Research
Database

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

Showing page of 162,544 results, sorted by

Migration Dynamics, Entrepreneurship, and African Development: Lessons from Malawi

Authors Kevin J. A. Thomas, Christopher Inkpen
Year 2013
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 6
43701 Journal Article

Are unequal societies more migratory?

Authors Mathias Czaika
Year 2013
Journal Name Comparative Migration Studies
43703 Journal Article

The demographic and economic framework of migration in Kuwait

Authors Françoise DE BEL-AIR
Description
As of December 2012, 68 percent of residents in Kuwait were expatriates. Most come from Asia and especially from India (30 percent of all foreign residents). Three-quarters of expatriates are active. They account for 83 percent of the total active population and 93 percent of the private sector's workforce. Asians are mainly involved in the services and craft sectors, while Arabs more often fill managerial posts. Recent flows suggest a shift in recruitment policies towards upgrading the workforce's level of qualifications and occupations. Data also show the extent of forced migration from Kuwait: 400,000 Arabs, most of them of Palestinian origin, were forced to flee the country after the First Gulf War. Also, Kuwait's stateless residents (the Bidun) have been compelled to emigrate since 1985, while those still in the country are considered illegal residents.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43713 Report

Chinese investment strategies and migration – does diaspora matter? Poland – case Study

Authors Pawel KACZMARCZYK, Monica SZULECKA, Joanna TYROWICZ
Description
The report is organized in the following way. Section 2 looks at the recent Chinese migration to Poland but it presents it in a broader context – of both Chinese migration worldwide and flows / stocks of immigrants in Poland. Section 3 provides an analysis of Foreign Direct Investment in Poland, with particular emphasis on Chinese capital. Next section is based on available quantitative and qualitative data and assesses links between Chinese FDI in Poland and migration flows. In this section we refer to three potential explanatory avenues as suggested above. Finally, section 5 concludes.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43714 Report

The role of sending countries in the labor market assimilation of immigrants in host countries

Authors Metin NEBILER
Description
The literature on the economics of migration has ignored the role of sending governments in the assimilation of immigrants in host country labor markets. Recent studies show that immigrants do not cut their ties with the homeland. Various actors linked to homelands are involved in this process. In this paper, we present a different perspective, which identifies the possible actions of those actors, and in particular of government institutions, and their impact on the assimilation process. We hypothesize that these actors may influence the assimilation trajectory of their expatriates. The incorporation of these actors into the existing economics literature is discussed in relation to several categories of actions, such as pre-departure training, post-arrival training and naturalization.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43715 Report

Chinese investment strategies and migration : does diaspora matter?

Authors Frank N. PIEKE, Tabitha SPEELMAN
Description
In the first chapter of this report we outline the main changes in the Chinese migration order since roughly 1980. In the second chapter we turn to a discussion of Chinese emigration and settlement in Europe (by which we mainly refer to the EU countries) and Africa (mainly sub-Saharan Africa), whose similarities and contrasts help us highlight the range of permutations in recent emigration from China. The third chapter turns to China’s administration, management and institutional and legal framework for dealing with the many different Chinese migratory flows and their ramifications for China, both domestically and for its rising global presence. Chapter 4 is a brief conclusion including some reflections on future trends.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43716 Report

The educational integration of migrants : what is the role of sending society actors and is there a transnational educational field?

Authors Dirk JACOBS
Description
It is well documented that in most European countries migrants have lower educational attainment levels than natives. Access to education for migrant children is almost universally guaranteed in the EU, but this does not automatically equate to access to adapted education, taking into account specific needs linked to socio-economic disadvantages and linguistic challenges. Furthermore, social and ethnic school segregation constitutes a serious barrier towards access to good education for migrant children. Sending society actors seem to have only a limited impact on the educational integration of migrant children in destination countries, but initiatives like diaspora schools constitute one strategy to try and improve the educational outcomes of migrant children. The scientific literature has only given limited space to the potential role played by sending society actors for access to good education for migrant children. The Interact-project should aim to cover this field and assess whether the role played by sending society actors has not unjustly been overlooked.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43717 Report

The role of migration in shaping China's economic relations with its main partners

Authors Haiyan ZHANG
Description
This chapter studies the key feature and trends of China’s international immigration and analyses its impact on the trade and FDI flows between China and its major partner countries. The main focus is to exam possible interaction between trade, FDI and migration flows and to assess the role of Chinese ethnic communities and migration in facilitating these economic exchanges. The impact of Chinese migration/ethnic communities on host economies, especially with regard to the labour market will also be briefly examined. This study consists of four sections. After this introduction, the second section provides a literature review on the interaction between migration, trade and FDI on the one hand and the impact of migrants or international entrepreneurs on the economic development of the host country on the other hand. The third section provides empirical evidence about the economic relations between China and its main partner regions, such as Europe and Africa. The migration from China to these regions will be studied, especially with regard to its changing characteristics during last decades. The interaction between Chinese migration and trade and FDI flows in these regions and their evolving features will be analysed at regional/key country level. The concluding section will iscuss about the main findings and their policy implication for host countries.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43718 Report

Reaching out : the external dimension of the EU’s migration policy : a comparative study on India and Australia

Authors Katharina EISELE, Anja WIESBROCK
Description
This paper seeks to examine the external dimension of the EU’s migration policy by concentrating, first, on the EU’s legal framework in the area of migration followed by an analysis of the policy developments under the GAMM. In a second step, this paper depicts the EU relations with India and Australia, respectively, in terms of migration matters with a view to explore how the EU has defined its current positions towards these two third countries in form of a comparative case study. India and Australia have been selected for an analysis because the migration flows prevailing in each state vary and the level of economic development differs notably. While Australia has always been an immigration country and maintains traditional ties with the European continent, India has only recently emerged as a major country of emigration to the EU. Yet, the EU constitutes a major partner for both countries. Finally, some conclusive remarks are made on the diverging migration rules for third-country nationals from India and Australia.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43719 Report

Syrian refugees in Turkey

Authors Senay ÖZDEN
Description
This report provides an overview of Syrian migration to Turkey since the start of the revolt in Syria in March 2011. The number of displaced Syrians crossing the border into Turkey has dramatically risen with the escalating use of violence employed by the Syrian regime ito suppress the revolt. According to the United Nations Refugee Agency, 182,621 Syrian refugees were living in Turkey mid-February 2013 (http://data.unhcr.org/syrianrefugees/regional.php). With the influx of huge numbers of Syrians into Turkey, anti-immigrant, anti-Arab discourses have surfaced among the Turkish public. Furthermore, due to the Turkish governments’ openly hostile position to the Syrian regime, Syrian migration became closely linked with Turkish domestic politics and foreign policy. Those individuals and political bodies critical of the Turkish government assumed an anti-immigrant position accusing displaced Syrians of being armed, sectarian rebels. Therefore, analyzing the Syrian migrant community in Turkey means contextualizing it within the political framework of the host-society.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43720 Report

EU-India migration and trade linkages

Authors Chinmay TUMBE
Description
This paper reviews the relationship between migration and trade between India and the European Union (EU). It provides an overview of EU-India trade across various dimensions and links it with migration in three specific contexts: (a) The $ 14 billion EU-India diamond trade that represents nearly 15% of total EU-India merchandise trade, and that is attributed to the direct and active role played by Indian immigrants and the diaspora (b) The trade in food products such as lentils, beans, rice and spices that reflects the pull of goods towards the EU to meet the preferences of the Indian immigrants and (c) The trade in services in the computer & information, education and entertainment sectors and the mobility of professionals, students and tourists respectively.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43721 Report

National minorities and migration in Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova, Russia and Ukraine

Authors Iryna ULASIUK
Description
The dissolution of the Soviet Union resulted in massive depopulation in the former Soviet republics and unprecedented migration flows, including persons belonging to national minorities. Citizens of a once indivisible country were suddenly divided into “those of our kind” and “outsiders” – natives and national minorities/ immigrants. The latter were often not guaranteed citizenship and they were frequently denied basic rights. A significant percentage of national minorities have thus become forced migrants and refugees, leaving neighbouring states under threat of violence or because of discrimination. The primary interest of this paper rests upon the interconnection of minority and migration issues. It brings together two topics which have usually been discussed apart. The paper aims to investigate the interrelation of the minority regimes adopted by Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova, Russia and Ukraine, and migration. It seeks to open up the discussion on the extent to which certain policies and rights for national minorities can be meaningfully extended to new migrant minority groups. It also asks what lessons are to be learnt from the treatment of national minorities as far as future migration legislation is concerned.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43722 Report

Indian diaspora : ethnicity and diasporic identity

Authors M. K. GAUTAM
Description
The paper on Indian Diaspora: Ethnicity and Diasporic identity is divided into four parts. The first part poses certain questions, looking at the emergence of ethnicity and diasporic identity. The second part defines the terms and notions often used by scholars, in discussing the paper. The third part gives a brief account about Indian migration to Europe and studies on the Indian Diaspora. The fourth part analyses case studies of the Netherlands and Germany with reference to similarities and differences. Finally, in conclusion, the issue of ethnicity and identity formation in Europe is evaluated and some proposals are put forward for the way in which India and the Indian Diaspora can work together.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43723 Report

Religion and diasporas : challenges of the emigration countries

Authors Jocelyne CESARI
Description
Using the theoretical framework of transnational studies and sociology of religion, this paper identifies the most significant factors that influence the religious dimensions of the emigration countries: the majority or minority status of the migrant group in the receiving countries as well as the pre-existing level of politicization of religion in the sending countries. It shows that the interactions of sending and receiving countries take place in religious terms in a broader transnational space including deterritorialized religious and political actors.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43724 Report

Legal aspects of the integration of migrants in the Republic of Moldova

Authors Tatiana CIUMAS
Description
Integration is a new concept and even a new activity for Moldova. Formally Moldovan legislation contains no restriction on the rights and opportunities of foreigners, legally residing on the territory, except their political rights. At the same time for many years there was no viable mechanism for implementing their rights, and the presence of foreigners mainly limited to identifying their status, documentation and statistics. At the same time the emigration of Moldovan citizens abroad has been analyzed in the last years with the accent on remittances, statistical data and selection of destination countries. The protection of these persons’ rights and their reintegration was not seen as a priority by the state. This though has not been sufficiently analyzed and thus there is no real experience with good results regarding this process.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43725 Report

Immigrant Arab Americans and Alcohol Use: Longitudinal Study

Authors Cynthia L. Arfken, Carissa L. Broadbridge, Hikmet Jamil, ...
Year 2013
Journal Name JOURNAL OF IMMIGRANT AND MINORITY HEALTH
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43726 Journal Article

"Is it worth risking your life?": Ethnography, risk and death on the US-Mexico border

Authors Seth M. Holmes
Year 2013
Journal Name Social Science & Medicine
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43728 Journal Article

Occupational Mobility at Migration - Evidence from Spain

Authors Mikolaj Stanek, Alberto Veira Ramos
Year 2013
Journal Name Sociological Research Online
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43730 Journal Article

Post‐Return Transnationalism and the Iraqi Displacement in Syria and Jordan

Authors Vanessa Iaria
Year 2013
Journal Name International Migration
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43731 Journal Article

Selective Migration Policy Models and Changing Realities of Implementation

Authors Rey Koslowski
Year 2013
Journal Name International Migration
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43732 Journal Article

A Moving Heart: Querying a Singular Problem of "Immobility' in Afghan Migration to the UK

Authors Nichola Khan
Year 2013
Journal Name MEDICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43734 Journal Article

The role of the press in the war on asylum

Authors Greg Philo, Emma Briant, Pauline Donald
Year 2013
Journal Name Race & Class
43737 Journal Article

Imagining the future of Latino Studies

Authors Lourdes Torres
Year 2013
Journal Name LATINO STUDIES
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43738 Journal Article

Migrants and media newsmaking practices

Authors Eda GEMI, Iryna ULASIUK, Anna TRIANDAFYLLIDOU
Year 2013
Journal Name Journalism Practice
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43741 Journal Article

Emigration-diaspora policy nexus in migration policies of the EU Eastern Partnership countries and in Russia

Authors Shushanik MAKARYAN
Description
Provoked by more frequent discussions about the "emigration-diaspora" nexus among the researchers on international development, this policy brief, written based on the explanatory notes submitted by country-experts of CARIM-East project, explores the emigration-diaspora issues in migration policies of post-Soviet states in the EU neighborhood. As the examination of CARIM-East country experts reveals, the primary focus of emigration policies of post-Soviet states remains linked to labour migration and focuses on the prevention of emigration (and return of emigrated co-nationals), although migration policies of post-Soviet states also emphasize the need for integrating their labour-force into the international labour market. Post-Soviet governments offer various stimuli to attract their former residents to return to homeland, ranging from advocacy campaigns on business development to matching financial investments from remittances to providing grants to those trained abroad. Despite the conceptual ambiguity stemming from including labour migrants into diasporas, or as the development community has referred to -- "migrant diasporas", the policy documents of post-Soviet states use the term diasporas to refer to both permanently emigrated former citizens, and to current citizens living abroad (regardless of length of residency abroad). However, a more systematic examination is needed to understand whether and in which aspects the focus of migration policies of post-Soviet is different or overlaps for labour migrants abroad vs. diasporas.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43742 Report

Transnational ethnic networks and the creation of immigrant social capital: A multilevel analysis

Authors Harris H. Kim
Year 2013
Journal Name The Social Science Journal
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
43744 Journal Article

Abbau ethnischer Grenzen durch Nationensport. Eine Analyse von Internetforen über willkommene und unwillkommene Zuwanderer

Authors Dieter Reicher
Year 2013
Journal Name Österreichische Zeitschrift für Soziologie
43746 Journal Article

Tracking the Emotional Cost of Immigration: Ethno-religious Differences and Women’s Mental Health

Authors Cathy Holtmann, Lucia Tramonte
Year 2013
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
43747 Journal Article

Explaining Local Swedish Refugee Policy

Authors Gustav Lidén, Jon Nyhlén
Year 2013
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
43749 Journal Article

When the Educated Leave the East: Romanian and Hungarian Skilled Immigration to the USA

Authors Cristina Brǎdǎţan, László J. Kulcsár
Year 2013
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
43750 Journal Article
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