyki ruchów migracyjnych, a także teorii migracji i jej faz. W kolejnej części rozważań, uwagę skoncentrowano na specyfice polskiej emigracji zagranicznej oraz migracji powrotnej, ukazując jej aspekt historyczny oraz dynamikę zmian. Całość wzbogacona została komentarzami płynącymi z najnowszych badań, które opisują trendy charakteryzujące współczesną poakcesyjna emigracje z Polski. Wybrane aspekty socjopedagogicznego dyskursu nad emigracją poakcesyjną uczyniono kolejnym elementem rozdziału. Zwrócono w nim uwagę na zjawisko deprecjacji kwalifikacji- ich marnotrawstwa, (jednakże wbrew potocznym opiniom) w kontekście swoistej życiowej zaradności, będącej wyrazem determinacji mającej na celu poprawę losu jednostek, bez względu na charakter podjętego przez nie zatrudnienia. W tej części podjęto się także rozważań na temat istoty, alarmistycznie opisywanego drenażu mózgów, w kontekście poakcesyjnej emigracji i tego, czy stanowi dla Polski i jej obywateli realne zagrożenie. Ponowoczesna migracyjna sieć wsparcia i jej nowa jakość w postaci blogosfery- jako „natychmiastowego panaceum na wszelkie migracyjne dolegliwości” to kolejne z omówionych zagadnieniem. Na koniec rozważań teoretycznych pochylono się nad kwestią i modelami polskich migracji powrotnych, ich konsekwencjami i wynikającymi z nich zagrożeniami. Trzeci rozdział posłużył przedstawieniu podstaw metodologicznych, przeprowadzonych metodą sondażu diagnostycznego (z wykorzystaniem złożonego z trzech części kwestionariusza ankiety) badań, których wyniki i analiza zaprezentowane zostały w następnych częściach pracy – w rozdziale czwartym i piątym - prezentując społeczno – demograficzny profil poakcesyjnego migranta. Część ta obejmuje analizę głównych motywów wyjazdu i powrotu, dynamikę biograficznych doświadczeń polskich migrantów, z uwzględnieniem takich aspektów ludzkiej biografii jak: -doświadczenia zawodowe, -struktura oraz funkcjonowanie rodzin migracyjnych, (z perspektywy emigranta) -struktura racji działania dotycząca różnych aspektów decyzyjnych w biografii migrantów, -asocjacje towarzyszące Polakom powracającym z emigracji zarobkowej, -trudności adaptacyjne podczas emigracji i po powrocie z niej, -struktura sieci społecznego wsparcia i pomocy społecznej w trzech perspektywach czasowych, w których funkcjonowali i funkcjonują emigranci. Ponadto istotnym elementem omawianej części jest ocena migracyjnych doświadczeń, dokonanych przez samych migrantów, będąca próbą bilansu migracyjnego epizodu i jego roli w życiu młodych reemigrantów. Rozdział IV przedstawia zatem wyniki, uzyskanych drogą empirycznych weryfikacji, badań. Ostatni rozdział niniejszej pracy przybliża podsumowanie wniosków będące finalnym efektem badawczych dociekań.
Year 2011
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46261 Project

Altern und Generationenbeziehungen in Familien mit Migrationshintergrund - Ein Vergleich russischsprachiger Migranten in Israel und Niedersachsen

Principal investigator Claudia Vogel (Principal Investigator ), Sharon Shiovitz-Ezra (Principal Investigator )
Description
Familien stehen künftig vor neuen Herausforderungen: Aufgrund des demogra-phischen Wandels stellt sich auch für die Familien russischsprachiger Migran-ten die Frage, wer soll bzw. wer kann künftig die Unterstützung und Pflege der Älteren übernehmen. Am Beispiel von Aussiedlern und jüdischen Migranten aus der ehemaligen Sowjetunion, die zusammen mit fast 3 Millionen Personen eine der größten Migrantengruppen in Deutschland bilden, sollen familiale Genera-tionenbeziehungen komparativ untersucht und spezifische Bedarfe der Älteren analysiert werden. In Israel stellt die Gruppe der russischsprachigen Migranten sogar über 20 Prozent der Bevölkerung, dort liegen Bereits wegweisende Be-funde gerontologischer Studien vor. Aus Auswertungen des Survey of Health, Aging and Retirement in Europe (SHARE) zu Netzwerken und familialem Austausch in Israel ist bekannt, dass ältere Migranten finanziell häufiger von ihren Familien unterstützt werden müssen, während sie ihren erwachsenen Kindern seltener helfen können. Für Deutschland sollen 500 Telephoninterviews mit Zuwanderern aus der ehemali-gen Sowjetunion durchgeführt werden, um Daten zu Generationenbeziehungen der russischsprachigen Migranten zu erheben. Aus dem Ländervergleich lassen sich Erkenntnisse darüber gewinnen, ob die Unterstützungsnetzwerke der rus-sischsprachigen Migranten in Deutschland ebenfalls familienzentrierter sind und ob künftig möglicherweise eine Überlastung der familialen Generationen-beziehungen droht.
Year 2011
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46262 Project

The role of ethnic religious community institutions in the intergenerational transmission of Korean among immigrant students in Montreal

Authors Seong Man Park
Year 2011
Journal Name Language, Culture and Curriculum
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46263 Journal Article

Nobody said it would be easy: ethnolinguistic group challenges to bilingual and multicultural education in New York City

Authors Tatyana Kleyn, Sharon Adelman Reyes
Year 2011
Journal Name International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism
Citations (WoS) 5
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46265 Journal Article

Crossing Language and Identity as a Critical Border Ethnographer in Southern California

Authors Ana María Relaño Pastor, Ana M. Relano Pastor
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Language, Identity & Education
Citations (WoS) 3
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46266 Journal Article

A preliminary assessment of Buddhism’s contextualisation to the English RE classroom

Authors Phra Nicholas Thanissaro
Year 2011
Journal Name British Journal of Religious Education
Citations (WoS) 7
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46267 Journal Article

Anti-imperial metropolis: political networks of Africans, Asians and Latin Americans in interwar Paris

Description
This project proposes an examination of the political networks forged by Asians, Africans and Latin Americans in Paris between the two World Wars. Its principal goal is to arrive at a better understanding of how these networks contributed to the discursive construction of evolving cultural identities and anti-imperial nationalisms among the foreigners and colonial subjects residing in Paris. By analysing various “groups” of people, with a particular focus on anti-imperialist intellectuals, the project is situated at the intersection of migration history, colonial history and intellectual history, seeking to bring together strands of scholarship that so far have too often been compartmentalized into subfields. In doing so, this research builds on a valuable body of historical scholarship about the imperial/colonial nature of the France of the Third Republic. However, by looking specifically at the interactions between groups that so far have usually been treated in isolation from one another, the projects seeks to go significantly beyond the existing historiography. It thereby aims at further complicating straightforward dichotomies between metropolitan and imperial/colonial history, as has been demanded by postcolonial scholars over the last decades.
Year 2011
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46268 Project

Metaphorical constructions of hypertension among three ethnic groups in the Netherlands

Authors John Schuster, E. J. A. J. Beune, Karien Stronks, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Ethnicity & Health
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46269 Journal Article

Migration and health: a study of effects of early life experiences and current socio-economic situation on mortality of immigrants in Sweden

Authors Martin Klinthall, M Lindstrom, Martin Klinthäll, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name Ethnicity & Health
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46270 Journal Article

The role of questions about migration in UK censuses: A simple matter of counting, or a means of exerting power?

Authors Oliver Duke-Williams
Year 2011
Journal Name Geoforum
Citations (WoS) 2
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46271 Journal Article

Beyond National Models? Managing Immigration and Integration in Systems of Multi-level Governance – a transatlantic comparison

Description
The research project addresses the formation of immigration and integration policies in systems of multi-level governance from a comparative trans-Atlantic perspective. It investigates under what conditions and through what political processes initiatives in this critical field of the EU’s international competitiveness are successfully launched. Built on this insight and informed by the trans-Atlantic comparative perspective, the project explores successful models of managing migration and integration (best practices) and how they are linked to the political opportunities generated in systems of multi-level governance (including the increasingly important process of European integration). Based on a prior study of two Canadian provinces, two regions in Europe will be studied as in-depth case studies (North Rhine-Westphalia and Emilia-Romagna). They are located in Germany and Italy, two EU member states with significant recent changes to their immigration regimes and political systems that grant considerable political autonomy to the regional level. The Marie Curie Fellowship will be housed at Hamburg University’s Center for Global Governance (CGG), a centre of excellence in international, multi-disciplinary research on the transformation of governance in a globalizing world. The Marie Curie fellowship is designed in a way to allow for effective and sustainable forms of research collaboration and knowledge mobilization between Europe and Canada. A series of high-profile publications, presentations at European universities, joint workshops, transnational research projects, graduate students collaboration and fora of exchange between migration specialists at European and Canadian universities through pre-existing transatlantic networks are key initiatives to develop and nurture such mutually beneficial forms of transatlantic cooperation.
Year 2011
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46272 Project

Labor migration, ethnic kinship, and the conundrum of citizenship in Turkey

Authors Ayşe Parla, Ayse Parla
Year 2011
Journal Name Citizenship Studies
Citations (WoS) 6
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46273 Journal Article

Educating New York's bilingual children: constructing a future from the past

Authors Ofelia García, Ofelia Garcia
Year 2011
Journal Name International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism
Citations (WoS) 32
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46274 Journal Article

Information, Decision, and Migration: Jewish Emigration from Eastern Europe in the Early Twentieth Century

Authors Gur Alroey
Year 2011
Journal Name Immigrants & Minorities
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46275 Journal Article

Corrigendum to “Moderators of acculturative stress in Pakistani immigrants: The role of personal and social resources” [Int. J. Intercult. Relat. 35 (2011) 523–533]

Authors Tahira Jibeen, Ruhi Khalid
Year 2011
Journal Name International Journal of Intercultural Relations
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46276 Journal Article

The Dark Side of Globalized Migration: The Rise and Peak of Criminal Networks—The Case of Central Americans in Mexico

Authors Rodolfo Casillas, Rodolfo Casillas
Year 2011
Journal Name Globalizations
Citations (WoS) 8
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46277 Journal Article

The Language Acquisition of Male Immigrants in a Multilingual Destination: Turks and Moroccans in Belgium

Authors Frank van Tubergen, Menno Wierenga
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
Citations (WoS) 12
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46279 Journal Article

Migration, Ethnonationalist Destinations and Social Divisions: Non-Jewish Immigrants in Israel

Authors David Bartram
Year 2011
Journal Name Ethnopolitics
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46280 Journal Article

Circular migration and home care? The case of Romanian and Ukrainian home care workers in Northern Italy

Description
In its recent documentation on migration issues, the European Commission has been promoting “circularity” as an effective and efficient way to manage labour migration from both within and outside the EU. But how does the employment of circular migrants exactly work and what are its implications for Europe's societal challenges such as ageing and immigration? To answer to these questions, the present study focuses on Eastern European circular migrants and the elderly care sector. In particular, it draws attention to Romanian and Ukrainian care workers within the two Italian provinces of Verona and Reggio Emilia with the aim to assess the actual convenience of “circularity” for the overall improvement of home care provision. On this ground, it pursues three interrelated research objectives: 1) the impact of “circularity” on the employment relationship between care workers and their employers; 2) the way circular migration affects the organisation of home care from the welfare state’s point of view; and finally 3) the conditions which allow “circularity” to take place in an efficient and profitable way. These issues are investigated in a comparative and diachronic way, looking at the differences between Ukrainian and Romanian migratory patterns during the period of 2006-2011. A further layer of comparison is added by the differences between Verona and Reggio Emilia, two towns with relevant dissimilarities concerning political traditions and public administrations. Finally, this project contributes to the scholarly debate on gender, care and migration by introducing “care units” (i.e. the ensemble of subjects involved in the provision of care to an individual care receiver) as an innovative object of analysis. In order to assess the impact of “circularity” on these “care units”, a combination of quantitative and qualitative research methods is foreseen for extended fieldwork in the two Italian provinces.
Year 2011
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46281 Project

From the Right of Asylum to Migration Management: The Legal–Political Construction of ‘a Refugee’ in the Post-Communist Czech Republic

Authors Alice Szczepanikova
Year 2011
Journal Name Europe-Asia Studies
Citations (WoS) 4
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46282 Journal Article

Formation and persistence of oppositional identities

Authors Alberto Bisin, T Verdier, Y Zenou, ...
Year 2011
Journal Name European Economic Review
Citations (WoS) 29
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46283 Journal Article

Making migration work. A study of the developmental impact of return migration in Romania and Republic of Moldova

Principal investigator Romana Careja (Principal Investigator ), Hans-Jürgen Andreß (Principal Investigator )
Description
In spite of the recognized relevance of migrants' resources for development, especially local development, there is relatively little research on how the Central and Eastern European governments capitalize on the emigrants' resources and how emigrants themselves respond to the sending countries' policies. Thepresent project aims to fill this gap in hwo steps. The pre-study focuses on policies and collects basic information on emigrants. It will result into a comprehensive description of the policy field targeting the labour emigrants and will provide the information needed for preparing the main study, a field study focusing on emigrants.The pre-study is guided by two questions: 1. Do the sending countries encourage entrepreneurial behaviours of emigrants? and 2. Does the state itself mobilize the emigrants' resources towards projects with developmental effects at local, regional and national level? The answer to these questions is sought for through an in-depth survey and analysis of the policies and programmes which influence the way migrants use the resources acquired while working abroad and of the programmes through which the states attract emigrants' resources in developmental projects in Romania and Moldova. The main study will collect quantitative and qualitative information from the emigrants themselves, and will investigate whether and how the emigrants react to the policies put forward by the sending countries.
Year 2011
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46284 Project

Staatsbürgerschaft oder Migrationshintergrund? / Citizenship or Immigrant Background?

Authors Cornelia Gresch, Cornelia Kristen
Year 2011
Journal Name Zeitschrift für Soziologie
46285 Journal Article

Migration, nursing, institutional discrimination and emotional/affective labour: ethnicity and labour stratification in the UK National Health Service

Authors Adina Batnitzky, Linda McDowell
Year 2011
Journal Name Social & Cultural Geography
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46286 Journal Article

Violence Expressed - a comparative study of testimonies of violence among Kurdish activists

Description
Most people living in conflict areas have experienced armed incidents, poverty, displacement, as well as witnessed torture and killings. However, only certain forms of suffering are publicly acknowledged and may lead to prestige and a strengthened social position within a community, or grant political asylum in the country of refuge. Expressions of suffering and pain are therefore seldom the mere expressions of personal suffering as they are often integrated into a standardized discourse of victimhood and heroism. Taking the two decades of conflict between the Kurdish Workers Party PKK and the Turkish State as point of departure, this projects elaborates on the effects such standardization or silencing of violent experience have on the processing of violent experience – for the individual and the social community at large. Grounded in the anthropology of violence, and based on a two years comparative research in Turkey and Denmark, this multisited and interdisciplinary research aims at understanding how expressions of violence are determined and influenced by social processes such as nationalist discourses, ongoing conflict and migration. Suffering that has no place within a public discourse, is silenced, the body often being the last resort to express the unspeakable. How then do individuals cope with their pain that has been politicized, publicized and collectivized; what happens, when suffering is regarded illegitime, or a sign for weakness and shame? An understanding of these mechanisms is crucial to better understand the violent dynamics in post-conflict societies, as well as to assess difficulties in integration of traumatized refugees. Insight in how violence is understood, coped with and expressed is thus an essential part of assessing and preventing violence in the first place.
Year 2011
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46287 Project

Participatory methods and critical models: Arts, migration and diaspora

Authors Maggie O’Neill
Year 2011
Journal Name Crossings: Journal of Migration & Culture
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46288 Journal Article

Cosmopolitan charismatics? Transnational ways of belonging and cosmopolitan moments in the religious practice of New Mission Churches

Authors Kristine Krause
Year 2011
Journal Name Ethnic and Racial Studies
Citations (WoS) 16
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46289 Journal Article

European Museums in an Age of Migrations

Description
“Migration” is a key word that indicates a complex condition of contemporary society, in which mobility doesn’t only pertain to people, but to objects, information and knowledge too. Hence, the “age of migrations” that MeLa adopts as its framework reflects a set of global processes that do not only involve the transnationalization of labor, but also the refashioning of the cultural and political spheres under the impact of today’s global mobility. In this context, the main objective of MeLa is to define innovative museum practices that reflect the challenges of the contemporary processes of globalization, mobility and migration. To succeed in its intentions MeLa will devise strategies for museums to enhance the European cultural heritage, both tangible and intangible, and turn it into an effective agent of shared forms of citizenship and identity building. At the core of the MeLa research, in fact, lies the idea that shared values, memories and identities can drive a change in European museums and turn them into crucial venues for the contemporary age of migrations. This process implies a redefinition of the museums’ ways of organizing and representing their collections in order to encompass a complex variety of voices and subjects. This strategy brings out the concepts of multiplicity (of voices, points of view, theories, etc.) and hybridity (of forms and physical expressions in architecture and exhibition settings) that operate in contemporary culture, and exploits them to create truly democratic forms of European citizenship. On an operative level, MeLa is characterized by an innovative research methodology that entails the use of both traditional and experimental research tools, like brainstorming sessions, “research by art” and “research by design” activities. The project involves nine European partners with different yet complementary fields of expertise: five universities, two museums, a research institute and a small company—they will all participate in the research activities with a collaborative approach. Public events and art exhibitions will be organized to provide stimuli to the research activities and share their process findings, bringing together experts from different museums sectors, scholars and artists. Beside resulting in traditional critical reflections, the theories, methodologies and proposals developed by the research will be tested in experimental pilot projects of virtual of real exhibitions. The research findings will finally coalesce into scientific publications and policy briefs for the use of the European Union and the museum community. (“Mela” is the Sanskrit word for “gathering” or “meeting”; today it is referred to intercultural encounters, intended as opportunities for community building).
Year 2011
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46290 Project

Ethnic and civic dealings with newcomers: naturalization policies and practices in twenty-six immigration countries

Authors Edward A. Koning
Year 2011
Journal Name Ethnic and Racial Studies
Citations (WoS) 25
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46291 Journal Article

Global Migration, Ethnicity and Britishness

Authors Tariq Modood, John Salt
Year 2011
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46292 Book

Reframing migrant mothers as citizens

Authors Umut Erel
Year 2011
Journal Name Citizenship Studies
Citations (WoS) 42
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46293 Journal Article

Struktura imigracji i emigracji zarobkowej na Opolszczyźnie. Wnioski dla regionalnego rynku pracy

Year 2011
Book Title Labor market. Occupations needed in the Opole region
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46294 Book Chapter

Migracje polskich profesjonalistów i profesjonalistek: wyjazdy i powroty

Year 2011
Journal Name Studia Migracyjne - Przegląd Polonijny
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46295 Journal Article

Making migration work. A study of the developmental impact of return migration in Romania and Republic of Moldova

Principal investigator Romana Careja (Principal Investigator ), Hans-Jürgen Andreß (Principal Investigator )
Description
In spite of the recognized relevance of migrants' resources for development, especially local development, there is relatively little research on how the Central and Eastern European governments capitalize on the emigrants' resources and how emigrants themselves respond to the sending countries' policies. Thepresent project aims to fill this gap in hwo steps. The pre-study focuses on policies and collects basic information on emigrants. It will result into a comprehensive description of the policy field targeting the labour emigrants and will provide the information needed for preparing the main study, a field study focusing on emigrants.The pre-study is guided by two questions: 1. Do the sending countries encourage entrepreneurial behaviours of emigrants? and 2. Does the state itself mobilize the emigrants' resources towards projects with developmental effects at local, regional and national level? The answer to these questions is sought for through an in-depth survey and analysis of the policies and programmes which influence the way migrants use the resources acquired while working abroad and of the programmes through which the states attract emigrants' resources in developmental projects in Romania and Moldova. The main study will collect quantitative and qualitative information from the emigrants themselves, and will investigate whether and how the emigrants react to the policies put forward by the sending countries.
Year 2011
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46297 Project

Integration policies across the Atlantic: How far behind is Europe, how far ahead

Authors Thomas Huddleston
Year 2011
Book Title International Perspectives: Integration and Inclusion
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46298 Book Chapter

"Repatriation is not for everyone" the life and livelihoods of former refugees in Liberia

Authors Naohiko Omata, UNHCR. Policy Development and Evaluation Service
Year 2011
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46299 Report

WHY SWISS-GERMANS DISLIKE GERMANS

Authors Marc Helbling
Year 2011
Journal Name European Societies
Citations (WoS) 34
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46300 Journal Article
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