Research
Database

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

Showing page of 162,587 results, sorted by

Migration, gentrification and housing crisis. The case of Peruvians living in Abasto (Buenos Aires)

Authors Francisco J. Cuberos‐Gallardo
Year 2022
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 1
49852 Journal Article

Compatibility of ethnic and national identifications under multicultural policies

Authors Akira Igarashi
Year 2022
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 3
49854 Journal Article

Networks of Alterity in Syndemic Times: Sociodigital Media Controversy Around Racism in Mexico

Authors André Dorcé
Year 2022
Journal Name Journal of Intercultural Studies
49855 Journal Article

(Methodological) nationalism and academic debates on the integration of migrant children

Authors Barbara Gornik
Year 2022
Journal Name Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism
49857 Journal Article

In Search of Talent: Startup Policy in South Korea

Authors Felicia Istad
Year 2022
Journal Name European Journal of Korean Studies
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
49859 Journal Article

Changing the Landscape of an American Town: Immigrantrification of a Korean Ethnoburb and Its Cultural and Economic Consequences

Authors Halyna Lemekh
Year 2022
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
49860 Journal Article

Forced Migration and the Plight of the Chakma Refugees in Arunachal Pradesh: ‘Citizenship’ as a Bone of Contention

Authors Nawang Choden, Nawang Choden
Year 2022
Journal Name JOURNAL OF MIGRATION HISTORY
Citations (WoS) 1
49865 Journal Article

Patterns of Panethnic Intermarriage in the United States, 1980–2018

Authors Aaron Gullickson
Year 2022
Journal Name Demography
49869 Journal Article

Book Review: Ethnic Dissent and Empowerment: Economic Migration Between Vietnam and Malaysia

Authors Choo Chin Low
Year 2022
Journal Name International Migration Review
49870 Journal Article

Should Canada Pay for Refugee Healthcare? A Social Justice Analysis of the Interim Federal Health Program (IFHP)

Authors Adam Mursal, Weizhen Dong
Year 2022
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
49871 Journal Article

Root Causes of Migration, Development, and US Aid to Northern Triangle States

Authors Jill Marie Gerschutz-Bell
Year 2022
Journal Name Journal on Migration and Human Security
49873 Journal Article

Students' identity development in Greek supplementary schools in England from 1950s to 2010s

Authors Angeliki Voskou
Year 2022
Journal Name PAEDAGOGICA HISTORICA
Citations (WoS) 1
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
49874 Journal Article

Displacement among Sri Lankan Tamil Migrants: The Diasporic Search for Home in the Aftermath of War. By Diotima Chattoraj

Authors Tridib Chakraborti
Year 2022
Journal Name Journal of Refugee Studies
Citations (WoS) 1
49876 Journal Article

Immigrants’ intragroup moral exclusion predicts ingroup-directed behavioral intentions: The mediating role of disidentification

Authors Hadi Sam Nariman, Ameni Mehrez, Lan Anh Nguyen Luu, ...
Year 2022
Journal Name International Journal of Intercultural Relations
Citations (WoS) 1
49877 Journal Article

Listening to the Voices of Syrian Refugee Women in Canada: an Ethnographic Insight into the Journey from Trauma to Adaptation

Authors Areej Al-Hamad, Cheryl Forchuk, Abe Oudshoorn, ...
Year 2022
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
Citations (WoS) 3
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
49879 Journal Article

The State and the Madheshi Dalit Women's Access to Citizenship in Nepal

Authors Krishna Prasad Pandey
Year 2022
Journal Name CONTEMPORARY VOICE OF DALIT
Citations (WoS) 1
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
49880 Journal Article

What's Political about Political Refugeehood? A Normative Reappraisal

Authors Felix Bender
Year 2022
Journal Name ETHICS & INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
Citations (WoS) 4
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
49881 Journal Article

New Zealand border restrictions amidst COVID-19 and their impacts on temporary migrant workers

Authors Liangni Sally Liu, Guanyu Jason Ran, Xiaoyun Jia
Year 2022
Journal Name Asian and Pacific Migration Journal
Citations (WoS) 2
49882 Journal Article

Leaving Blacks Behind in Brooklyn

Authors Jerome Krase
Year 2022
Journal Name Newsletter on the Results of Scholarly Work in Sociology, Criminology, Philosophy and Political Science
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
49883 Journal Article

Contested skills and constrained mobilities: migrant carework skill regimes in Taiwan and Japan

Authors Pei-Chia Lan
Year 2022
Journal Name Comparative Migration Studies
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
49885 Journal Article

The racialisation of British citizenship

Authors Frances Webber
Year 2022
Journal Name Race & Class
Citations (WoS) 2
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
49887 Journal Article

Preparing teacher candidates for bilingual practices: toward a multilingual stance in mainstream teacher education

Authors Ester de Jong, Jiameng Gao
Year 2022
Journal Name International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism
49888 Journal Article

Book review: Ethnic dissent and empowerment: Economic migration between Vietnam and Malaysia

Authors Tu Phuong Nguyen
Year 2022
Journal Name Asian and Pacific Migration Journal
49890 Journal Article

Queer & Trans African mobilities: migration, asylum and diaspora

Authors Gabriel/le du Plessis
Year 2022
Journal Name Ethnic and Racial Studies
49892 Journal Article

“Despabilarse” del hogar. La dimensión ambiental en la trama de cuidados provistos por mujeres migrantes del Área Reconquista

Authors Maria Belen Lopez
Year 2022
Journal Name PERIPLOS. Revista de Investigación sobre Migraciones
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
49896 Journal Article

When exit policies determine entry policies: The case of the Karta Polaka

Authors Diego Caballero Vélez, Jan Misiuna
Year 2022
Journal Name International Migration
49897 Journal Article

Young Poles in Times of Dramatic Change: Refugees, Identity and Social Engagement

Authors Félix Krawatzek, Piotr Goldstein
Description
Young people have experienced profound changes in the way Polish national identity is expressed in public since the conservative Law and Justice Party (PiS) gained far-reaching control of Polish politics in 2015. This report exam­ines young people’s political attitudes in conjunction with their views on the arrival of over two million refugees from Ukraine in 2022, and their views on those refugees who have been trying to get into the EU through the Polish- Belarusian border since 2021. Views on both events allow us to better under­stand young people’s sense of Polishness. Moreover, opinions on national his­tory are central to understandings of identity, as are young people’s percep­tions of Poland’s place in Europe. The fears and uncertainties young Poles express are analysed in an original online survey conducted in March 2022 among 2 002 respondents aged 16–34, combined with insights from focus group discussions conducted in May 2022 among a set of young participants and participants aged 65 and older in the cit­ies of Gdańsk and Lublin. Such a combination of methodologies allows unique insights into the reasoning behind the patterns that a survey can identify. The key findings are as follows: - Nearly half of young people state that Poland should let in as many refugees from Ukraine as necessary. The presence of Ukrainians in Poland since the start of the war in Ukraine in 2014 and the resulting personal contacts are an important factor in the welcoming attitude to and support for the Ukrainian refugees who have arrived since February 2022. - There is also overall approval for the political support for Ukraine, in par­ticular when it comes to supplying humanitarian assistance. In addition, nearly 15 % of respondents support the deployment of Polish soldiers to Ukraine. - The welcoming attitude vis-à-vis Ukrainian refugees stands in stark con­trast to the support for the pushbacks of the mostly Muslim refugees who have tried to enter Poland via Belarus since 2021. The relative ethnic and religious homogeneity of Poland that resulted from World War II feeds into fear of others, particularly Muslims. There is, moreover, rather low support for granting those refugees the right to apply for asylum, with only 9 % of young people stating that these people should definitely have the right to apply. - Gender is crucial when it comes to understanding the different views on the refugees coming from Ukraine and the Middle East. Women are more likely to want to see refugees from Ukraine return as soon as it becomes possible to Ukraine, whereas men are more likely to support a hard line on refugees at the border with Belarus. - Despite the current government’s involvement in memory politics, the com­mon Polish-Ukrainian history is practically unknown to young Poles, and even when it is known it is considered largely irrelevant. Ukraine and Be­larus are for young Poles a different ‘Eastern Europe’ than the Central Eu­rope they feel part of. - The informal help that Polish people, including the younger generation, have offered to refugees from Ukraine is hard to quantify. Many offered ac­commodation in their own homes, transportation, or help in settling in, but few would consider this ‘humanitarian aid’ in the early phase of the war. - Resentment and fear are among the key emotions driving the opinions and sentiments of many young people when they talk about their attitudes towards refugees and related changes in Polish society and politics. Young Poles, and particularly young women, are significantly more concerned about welfare issues such as access to childcare, healthcare, and the situa­tion on the job market than people of their grandparents’ generation. These fears and uncertainties underpin assessments of politics and attitudes to­wards ethnic and social diversity in Poland.
Year 2022
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
49898 Report

Social identity and labor market outcomes of immigrants

Authors Maria Rosaria Carillo, Vincenzo Lombardo, Tiziana Venittelli
Year 2022
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
49899 Journal Article
SHOW FILTERS
Ask us