journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28943652/foreign-retirement-income-among-new-older-immigrants-in-the-united-states
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alma Vega, Emma Aguila
Older adults make up an increasing share of new legal immigrants to the United States. These immigrants are often financially dependent on family since they are often barred from receiving several U.S. support programmes and are less likely to receive U.S. retirement benefits than natives. However, little information exists as to whether they receive retirement income from abroad. Using the New Immigrant Survey (N=2,150), we find that only 8.1 per cent of older recent immigrants report receiving foreign retirement income...
June 2017: International Migration
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26435548/institutionalization-of-migration-policy-frameworks-in-armenia-azerbaijan-and-georgia
#22
Shushanik Makaryan, Haykanush Chobanyan
This article is a comparative study of the institutionalization of the migration policy frameworks of post-Soviet states Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. All three countries share common historical legacies: a Soviet past, wars and conflicts, unemployment, high emigration, and commitment to integration into European bodies. To what extent do the migration policies of these three countries (driven by contextual forces, i.e. domestic challenges) address country-specific migration dynamics? Or are they imposed by the European Union? In which dimensions have the national policies on migration of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia evolved, and around which issues have they converged or diverged? Have these trends led to an integration of migration policymaking at the regional level in the South Caucasus?...
October 1, 2014: International Migration
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25382866/take-me-home-return-migration-among-germany-s-older-immigrants
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jenjira J Yahirun
This paper examines the determinants of return migration as foreign-born men approach old age in Germany. Return migration in later life engages a different set of conditions than return migration earlier on, including the framing of return as a possible retirement strategy. Using 23 years of longitudinal data from the German Socioeconomic Panel, this paper investigates how social and economic resources of immigrant men influence decisions to return "home." Results suggest that immigrants from former guest worker recruitment countries within the European Union are more likely to return than non-E...
August 2014: International Migration
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25346548/-right-here-is-the-gateway-mobility-sex-work-entry-and-hiv-risk-along-the-mexico-u-s-border
#24
Sm Goldenberg, Js Silverman, D Engstrom, I Bojorquez-Chapela, Sa Strathdee
Women comprise an increasing proportion of migrants. Many voluntarily migrate for sex work or practice survival sex, while others may be trafficked for sexual exploitation. To investigate how the context of mobility shapes sex work entry and HIV risk, we conducted in-depth interviews with formerly trafficked women currently engaged in sex work (n=31) in Tijuana, Mexico and their service providers (n=7) in Tijuana and San Diego, USA from 2010-2011. Women's experiences of coerced and deceptive migration, deportation as forced migration, voluntary mobility, and migration to a risk environment illustrate that circumstances driving and resulting from migration shape vulnerability to sex trafficking, voluntary sex work entry, and HIV risk...
August 1, 2014: International Migration
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24223429/household-migration-remittances-and-its-impact-on-health-in-indonesia
#25
Yao Lu
The growing flow of migrant's remittances has generated much interest in understanding the socioeconomic consequences of household migration for individuals and families in migrant-sending areas. This paper examines the effect of household migration on health status, as measured by nutritional status, of adults who remained behind in rural Indonesia, a setting with high rate of out-migration and poor nutritional profiles. Assuming that remittances may improve household economic resources and thus change dietary intake and health-related investment, household migration may be associated with both the risks of undernutrition and overnutrition...
July 1, 2013: International Migration
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23894210/mass-media-and-rural-out-migration-in-the-context-of-social-change-evidence-from-nepal
#26
Martin Piotrowski
This work examines the influence of mass media on rural out-migration using historical and contemporary data from a setting experiencing massive social and economic development in the last half-century. Data come from the Chitwan Valley Family Study, an ongoing study of an agrarian region in rural Nepal. Media are hypothesized to affect migration by inducing attitudinal and behavioral changes similar to those of other determinants of migration. As their influence differs from other determinants in important ways, media represent a unique form of influence that should be taken into account...
June 1, 2013: International Migration
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25097268/latino-immigrants-discrimination-and-reception-in-columbus-ohio
#27
J H Cohen, N M Chavez
Columbus, Ohio has witnessed rapid growth in its Latino population as immigrants settle in the city to access jobs and a generally low cost of living. Immigrants also face discrimination as they settle in Columbus and interact with the city's citizens. In this paper, we note how discrimination plays out in social and economic isolation; a lack of programs to support the incorporation of Latinos in the city; and state laws that target immigrants. We present results of ongoing ethnographic work with the Latino community in Columbus...
April 1, 2013: International Migration
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24970950/the-human-capital-characteristics-and-household-living-standards-of-returning-international-migrants-in-eastern-and-southern-africa
#28
Kevin J A Thomas
Africa's experience with return migration is not new. However, few empirical studies have examined the social and economic characteristics of returning migrants within the continent. In this study, the human capital endowments and household living standards of returning migrants in Uganda and South Africa are examined using recently available data. The study compares returnees in both countries with immigrants as well as the native-born population with no international migration experience. It also investigates how factors such as previous country of residence, year of arrival, and other demographic factors predict levels of education and living standards among returning migrants...
August 1, 2012: International Migration
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23264698/remittance-activity-among-brazilians-in-the-us-and-canada
#29
Franklin Goza, Igor Ryabov
This comparative study uses data collected in 1990 and 1991 to examine the remittance behavior of Brazilians who had recently arrived in Canada and the United States. These data permit an examination of remittance activity among immigrants relatively soon after their arrival in a pair of host destinations. Prior to contrasting the remittance activity of these newly arrived immigrants, we first document the high degree of similarity between the two groups at their time of arrival; a point that becomes important when contrasting their divergent outcomes...
August 1, 2012: International Migration
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24899733/the-u-s-diversity-visa-programme-and-the-transfer-of-skills-from-africa
#30
B Ikubolajeh Logan, Kevin J A Thomas
The Diversity Visa (DV) programme is designed to improve the multicultural composition of the U.S. "melting pot" beyond the traditional source countries in Europe. In pursuit of this objective, the basic eligibility requirement for participation in the programme is a high school diploma. Despite its salutary objective and design, the programme's implications for the African brain drain may not all be benign. The "tired, poor, huddled masses" from Africa are defined in more restrictive terms, and the obstacles they face are more economically and administratively onerous than those encountered by their early European counterparts...
April 1, 2012: International Migration
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22400149/creating-an-enabling-environment-for-diasporas-participation-in-homeland-development
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer M Brinkerhoff
Diasporas contribute to their homeland’s development through remittances, philanthropy, skills transfer, business investment, and advocacy. This paper focuses on actions that homeland governments can take to create an enabling environment for diasporas’ contributions. Part I addresses the diaspora phenomenon and the homeland government-diaspora relationship. Part II develops a framework for characterizing government’s role in an enabling environment specific to diasporas’ development contributions. Part III considers how to put the framework into practice, identifying important caveats and discussing several implementation issues, including the potential role of donors...
2012: International Migration
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24347678/movement-between-mexico-and-canada-analysis-of-a-new-migration-stream
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Douglas Massey, Amelia E Brown
In this analysis we use data from the Mexican Migration Project to contrast processes of Mexican migration to Canada and the United States. All migrants to Canada entered through the Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program and consistent with program criteria, migration there is strongly predicted by marital status and number of dependents, yielding a migrant population that is made up of males of prime labor-force age who are married and have multiple children at home. In contrast, the vast majority of migrants to the United States are undocumented and thus self-selected without regard to marital status or parenthood...
January 1, 2011: International Migration
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22180885/-deseos-y-dolores-mapping-desire-suffering-and-dis-loyalty-within-transnational-partnerships
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Deborah A Boehm
This piece considers the deseos -- wants, desires, needs -- and dolores -- pain or sorrow -- of individuals in US-Mexico transnational partnerships. For transnational Mexicans, “desire” manifests as diverse, even contradictory, expressions of emotion. Migration is intertwined with multiple desires within intimate relationships, but is also tied to suffering across borders. Conflicting articulations of deseos y dolores reveal gender politics as well as the broader socioeconomic inequalities that drive migration and result in the transborder movement that separates couples and family members in a transnational space...
2011: International Migration
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22180884/not-in-the-eyes-of-the-beholder-envy-among-bolivian-migrants-in-spain
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maria Tapias, Xavier Escandell
This article explores a culturally sensitive topic, envy, among Bolivian migrants in Spain. Following a constructivist approach to emotions, we examine discourses of envy, as they are shaped by the cultural contexts in which they emerge. Our study uses a sample of 30 transnational households and multi-sited ethnography to illustrate the ways emotions and their effects on sociality serve as a mechanism of social control, especially when the boundaries of such a community have been stretched transnationally. Envy is an important component of a belief system central to understanding the emergence, or lack thereof, of trust and solidarity among migrants and can shape the types of social relations and conflicts between migrants and non-migrant households back in Bolivia...
2011: International Migration
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22180883/the-war-at-home-affective-economics-and-transnationally-adoptive-families-in-the-united-states
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rachael Stryker
The question of how to best conduct post-placement interventions for transnationally adoptive families at risk of dissolution (legal annulment) is an emerging issue in the United States. The current popular trend for adoptive families to pursue biomedical post-placement interventions, despite a lack of proof that such interventions actually work to keep the adoptive family intact, suggests the need for a more phenomenological approach to understanding both adoptive parents’ and transnational adoptees’ post-placement experiences...
2011: International Migration
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22180882/what-is-love-the-materiality-of-care-in-ghanaian-transnational-families
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Cati Coe
In the West, economics and intimacy are assumed to occupy separate – even antithetical – domains. In Ghanaian family life, however, affection is understood to be expressed through the distribution of material resources across generations and a person’s life cycle. Such an understanding of love means that migrant parents who leave their children behind in Ghana can continue to be good parents by sending remittances, and, in fact, may be considered better parents than caregivers who stay and are poorer...
2011: International Migration
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22167868/irregular-migration-and-informal-economy-in-southern-and-central-eastern-europe-breaking-the-vicious-cycle
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Thanos Maroukis, Krystyna Iglicka, Katarzyna Gmaj
The flexible and cheap labour that European “post-industrial” economies are in need of is often facilitated by undeclared labour. The undocumented migrant, from his/her part, relatively easily finds work that suits his -- at least initial -- plans. What lies behind this nexus between irregular migration and informal economy? To what extent can this nexus be attributed to the structural features of the so-called “secondary”, as opposed to “primary”, labour market? And how does migration policy correlate with this economic context and lead to the entrapment of migrants in irregularity? Finally, can this vicious cycle of interests and life-strategies be broken and what does the experience of the migrants indicate in this respect? This paper addresses these questions via an exploration of the grounds upon which irregular migration and the shadow economy complement each other in southern Europe (SE) and central and Eastern Europe (CEE) (two regions at different points in the migration cycle)...
2011: International Migration
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22167867/measuring-irregular-migration-and-population-flows-%C3%A2-what-available-data-can-tell
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Albert Kraler, David Reichel
Wild assumptions, estimates and number games are made in regard to irregular migration flows. While the numbers cited are, in fact, often dated and of unclear origin, reports use such numbers to suggest a rise in irregular migration; they also usually assume that irregular entry and, to some extent, overstaying are the only significant pathways into irregularity. To properly account for irregular migration flows, however, both in- and outflows, as well as the complex ways of becoming (or ceasing to be) an “irregular migrant”, have to be included...
2011: International Migration
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22167866/the-size-of-the-irregular-migrant-population-in-the-european-union-%C3%A2-counting-the-uncountable
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dita Vogel, Vesela Kovacheva, Hannah Prescott
It is difficult to estimate the size of the irregular migrant population in a specific city or country, and even more difficult to arrive at estimates at the European level. A review of past attempts at European-level estimates reveals that they rely on rough and outdated rules-of-thumb. In this paper, we present our own European level estimates for 2002, 2005, and 2008. We aggregate country-specific information, aiming at approximate comparability by consistent use of minimum and maximum estimates and by adjusting for obvious differences in definition and timescale...
2011: International Migration
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22167865/methods-approaches-and-data-sources-for-estimating-stocks-of-irregular-migrants
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael Jandl
This paper presents a comprehensive review of available methods for sizing irregular migrant populations as a particular group in the study of hidden populations. Based on the existing body of literature on the subject, a generic classification scheme is developed that divides existing estimation procedures into subcategories like “approaches”, “methods” and “estimation techniques”. For each of these categories, basic principles, methodical strengths and weaknesses, as well as practical problems, are identified and discussed with the use of existing examples...
2011: International Migration
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