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relevant knowledge in the field of migration.

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A content analysis of media reports on the Indian community in Finland

Authors Liina MUSTONEN
Description
The report analyses the media representation of Indian community resident in Finland. The four major Finnish newspapers were analysed during the period between 2012 and 2015. In comparison with many other European countries with larger migrant communities, the Indian community in Finland is small. Although specific reporting on ethnic communities is limited in the Finnish press, interesting insights on the media representation of the Indian community can be drawn from the data. The research concludes that reports on business relations and Finnish companies' operations in India, mostly concerning Nokia's failures in India, are often portrayed in a negative light. India is considered as a difficult business environment and culturalist explanations dominate over others. At the same time the reporting recognizes the opportunities that India's new rising market can offer to Finnish companies. In turn, residents with Indian origin in Finland are portrayed as hard-working and important part of the economy in Finland. Indian culture understood as art is also seen as an enriching addition to the Finnish culture. However, occasional notions in the Finnish press point to the idea of a 'Finn' as a somewhat closed category : a migrant becomes Finn, or resembles a Finn instead of 'Finnishness' becoming more inclusive. Similarly the press sometimes gives an essentialized representation of gender roles among the Indian community in Finland without giving a voice to the immigrant community that is being essentialized.
Year 2015
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43502 Report

Consequences of Turkish return migration from Western Europe

Authors Filiz Kunuroglu, Kutlay Yagmur, Sjaak Kroon, ...
Year 2015
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INTERCULTURAL RELATIONS
43503 Journal Article

Japanese Saris: Dress, Globalisation and Multiple Migrants

Authors Amy Jane Barnes, Malika Kraamer
Year 2015
Journal Name TEXTILE HISTORY
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43504 Journal Article

From Intermarriage to Conjugal Mixedness: Theoretical Considerations Illustrated by Empirical Data in France

Authors Beate Collet
Year 2015
Journal Name The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science
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43505 Journal Article

The sensitivity analysis of population projections

Authors Hal Caswell, Nora Sanchez Gassen
Year 2015
Journal Name Demographic Research
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43508 Journal Article

“Gone to work to America”: Irish step-migration through south Wales in the 1860s and 1870s

Authors David Morris
Year 2015
Journal Name Immigrants & Minorities
43513 Journal Article

The Artist as A Healer: A Glimpse of Satendra Nandan's writing as a Healer

Authors Manpreet Kaur, Prashneel Ravisan Goundar
Year 2015
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HUMANITIES AND CULTURAL STUDIES
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43515 Journal Article

Cultural legacies and electoral performance of ethnic minority parties in post‐communist Europe

Authors Adam Bilinski
Year 2015
Journal Name NATIONS AND NATIONALISM
43517 Journal Article

Introduction to the Special Issue: Social Work and Migration in Europe: A Dialogue Across Boundaries

Authors Paolo Boccagni, Erica Righard
Year 2015
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies
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43518 Journal Article

Migrant support measures from and employment and skills perspective (MISMES) : Armenia

Authors Sona KALANTARYAN
Description
Armenia became independent as a result of the Soviet Union’s collapse in 1991, accompanied by a number of severe economic and political crises. As with many other former Soviet republics, it was exposed to numerous socio-economic problems related to the decline in industry and the fundamental structural shifts in the economy during the transition period in the post-Soviet era. Moreover, the country faced additional difficulties as a result of a devastating earthquake and the economic blockade due to ethnic conflicts in the region. From 1990 until 2005 it is estimated that between 700,000 to 1,300,000 Armenians left their homeland and settled abroad. Unlike the emigration in the pre-transition period, when migration decisions were well thought out, migration during the transition period was an immediate response to rapidly deteriorating socio-economic and political realities. Only a minority of Armenian migrants choose European countries as a destination, while the absolute majority go to Russia. This is most probably due to the existing barriers and the absence of mechanisms facilitating migration from Armenia to Europe rather than the unattractiveness of these destinations.
Year 2015
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43519 Report

Mobility Strategies of Eastern European Immigrants in Spain during the Great Recession

Authors Rafael Viruela
Year 2015
Journal Name REVISTA DE CERCETARE SI INTERVENTIE SOCIALA
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43521 Journal Article

The Mexican Dream? The effect of return migrants on hometown development

Authors Benjamin James Waddell, Matias Fontenla
Year 2015
Journal Name The Social Science Journal
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43523 Journal Article

Observations on the Language of First Generation Bulgarian Immigrants to Canada

Authors Irena Vassileva, Diana Yankova
Year 2015
Journal Name International Journal of Canadian Studies
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43524 Journal Article

The usual suspect: worker migration and law enforcement in mid-nineteenth-century Anatolia

Authors Omri Paz
Year 2015
Journal Name CONTINUITY AND CHANGE
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43530 Journal Article

Immigrant–native fertility differentials: The Afghans in Iran

Authors Mohammad Jalal Abbasi-Shavazi, Rasoul Sadeghi, Hossein Mahmoudian, ...
Year 2015
Journal Name ASIAN AND PACIFIC MIGRATION JOURNAL
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43531 Journal Article

Demography, migration, and the labour market in the UAE

Authors Françoise DE BEL-AIR
Description
The objective of the paper is to draw a sketch of UAE’s population and migration dynamics, using the scarce data available from the federal and emirate-level statistical bureaus. In 2010, expatriates in the UAE were estimated to number 7,316,073 persons, twenty times the 1975’s figure of 356,343. Foreign nationals thus made up 88.5 per cent of the country’s total population; most were believed to come from Asia and especially from India. In the employed population, foreign nationals accounted for an even larger share (96 per cent of the Dubai’s employed population in 2011). Non-Emiratis comprised 40 per cent of the UAE’s public sector’s workforce in 2013, but as much as 99.5 per cent of those employed in the private sector. Unlike in other GCC states, a quarter of working expatriates were in managerial posts, employed across all activities’ spectrum. Expatriates’ demographic expansion mounted during the 2000s, a period of spectacular economic growth fuelled by soaring oil prices. Since 2008’s financial downturn, however, the economy recovered and the hiring of foreign workers has resumed, stimulated by large-scale projects such as Dubai’s Expo 2020. Nonetheless, reforms in immigration policies are now undertaken, fuelled by security concerns and pressures from human rights’ protection bodies. The reality of some expatriates’ settlement is also witnessed in numbers (expatriate children aged 0-14 outnumbered Emirati children already in 2005), while mixed marriages are acknowledged in policies: some naturalisations of children of Emirati mothers have been performed since 2011.
Year 2015
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43533 Report

Migration and Social Cohesion: Appraising the Resilience of Place in London

Authors Mary J Hickman, Nicola Mai
Year 2015
Journal Name Population, Space and Place
Citations (WoS) 5
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43534 Journal Article

Immigration Detention Centres between Migratory and Social Control: An Internal Polymorphic Border

Authors Sabina Barone
Year 2015
Journal Name Revista de Dialectología y Tradiciones Populares
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43536 Journal Article

The stigmatized tourist

Authors Omar Moufakkir
Year 2015
Journal Name Annals of Tourism Research
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43537 Journal Article

Structural and normative conditions for interethnic friendships in multiethnic classrooms

Authors Maja K. Schachner, Alaina Brenick, Peter Noack, ...
Year 2015
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INTERCULTURAL RELATIONS
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43539 Journal Article

Migration and Refuge in the Mediterranean, Beyond Borders

Authors Liliana Suarez-Navaz
Year 2015
Journal Name Revista de Dialectología y Tradiciones Populares
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43540 Journal Article

Historical Heritage in Contemporary Polish Law Relating to Foreigners

Authors Barbara Mikołajczyk
Year 2015
Journal Name Immigrants & Minorities
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43541 Journal Article

A reappraisal of the Hirschman 'exit, voice and loyalty' scheme to interpret immigrants’ political participation in their origin countries

Authors Lorenzo GABRIELLI, Ricard ZAPATA-BARRERO
Description
In this article, we apply Hirschman’s well-known distinction between voice, exit, and loyalty as an interpretative framework for looking at the political participation of immigrants in their origin countries and at their connections with state and non-state actors. Hirschman articulated these three options as mutually exclusive, but in our reappraisal of this scheme we consider these options overlapping and simultaneous. We can then distinguish immigrants’ political actions as constituting a specific combination of these three options. Having already exercised their right to move, immigrants can steer their political activities towards the origin country, following two different options: “voice” or “loyalty”. An exit may lead to the transnationalisation/internationalisation of the voice option or otherwise, to political activities inspired by loyalty towards the origin state. We will also argue that these options are in the hands of immigrants, but can also be promoted by origin states and civil society actors, who may oppose each other on some points. The State of origin’s interest is in maintaining their emigrants’ loyalty option, in spite of the fact that they have used an exit option, or at least searching for a political containment of their citizen abroad. However, civil society groups at origin can try to develop the voice option, through the activities of emigrants, despite (lesser or stronger) opposition from state actors. Finally, we will introduce the assumption that immigrants’ political actions towards their country of origin are related to the interpretation of their exit reasons. When migration is perceived as a consequence of a political situation, the result is a voice option channelling protest jointly with origin societies. On the contrary, when the exit is perceived as more of an economic issue, immigrants maintain stronger links with the origin State and loyalty towards its institutions.
Year 2015
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43544 Report

Stress and Personality Development Among US-Immigrating Youth

Authors Yesenia Merino
Year 2015
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
43545 Journal Article

Demography, migration, and the labour market in Bahrain

Authors Françoise DE BEL-AIR
Description
Mid-2013, estimates of Bahrain s population stood at 1,253,191 persons, of whom 638,361 (51 per cent) were foreign nationals. Most were from Asia (85 per cent) and especially from India (half of all foreign residents). Eighty per cent of expatriates are employed. They account for 77 per cent of the employed population and 81 per cent of the private sector s workforce. Asians are overwhelmingly involved in services and blue collar occupations, while Arabs more often fill managerial posts. Immigration flows to the Kingdom increased significantly over the 2000s, fuelled by high oil prices and the ensuing boom in the construction and services sectors. This demonstrates the difficulty to reconcile labour reforms, and especially, the Bahrainisation of the work force, with the maximisation of economic productivity.
Year 2015
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43547 Report

Maintaining national culture abroad : countries of origin, culture and diaspora

Authors Sonia GSIR, Elsa MESCOLI
Description
Within the framework of the INTERACT project, this paper aims to shed light onto a specific facet of the role of sending countries in migrants' integration processes: culture. Culture is analysed as one of the tools that both migrants and countries of origin resort to in order to maintain reciprocal ties after migration. Following a brief presentation of the anthropological and sociological definitions of culture and the consequent notion of 'cultural identity' on which the analysis builds, we study the concrete implementation of these dynamics. In particular, our attention is deployed at three levels: the level of migrants' everyday practices (including the use of the origin language); the policy level (pertaining to both diaspora and integration); and the association level (cultural centres in particular). Through the study of several transversal examples, we consider the broader issue at stake in this paper: the possible connection between migrants' performance in the culture of their country of origin and integration processes. We take into account the European legal framework within which both migrants and national governments function, and the influence it has on discourses and national and international policies addressing integration issues. We reach the conclusion that no causal or univocal link can be established between cultural practices and integration, for several reasons: a variety of factors are at play in integration processes within multi-cultural urban spaces, including socio-economic issues and power relations, which are crucial; culture itself is a changing and combined set of behaviours which determine dynamic and multiple belongings and which need a comprehensive approach; and identities shape the interaction among cultures - which is why we finally state the usefulness of the notion of 'ethnicity'.
Year 2015
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43548 Report

The migration and integration of Moroccan and Ukrainian migrants in Italy : policies and measures

Authors Anna DI BARTOLOMEO, Giuseppe GABRIELLI, Salvatore STROZZA
Description
The present report looks at the integration of Moroccan and Ukrainian migrants living in Italy. Beyond being quantitatively important in the Italian context, these two groups differ largely in terms of demographic characteristics, migration patterns and insertion modalities but also with respect to emigration and diaspora policies. Two core aspects of integration are emphasized in this report. First, integration processes are evaluated from a multi-dimensional perspective. Second, the role played by origin (and destination) country determinants in facilitating or constraining integration is investigated. Origin determinants include the ties between migrants and their country of origin, country-fixed characteristics, diaspora and emigration policies at origin and the engagement and role of non-state organisations. To this aim, three sets of data have been employed, making this report largely multidisciplinary: an in-depth analytical description of the legal and political frameworks at origin and destination, a quantitative analysis and an explorative qualitative survey. This report finds evidence that integration levels, determinants and, specifically, the role of origin factors vary largely across dimensions. In the labour market, both Moroccan and Ukrainian migrants living in Italy show high levels of integration. These extremely positive performances seem due more to destination than origin factors - namely Italy’s labour market specificities and migration history. Conversely, origin determinants presumably have a lower impact. In addition, the role played by NGOs appears relevant in helping migrants find employment - not good employment or well-remunerated employment but just employment. In the education dimension, things differ. At an international level, Ukrainians living in Italy show good levels of integration once controlled for natives’ performance. Origin determinants - in terms of conditions at home - thus seem to prevail here. Not surprisingly, the degree of integration in the ‘access to citizenship’ dimension is connected to the degree of openness/restrictiveness of host citizenship laws and, accordingly, to the length of presence in the country. Our results confirm that Italy is still one of the countries where getting citizenship is one of the main constraints for migrants in both recent communities (Ukrainians) and well-established ones (Moroccans). Finally, cultural integration is a main obstacle to Moroccan integration, while Ukrainians are also found to be in a difficult position with respect to social and political integration. In terms of ties between migrants and their country of origin, a micro-level analysis confirms a very clear pattern: the lower the (cultural, economic, political, social) ties, the higher the level of integration. This applies - to a different extent - to all dimensions and types of ties.
Year 2015
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43549 Report
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