145 results
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2. Category traversing: early Korean immigrants eluding the U.S. state.
- Author
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Choi, Carolyn and Kim, Sunmin
- Subjects
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FOREIGN study , *NATIONAL archives , *FOREIGN students , *IMMIGRATION enforcement , *TWENTIETH century , *EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
This paper explores
category traversing , the process through which migrants navigate state-imposed immigration categories. In the early twentieth century, Asian migrants were categorically excluded from entering the U.S. under the Asiatic Barred Zone, while exemptions were granted to merchants, diplomats and students. Drawing on immigrant case files from the U.S. National Archives, we highlight how Korean migrants navigate student status to circumvent race-based exclusion. At ports of entry, they curated a performance to present as a student in the eyes of immigration officials, with a proper display of scholarly knowledge and financial ability. Even after entry, failure to maintain student status invited scrutiny from officials. Responding to these demands, migrants agentially traversed the categories of student and worker to remain in a country that sought to exclude them. This paper contributes to this special issue by documenting (a) how migrants perform in accordance with state-imposed categories to navigate immigration regimes and (b) how they challenge those categories by traversing them as they see fit. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. ‘We just fly by the seat of our pants sometimes here’: Understanding the Provision of Settlement and Integration Supports in Rural Saskatchewan.
- Author
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KELLY, MELISSA
- Subjects
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EMIGRATION & immigration , *SOCIAL integration , *IMMIGRANTS , *COMMUNITIES , *HUMAN settlements , *CITIES & towns - Abstract
Historically, immigration has been an urban phenomenon in Canada. Over the last two decades, however, more and more immigrants have begun to settle in smaller cities and even in rural areas. Given this shift, there is a need to know more about how federal and provincial settlement and integration policies and programs function beyond the metropolis. This paper takes a place-based qualitative case study approach to shed light on how the settlement and integration sector works in rural Saskatchewan. The research is based on interviews with individuals working within or adjacent to the settlement and integration sector, as well as a focus group carried out with immigrants themselves. The findings of the study reveal that there are many challenges that make it difficult to meet the needs of immigrants in rural Saskatchewan by way of formalized supports. Nevertheless, those working in the sector have drawn on local strengths and resources to devise innovative solutions to meet the needs of the growing immigrant population. The paper concludes by arguing that local communities should be given more flexibility and a bigger role to play in the development of settlement and integration policies and programs. Settlement and integration works differently across geographical space, and a ‘one-size fits all’ approach to service provision is not enough to meet the current needs of all communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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4. Student migration, transnational knowledge transfer, and legal and political transformation in Georgia.
- Author
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Krannich, Sascha
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EMIGRATION & immigration , *KNOWLEDGE transfer , *POLITICAL systems - Abstract
In contrast to the other papers in this special issue, this paper reflects a specific case of co-agency between states and individual migrants, particularly students and alumni networks. Based on a qualitative case study with 29 Georgian students and 14 institutions and organizations, this paper explores the impact of Georgian alumni on polity building in Georgia. Here we can observe two phases: Firstly, the states of Georgia and of Germany act as co-agents by facilitating migration to young Georgian students by financing their studies in Germany (student scholarships) with the objective that the students return and transfer their knowledge to the country of origin. Subsequently, the Georgian alumni who studied law in Germany act as co-agents between different institutions in both countries. In doing so, they transform state institutions by themselves and contribute to the development of the legal and political system in Georgia. They do that particularly in such important legal fields like constitutional law, civic law, and criminal law, but also in the creation of parliamentarism based on a bicameral system or the promotion of separation of church and state in Georgia. That takes place after return migration as well as from Germany through transnational networks and mobility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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5. Greener pastures: why Indian international students leave the US labor market.
- Author
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Jacobs, Elizabeth M.
- Subjects
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MIGRANT labor , *LABOR market , *SCHOOL-to-work transition , *RETURN migration , *FOREIGN workers , *STUDENT passports , *EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
This paper revisits conventional wisdom on US degree premiums for immigrant workers and shows that, despite the benefits of a US degree, migration policies and substandard labor conditions contribute to international student motivations to return home. Using two original datasets, I find that about a third of Indian-born US graduates leave the US, seeking employment opportunities abroad and a respite from US work visa restrictions. I draw on 105 in-depth interviews and 7,177 employment histories constructed from LinkedIn, and the analysis demonstrates the use of digital data to shed new light on under-studied patterns of return migration in institutional perspective. I find that US work visas are related to the underemployment of immigrant workers, and gaps in visa availability are associated with US labor market departure for Indian international students. At the same time, foreign employers reward skills and credentials developed in the US, and the results suggest that US degrees carry a higher premium in foreign labor markets. The paper emphasizes the role of institutions in the skilled migration system and identifies disjunctures in US migration policy. I identify opportunities for policy reform to improve immigrant labor conditions and increase the retention of US-educated migrants in the US labor market. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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6. Ethnic proximity, mobility and (non)-belonging: middle-class Singaporean migrants in China.
- Author
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Ang, Sylvia, Thang, Leng Leng, and Ho, Elaine Lynn-Ee
- Subjects
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MIDDLE class , *NONCITIZENS , *IMMIGRANTS , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *COUNTRIES - Abstract
AbstractNew global multi-directional migration flows are decentering extant analyses of White expatriate migration. As migration becomes more diversified, new lines of intellectual inquiry are surfacing about the experiences of middle-class non-white expatriates. This paper uses the case study of China, which with the rise in immigration, has an increasingly diverse ‘expatriate’ population. While the visibility of White expatriates in non-white-majority host countries may compel them to adopt lifestyles segregated from the local population, expatriates of Chinese heritage in China have the (dis)advantage of blending in with the local population. This paper examines the experiences of Singaporean-Chinese migrants in China where their ethnic proximity to the Chinese can be both a boon and a bane. We present our findings in three sections addressing: first, how ethnic proximity can enable mobilities including motility and a mobile sense of belonging; second, how mobilities can condition ethnic proximity as experiences of privilege but also reminders of non-belonging; and third, how participants’ change in life phases i.e. temporalities shift meanings of proximity, mobility and mobile belonging. Through highlighting the multidimensional nature of mobilities – proximity, motility, temporalities – this paper contributes to studies of middling migration, (ethnic) proximity and mobilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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7. Climate Refugees in India: Seeking Security between Disaster Diplomacy and Strategic Ambiguity.
- Author
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Bollempalli, Manasa
- Subjects
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ENVIRONMENTAL refugees , *LEGISLATION , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *NATIONAL security - Abstract
Among the 100 million refugees and displaced persons in 2022, the category of "climate refugees" has become more salient, yet countries still do not know how to handle it. Two aspects of climate refugees also remain understudied; how climate refugees are perceived, since they are viewed through the dual lenses of climate risks and migratory flows and how these perceptions impact policies. Climate refugees are thus doubly impacted by the spill-over effect of securitization processes in the fields of climate change and immigration. This paper analyzes how climate- and migration-security legislation in a resource-constrained nation conceptualizes climate refugees, and how their diverse conceptual categories spill over into policymaking and create a mutually beneficial and humanitarian approach for host and migrant populations. This paper uses India as a case study based on its historical practice of refugee protection despite significant resource constraints, high risk of inbound climate refugees, participation in key global agreements, and domestic discourse over climate and immigration securitization. Using policy analysis and expert interviews, this study demonstrates that India successfully exemplifies a broadly humanitarian climate mobility regime in the South Asian region through relocations, Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief operations, and ad hoc legal protection. Despite crucial structural limitations, India illustrates a democratic global south template implicitly recognizing migrants' vulnerability to climate change and attempts to minimize risk, with potential for replication in other developing and developed nations. This normative policy framework, notwithstanding its limitations, presents an alternative to the threat-centric and unsustainable securitization of climate migration practiced in the Global North. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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8. Circumstantial Citizenship: UAE Born Syrians and Their Complex Journeys to Long-Term Security.
- Author
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Akıncı, İdil
- Subjects
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STATUS (Law) , *CITIZENSHIP , *PASSPORTS , *SYRIANS , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *LIMINALITY - Abstract
A number of studies acknowledge the role of a liminal legal status as well as geopolitical factors in constituting a demand for an alternative citizenship. Less is known about the effects of war or political turmoil in countries of nationality for populations who live outside those countries in places with little or no permanent settlement paths. This paper takes the case of Syrian nationals born and raised in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to explore the impact of war in Syria on their considerations about, and for some, experiences of, migration, including through asylum-seeking in Europe. It argues that this migration is less about relocation to the "West" and more about a solution to restrictions tied to their liminality in the UAE, as well as their citizenship by birth. By pursuing "stronger" passports from elsewhere, they seek an ability to choose where they live — including the option to stay "home" in the UAE or maintain links there. This paper introduces the notion of circumstantial citizenship to better understand how, when, and for whom citizenship matters in restrictive migration contexts. By engaging with key debates in migration studies, such as volition, alternatives, and options, circumstantial citizenship conceptualizes people's complex journeys as they navigate liminality, changing conditions, international borders, and limited resources to access the long-term security of a better passport. Findings provide significant insights into the role of restrictive migration policies in shaping the value and meaning of citizenship and driving onward migration in complex ways today. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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9. İmparatorluktan Yeni Dünyaya: Arjantin’in “Ruso” Göçmenleri.
- Author
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Tekin, Segâh and Haşimoğlu, Murad
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RUSSIAN language , *RUSSIANS , *NINETEENTH century , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *DIASPORA , *GEOGRAPHY - Abstract
In accordance with global migration trends, Russian geography became a source of emigration starting from the mid-19th century. On the other hand, following their independence in the early 19th century, Latin American countries became recipients of migration waves from different countries, including multinational Eurasian states such as Ottoman, Russian, and Austria-Hungarian empires. The migration wave from Russian Empire to Latin America started around the 1850s and lasted until the collapse of the empire in 1917. Argentina was the leading destination of emigration for the early migrant Russian citizens who were then officially called the “Ruso” and came from various ethnic and religious backgrounds. Within the context of this paper, which focuses on the migration and adaptation processes of Ruso immigrants in Argentina, the social, economic, cultural, and religious dimensions of their new lives are discussed. The paper concludes that early Ruso immigrants eventually constituted a labor diaspora and, despite being ethnically and religiously the most heterogeneous migrant movement from the Russian geography, Russian language, and culture continued their dominancy in the lives of at least the first immigrant generation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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10. Animating migration journeys from Colombia to Chile: expressing embodied experience through co-produced film.
- Author
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Ryburn, Megan
- Subjects
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EMIGRATION & immigration , *COLOMBIAN women authors , *FEMINISTS , *FEMINISM , *SOCIAL movements - Abstract
This paper analyses the process of co-producing an animated film about the migration journeys of Colombian women resident in Antofagasta, Chile. It first establishes the relationship between feminist epistemologies and arts-based methodologies, which hinges on embodiment. It then turns to a detailed discussion of using film co-production as a research method for accessing and expressing embodied experiences of migration. This discussion highlights how moments of discomfort (Gokariksel, Hawkins, Neubert, and Smith, 2021) experienced by the researcher motivated the search for a more collaborative methodological approach that was better attuned to lived experience. This included striving towards more inclusive practices with respect to recruitment, anonymity, and confidentiality. Moments of discomfort also revealed how care and caring responsibilities are entangled with research, and how they gender possibilities of participation and production for community co-producers and artists, as well as for researchers. Finally, through discomfort, lessons were learned about the politics of representing experiences of migration, violence, and endurance, as well as joy. The paper concludes that, whilst by no means a panacea, collaborative arts-based research methods can offer an innovative toolset for exploring embodied experience and for navigating the relational and representational complexities attendant to research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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11. Negotiating Work-Family Transitions: Reverse Family Migration among Second-Generation Hong Kong Mothers.
- Author
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Ngan, Lucille Lok Sun
- Subjects
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FAMILIES , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *FAMILY unity (Law) - Abstract
Gendered and generational understandings of circular migration are scant in studies of Chinese family migration. Filling this gap, this paper draws on in-depth interviews with twenty-six returnee families to examine the work–family transitions of previously employed, overseas-educated mothers who have re-migrated from Hong Kong to Canada, Australia, the United States, or the United Kingdom. These overseas-educated returnee mothers possess transnational backgrounds that differentiate them from most first-generation immigrant mothers. This paper shows that, despite this distinction, reverse migration leads to compromised careers and domestication for these women, although they accept, and in some cases embrace, such compromises. This study elucidates how both husbands and wives in these families justify women's post-migration changes in their work and caregiving roles. It argues that beyond economic rationalization, interrelated gender, cultural, transnational, and family lifestyle dimensions distinctively impact how second-generation returnee mothers negotiate work–family transitions. This paper offers new insights involving generational and gendered dimensions into the study of Chinese family migration. It also widens the discussion of the impact of family migration on skilled immigrant women in transnational circuits beyond its focus on the lives of first-generation skilled immigrant women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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12. Revisiting the punitiveness of deportation.
- Author
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Spalding, Amanda
- Subjects
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DEPORTATION , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *CRIMINOLOGY , *NONCITIZEN criminals ,EUROPEAN Convention on Human Rights - Abstract
Immigration measures such as deportation are currently not regarded as punitive and there has been little exploration of this from a legal perspective. This paper will consider this issue in depth, covering little discussed case law from the European Court of Human Rights. It will also explore how this legal position on deportation does not reflect the findings of other disciplines such as criminology and sociology on how immigration measures are used and experienced as punitive. This paper will build on existing literature by demonstrating the significance of a recent development in UK law to this debate. Section 47 of the Nationality and Borders Act 2022 (NBA 2022) introduced a 'stop the clock' provision into the Early Removal Scheme for foreign national prisoners. This new provision may prompt the judiciary to revisit the question of whether deportation is punitive in some contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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13. Politics of photographs: construction and consolidation of identities during Assam movement.
- Author
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Kakoty, Rukmini
- Subjects
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VIOLENCE , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *PHOTOGRAPH albums - Abstract
Images could be understood as a medium that does not only reflect and represent the socio-political dynamics but diffuses and perpetuates ideas and perceptions. Images, as an integral part of media, play a huge role in this dissemination through their framing, contents, signs, and symbols. In order to comprehend this power of photographs, the paper will look into the frames, as expounded by Judith Butler, which determine the visibility and invisibility of subjects in a photograph. This paper deals with the Assam Movement, which happened in Assam, a northeastern state of India, as a reaction to the migration from neighboring Bangladesh. The paper will also delve into how the newspapers, as a production of the class structure, impress upon the symbolic environment in which peoples' subjectivities are formulated. It is a study of how photographs published in newspapers can lay the foundations for the construction of an identity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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14. Assembling exits and returns: the extraterritorial production of repatriation for Filipino migrant workers.
- Author
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S. Liao, Karen Anne
- Subjects
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REPATRIATION , *MIGRANT labor , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *JURISDICTION - Abstract
Research on the extraterritorial processes of migration governance has developed a strong focus on immigration states’ externalisation management and the diaspora strategies of emigration states. In labour migration, the scholarship on migrant-sending states has largely focused on the systematic processes of recruitment and employment of migrant workers; in contrast, the question of how migrant workers are extraterritorially governed in return has received less attention, despite its importance for understanding migration governance beyond sending country jurisdiction. This paper contributes to this area of research by investigating how migrant workers are repatriated from host countries during disruptions. Using assemblage thinking as analytical lens, I consider repatriation as an extraterritorial, emergent process, shaped by the relations among state and non-state actors, material and technological resources, and the role of street-level actors. Focusing on the case of the Philippines, I draw from over 30 key informant interviews with repatriation actors to examine how the exit stage of the repatriation process is constructed, mobilised and negotiated for Filipino migrant workers, in ways that reveal the possibilities and challenges of migrant protection in host countries. The paper shows how assemblage and street level analysis can illuminate the different ways migration processes emerge amid disturbances in extraterritorial space. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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15. The Experience of Anti-Chinese Racism in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) Before and During Covid-19: An Intersectional Analysis.
- Author
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GUIDA MAN, KEEFER WONG, and ERNEST LEUNG
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RACISM , *COVID-19 pandemic , *STEREOTYPES , *MICROAGGRESSIONS , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *CITIZENSHIP - Abstract
This paper aims to fill a lacuna in existing literature by adopting a feminist and intersectional framework and analysis to examine the experience of racism of individual Chinese residing in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA), and to explicate how macro and meso-structural processes impact Chinese individuals and communities during COVID-19. We draw on data analysis from a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) funded research project, and focus our analysis of the experience of anti-Chinese racism before and during COVID on i) context of racialization and racism, i.e., geopolitics, Chinese culture and identity, and media representation; and ii) experiences of racialization and racism, in the form of stereotyping, microaggression, and verbal acts of racism. We demonstrate that anti-Chinese racism has persisted prior to COVID-19, however, the pandemic exacerbates precipitating racist ideologies, policies and practices, allowing them to manifest and proliferate. In particular, our paper elucidates how different forms of antiChinese racism interact with individuals’ intersectionalities (i.e., race, class, gender, age, ability, English/French fluency, immigration/citizenship status, etc.) to further complicate how individuals are differentially targeted and how they experience racism differently. As well, our paper illuminates how individual interviewees utilize their agency to devise strategies to deal with anti-Asian racism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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16. Making workable knowledge for asylum decisions: on tinkering with country of origin information.
- Author
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van der Kist, Jasper
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL refugees , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *FEMINISTS , *UNCERTAINTY , *DECISION making - Abstract
As the number of asylum seekers grew, and flight stories became more complex, many Western governments deployed national research units, tasked with producing reliable Country of Origin Information (COI) to assist officials, judges and policy-makers in decision-making. Building on ethnographic research at Staatendokumentation, the COI unit at the Austrian Federal Office for Immigration and Asylum, the paper argues that country research practices can best be understood as 'tinkering' – e.g. making use of know-how, equipment, material sources at disposal to produce workable COI in conditions of uncertainty. The concept of tinkering is derived from science and technology studies (STS) and brings into view how the research professionals cobble together a workable version of reality with the methodologies and materials at hand. Moreover, it highlights how country research involves continuous modification and adjustments to satisfy the needs of the unwitting case officer as the end-user of COI reports. Finally, using insights from feminist science and technology studies, the paper shows how country experts foster care for some things – i.e. the workload of case officers – at the expense of others – i.e. the experience of the asylum seeker. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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17. Devices of suspicion. An analysis of Frontex screening materials at the registration and identification center in Moria.
- Author
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Pollozek, Silvan and Passoth, Jan-Hendrik
- Subjects
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MORIA , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *BORDER security , *QUESTIONNAIRES - Abstract
The identification of migrants and the creation of data identities lies at the core of datafied forms of migration and border control. In recent years, Frontex has made identification to one of its key tasks and conducted so-called screenings in many EU member states. Yet only little is known about the screening materials in use. Based on an ethnographic inquiry of Frontex' data practices, this paper analyses Frontex booklets, dossiers, questionnaires, images, and forms and studies how they structure the situation of identification. Making use of research in science and technology studies and recent research on suspicion and credibility assessment, it argues that those materials not only compile information but work as socio-material devices of suspicion that render migrants into fraudsters and translate peoples' actions, stories, and performances into accounts of truthfulness or deceit. As devices, they frame cases, script interactions, code statements, create stigmata of belonging, and produce purified accounts, and thus enact multiple forms of suspicion. The paper concludes with a critical reflection about the credibility of those materials and speculates about how devices could be designed otherwise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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18. The hidden half: the double lives of Chinese migrant women in post-war Britain.
- Author
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Zhou, Sha
- Subjects
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WOMEN migrant labor , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *FAMILY roles - Abstract
Drawing on oral histories of first-generation migrant women, this paper explores Chinese women's role in financing migrant households, mothering children and promoting the well-being of the British Chinese community after 1945. It argues that, with better educational attainment and wider participation in professional occupations Chinese migrant women played an increasingly essential yet unrecognised role in private and public lives. This paper expands knowledge of Chinese women's experiences in contemporary international migration and confirms the necessity of understanding migration through the lens of gender to reveal evolving gendered family roles within migrant households and migrant women's manifold but unrecognised merits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. A listening guide analysis of an immigrant woman’s journey away from the changing landscape of home.
- Author
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Sullu, Bengi
- Subjects
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YOUNG women , *LANDSCAPE changes , *RATIONALIZATION (Psychology) , *PSYCHOLOGY , *EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
Psychological science frequently treats the human psyche as isolated from the environment within which it exists. In this paper, I employ the Listening Guide method, a relational, embodied, dynamic form of qualitative inquiry, to conduct and analyze an interview with a young Turkish woman on her journey as she relocates to a city in Western Europe. Tracing the psychological logic within her narrative leads me to find that she holds together the psychologically incongruent processes of longing for vividly remembered places that are pervasively lost and rationalization regarding why they are not to be missed. Interpreting this discovery against the backdrop of her inner world, I find that for her, remembering and longing for places go hand in hand with her desire to envision, revitalize and reconstruct elements of remembered and felt places during the immigration journey. This research has implications for immigration studies as it demonstrates the psyche as embedded in places. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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20. Long-Time Coherent Integration Method for Passive Bistatic Radar Using Frequency Hopping Signals.
- Author
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Chen, Gang, Biao, Xiaowei, Jin, Yi, Xu, Changzhi, Ping, Yifan, and Wang, Sujun
- Subjects
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PASSIVE radar , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *FOURIER transforms , *BISTATIC radar , *ROTATIONAL motion - Abstract
Long-time coherent integration using frequency hopping signals is a challenging problem for passive bistatic radar due to its frequency hopping characteristics. Apart from range walk, range curve, and Doppler frequency migration, Doppler diffusion caused by frequency hopping characteristics occurs within the observation time, which also lowers the detection performance. To deal with this problem, a novel coherent integration method for frequency hopping signals based on passive bistatic radar is proposed in this paper. In this novel method, range curve and range walk are eliminated by applying generalized Keystone transform. Then, Doppler frequency migration caused by the target's acceleration is compensated for by a parameter search with a designed search scope. Finally, Doppler frequency migration caused by frequency hopping characteristics is compensated for by designing a new acceleration compensation function and a revised rotation factor for Fourier transform. Since migration effects caused by frequency hopping characteristics are considered and compensated for when using frequency hopping signals, the weak target echo can be better integrated in the observation time compared to when using the existing methods. The simulation results and performance analysis illustrate the effectiveness of the proposed method. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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21. “Why Should I Move to the Countryside?” Exploring New Attempts for Fostering Inclusion in Rural Communities.
- Author
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TANOTRA, RITIKA and POOJARY, MONISHA
- Subjects
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RURAL development , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *BIRTH rate , *NEWCOMERS (Sociology) , *COMMUNITIES - Abstract
In 2019, the Canadian government deployed the Rural and Northern Immigration Pilot (RNIP). The program provides a pathway to permanent residency for skilled immigrant workers. It aims to address key challenges associated with labour market shortages that are a result of increasing retirement populations, declining birthrates, and the “exodus” of youth to urban cities (Bousmah and Grenier 2022). Unlike other programs, the RNIP aims to attract newcomers through a “community economic development-driven model” where local employers and community partners aid newcomers in securing suitable employment and providing services and mentorships to encourage inclusion and long-term settlement (IRCC 2022a). Although pathways to permanent residency provided through pilot programs can be attractive, their effectiveness in retaining skilled workers within underpopulated rural regions remains understudied. Using content analysis, this paper examines the implementation of the RNIP in Ontario (specifically North Bay, Sault Ste. Marie, Sudbury, Thunder Bay, and Timmins). Using federal and region-specific websites and community reports, we employ a case study approach to compare strategies and community initiatives relative to the needs of each region. We analyze how these regions are implementing this “community economic development-driven model” and question whether these measures are successful in creating feelings of belonging and inclusion among immigrants – factors we argue are essential for longterm settlement. Without addressing reasons for why long-term settlement may be unattractive and difficult for locals within these communities, newcomers that aim to settle in these regions may experience challenges that remain unrecognized. Overall, we consider whether community membership and long-term settlement can be adequately addressed through the implementation of such pilot programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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22. When women left their patrie: transborder mobility, women's sexual agency, and moral panic in Turkey.
- Author
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Artan, Zeynep Selen
- Subjects
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TRANSBORDER data flow , *EMPLOYMENT agencies , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *TURKISH women poets , *ARCHIVAL research - Abstract
The labor exchange agreements signed between Turkey and several European countries in the 1960s resulted in a large population move to Europe. While the majority of workers were men, the share of women had increased over the years. Initially overlooked, women's transborder mobility came under public scrutiny from the mid-1960s onwards. Migration scholarship has demonstrated that sending states may impose restrictive policies on women's transborder mobility to regulate their sexuality. However, this research often relies on a binary model (travel bans/no bans) where attention is paid mostly to cases in the former group. Under the rubric of moral panic, this paper offers an analytical framework to explore how control over women's sexuality can be maintained in contexts where no travel bans are adopted. Drawing on archival research, this study reveals that women's mobility triggered a moral panic in Turkey, prompting various political demands for prohibitive policies, which were met with state reluctance. Still, the disciplinary control over women's sexuality was maintained through a transnational network of ethno-national kin, spontaneous and independent of any state authority. While it was not designed to fill any power vacuum, the network effectively exercised disciplinary control over numerous Turkish women, employing discursive and punitive practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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23. The moderating effect of context of reception, labour market and education system on the migrant-native gap in university expectations.
- Author
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Palomo Lario, Carlos
- Subjects
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LABOR market , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *IMMIGRANT students , *STATISTICAL hypothesis testing - Abstract
This paper explores the cross-national variation in the gap in university expectations between native and second-generation immigrant students and whether it is moderated by characteristics of the country of residence of children of immigrants. Three domains have been considered at the national level: the context of reception of immigration (legal status of non-national immigrants and views about immigration of the local population); labour market segmentation and education systems (external differentiation). The study tests the general hypothesis that settings that enhance individual autonomy and widen room for choice by removing formal and informal barriers that migrants and their descendants face in everyday life and in specific domains (education and labour market) are associated with a larger gap in university expectations that is favourable to children of immigrants (a larger 'immigrant advantage'). Applying a two-stage analysis to PISA 2015 data, results provide overall support for this hypothesis. More welcoming contexts of reception are associated with a larger immigrant advantage. External differentiation is negatively associated with it, both for students attending general and vocational tracks, especially the latter, as compared to non-tracked students attending common tracks. There is not a robust association between labour market segmentation and the university expectations' gap. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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24. Sephardic longshoremen at the Haifa Port (1933-1936): dynamics of skill-selective labor immigration from Thessaloniki to mandatory Palestine.
- Author
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Srougo, Shai
- Subjects
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STEVEDORES , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *FOREIGN workers , *ZIONISM - Abstract
This paper focuses on the Zionist challenges regarding "Jewish labor" through the micro-history of the Salonikian longshoremen on the eve of their emigration from Greece (early 1930s), and during the first period of integration in the Haifa Port (1933–1936). To date, the hegemonic perspective on Salonikian longshoremen has emphasized the immigrants' crucial role in overcoming the Arab-dominated port labor market. However, while tending to paint a romantic picture of national fervor, this Zionist view obscured the economic, ethnic, and cultural confrontation involved in realizing "Jewish labor". These multiple forms of confrontation occurred not only between ethnic groups (Jewish-Arab struggle) but also within the local Jewish labor community. Re-visiting the Zionist agenda from the vantage point of both the Salonikian longshoremen and the Zionist establishment enables to present largely neglected aspects of the complex relations between the Sephardic Salonikians and the Ashkenazi/Eastern European-dominated Jewish labor establishment. Due to heavy doubts about the Salonikian commitment to the uphill battle for "Jewish labor," the Haifa Labor Council excluded the latter from the labor community. Consequently, the cultural marginality of the Salonikians weakened the Zionist vision of uniting all Jewish wage earners into a cohesive working class in the middle of the 1930s. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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25. Do dependents matter? Exploring multiple dimensions of attitudes toward immigration and immigrants.
- Author
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Rinken, Sebastian and Mariscal-de-Gante, Álvaro
- Subjects
- *
IMMIGRATION policy , *LATENT variables , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *OPERATIONAL definitions , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Most extant research on natives' attitudes toward immigration and immigrants (ATII) pays scant attention to the explanandum: predictors are widely assumed to apply across attitudinal facets regardless of how the dependent was defined and operationalized. This paper employs a sequence of factor and regression analyses to explore the dimensional structure of ATII in Spain, based on survey data collected in 2020 (N = 2,344). The most parsimonious factor solution for our dataset's broad basket of attitude gauges distinguishes impact assessments and migration policy preferences ('attitudes toward immigration') neatly from sentiment toward various immigrant groups ('attitudes toward immigrants'); the ensuing latent variables correlate with differentiated sets of predictors. Predictors based on extant theorizing prove highly pertinent for immigration attitudes, but contribute less to explaining anti-immigrant sentiment. In a more fine-grained factor solution, conceptually coherent ramifications emerge within both of these main dimensions; again, the more nuanced attitude components are associated with differentiated predictor profiles. These findings caution against the widely held notion that any sentiment or appraisal regarding international migration and migrants expresses a general attitude in this realm, instead encouraging researchers to acknowledge the complexity of ATII and pursue facet-specific explanations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Multisensory approaches in migration research: reflections and pathways.
- Author
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Desille, Amandine and Nikielska-Sekuła, Karolina
- Subjects
- *
LITERATURE & visual culture , *VISUAL communication , *EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
The rapidly developing field of visual methods and growing body of literature employing visual methodologies in the collection of data have contributed to the acknowledgement of the senses with a prevalence of sight in the research process. Yet, the 'sensuous scholarship' is not always considered in the systematic methodological process when visual methodologies are at stake. The aim of this paper is to problematise this stance in the context of the particular field of migration research. Our aim is to 'de-essentialise the visual' by presenting cases from our studies on immigrant communities in Norway, Turkey, Israel, and Portugal, and to exemplify how the embodied knowledge gained by both the researcher and research participants can contribute to research findings. We argue that sensuous experiences are part of researchers' positionality and influence the intellectual outcomes of our work. We support this stance with four claims that relate to a researcher's physical presence in the field. We claim that (1) our work suffers an intellectual bias, (2) our geographical bias influences the interpretation of sensory experiences, (3) we tend to overstudy groups for which we have sympathy/empathy, and (4) the sensing scholar does physical labour. As for the perspective of research participants, we argue that the attention to their sensory experiences may bring knowledge on important aspects of their livelihoods and can give in-depth insight into micro, meso, and macro processes the respondents are entangled with. We claim that (5) senses influence the inclusion-exclusion dynamic, (6) senses are drivers of ethnic boundary maintenance, and (7) emplacement is mediated by senses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. A PEOPLE-CENTERED APPROACH TO DESIGNING AND EVALUATING COMMUNITY JUSTICE WORKER PROGRAMS IN THE UNITED STATES.
- Author
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Burnett, Matthew and Sandefur, Rebecca L.
- Subjects
- *
RESTORATIVE justice , *JURISDICTION , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *LANDLORD-tenant lawsuits , *NATIVE American courts - Abstract
Around the country, jurisdictions are exploring new routes to expand access to justice by empowering community justice workers to provide legal services. Though such activities are often regarded as new, some have existed for decades -people without law licenses have long been authorized to provide representation in immigration matters, Tribal courts, and for those incarcerated in prisons and jails, as well as before a wide range of state and federal administrative agencies and otherfora. Recent eforts are seeking to expand community justice work, both by enlarging the labor force of justice workers and by empowering them to provide more useful and impactful legal assistance. For example, in November 2022, the Alaska Supreme Court approved a waiver of unauthorized practice of law restrictions that will allow Alaska Legal Services Corporation (ALSC), the largest civil legal aid provider in the state, to train and supervise community justice workers who live throughout Alaska's many rural and remote communities, including many where no attorneys live or even visit. Delaware's legislature took action on a key inequality in landlord-tenant law: in the past, landlords were permitted to employ non-lawyers for representation, but tenants were required to represent themselves or find an attorney. Delaware corrected this by permitting registered agents to appear in court on both sides of an eviction case. Andfornearlyfour years, the Utah Supreme Court has been operating the world'sfirst legal services regulatory sandbox, a regulatory space where traditional rules restricting legal advice and advocacy to lawyers can be relaxed in an environment where consumer protection is monitored in real time. This paper reviews established community justice worker models that have been serving low-income and excluded communities in the United States for more than 50 years, including accredited immigration representatives, Tribal lay advocates, and jailhouse lawyers and emerging justice worker models advanced in Alaska, Arizona, Delaware, and Utah in the last five years. These real-world activities offer opportunities for learning about whatfactors make justice work not only effective at resolving people's justice problems or encouraging their engagement with law, but also what makes justice worker programs sustainable over the long term and scalable to meet the enormous volume of Americans' unmet legal needs. To encourage that learning, we offer a people-centered and evidence-based framework for designing and evaluating community justice worker models that focus on program effectiveness, scalability, and sustainability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
28. Strategies to Exclude: Temporariness and Return/Readmission Policies of the EU.
- Author
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Samuk, Şahizer, Ince-Beqo, Gül, and Hennebry, Jenna L.
- Subjects
- *
CRISIS management , *HUMAN migrations , *RESEARCH questions , *SOCIAL conflict , *PATIENT readmissions , *EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
Migration governance, migration management and migration crises have been key themes among migration scholars and governments over the last decade. Historically, systemic political economic crises are accompanied by the scapegoating of migrants, often as a strategy to shift the focus away from political and economic decisions taken by states. The EU has been no exception, and political and social tensions around migration are arguably at an all-time high, as European governments aim to protect their interests and manage their borders amidst increasing migration pressures globally. In this paper, we will examine these three EU immigration prevention strategies, with a focus on the recently adopted Pact on Migration and Asylum. Specifically, we ask the following research question: what are the roles of temporariness and return/readmission as important EU strategies to hinder, stop, and exclude the movement of migrants to EU (and Schengen)? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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29. Visa-on-arrival, ECOWAS-free Mobility and the Securitisation of the Intra-African Migration in Nigeria.
- Author
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Omotuyi, Sunday, Apeloko, David Olubunmi, Bello, Moruf Ayodele, and Chukwudi, Celestina Ekene
- Subjects
- *
EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
Over the years, Nigeria's regional hegemonic leadership in (West) Africa, especially within the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) region, has been debated within academic and foreign relations circles. A major component of this regional leadership aspiration was its quest for a 'borderless Africa'. As an important arrowhead of its pro-African foreign policy, the Nigerian government proactively crafted a benign national border policy to give practical expression to the free mobility of persons and goods within the West African subregion. Despite a demonstrable commitment to free mobility within Africa over the years, Abuja suddenly imposed a restrictive border policy shortly after it signed the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) agreement and approved the contentious visa-on-arrival for African migrants. Considering this context, this study makes three arguments: First, it interrogates the rationale behind the liberal border diplomacy of the Nigerian government. Secondly, the paper contends that the inability to 'silence the guns' in Africa despite all efforts has seriously militated against the aspiration for intra-African mobility and borderless Community in West Africa. Lastly, the study examines the dire implications of Nigerian nationalistic border diplomacy and its declining soft power for the future of 'borderless West Africa'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. Within‐group sex ratios predict growth of social mole‐rats.
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Bensch, H. M., Thorley, J., Finn, K. T., and Zöttl, M.
- Subjects
- *
SEX ratio , *PHILOPATRY , *MORTALITY , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *FEMALES - Abstract
Groups of wild animals can vary considerably in their composition, including in the proportion of group members who are male or female, that is the within‐group sex ratio. Variation in within‐group sex ratios can arise from active adjustment of litter sex ratios by mothers, from sex differences in mortality, dispersal and immigration, or from stochastic variation in recruitment. Variation in the within‐group sex ratio can have consequences for within‐group competition and can affect individual life histories throughout development. In this paper, we explore which processes may generate variation in within‐group sex ratios in wild Damaraland mole‐rats (Fukomys damarensis), a singular cooperative breeder. We investigate whether within‐group sex ratios predict the growth, body condition and philopatry of individuals. We show that although the population‐level sex ratio is balanced, skewed within‐group sex ratios are common, particularly among small groups. Our data suggests that stochastic variation in the sex of recruits explains natural variation in the sex ratio of wild groups. Non‐breeding individuals in groups with a sex ratio biased towards their own sex grow more slowly than individuals in groups biased towards the opposite sex, suggesting that intra‐sexual competition may decrease growth rates. We suggest that the costs of competition may contribute to the large variation in growth observed in social mole‐rat groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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31. Controlling Australian Immigration: Holocaust Survivors in the Post‐War Years.
- Author
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Markus, Andrew and Rutland, Suzanne D.
- Subjects
- *
UNDOCUMENTED immigrants , *HOLOCAUST survivors , *IMMIGRATION law , *RACIALIZATION , *EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
Recent studies of immigration have questioned assumptions about the effectiveness of government controls. In her work on illegal Jewish immigration to the United States, Libby Garland argues that official immigration quotas may not reflect actual numbers of immigrants and critiques historians for being too ready to take immigration laws at face value. Mae Ngai's work on the racialisation of "illegal aliens" in the United States also documents the failure of legislation to curb illegal immigration. Situating her study within this historiography, Sheila Fitzpatrick has re‐examined Australian measures that aimed to limit the entry of Holocaust survivors and concluded that the number of arrivals was substantially higher than previously recognised, in part because migrants and their sponsors found ways around restrictions. In substantiation, Fitzpatrick drew on the archives of the International Refugee Organization and the Australian Government, and the papers of the country's first Minister for Immigration, Arthur Calwell. This article revisits Fitzpatrick's sources, as well as the records of Jewish organisations she did not consult. It establishes that the Australian government effectively limited Jewish immigration and the estimates of earlier scholars were substantially correct. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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32. The effects of emigration on the sustainability of the Pension system in North Macedonia.
- Author
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Raveni, Arbresh, Ismaili, Diturije, and Ollogu, Elisabeta Bajrami
- Subjects
- *
YOUNG adults , *PENSIONS , *PENSION reform , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *SUSTAINABILITY , *STOCHASTIC analysis - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to empirically investigate the effects of emigration on the sustainability of the Pension system in North Macedonia. In this study three different sets of tests are used for empirical analysis: a stochastic forecasting method in order to predict the movement of demographic and fiscal variables in the future; a time series investigation in order to quantify the effect of emigration on pension expenditure, and a microsimulation dynamic model in order to analyze the potential effects of different pension reform alternatives on the sustainability of the pension system in North Macedonia. The results suggest that mass emigration has a significant negative effect on pension sustainability in North Macedonia. The results suggest that massive emigration of young people from North Macedonia will negatively affect the growth prospect and labor market in the future. The results suggest that immediate reforms are needed and gradually increasing the contribution rate to 20% and retirement age for men and women to 65 years would stabilize the Pension system in North Macedonia in the long run. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
33. Do we need a border wall? The social perception of 'walling' the Polish-Russian border after the outbreak of the war in Ukraine.
- Author
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Studzińska, Dominika and Żęgota, Krzysztof
- Subjects
- *
RUSSIAN invasion of Ukraine, 2022- , *SOCIAL perception , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *BORDER security - Abstract
The project of progressive securitisation of the Polish – Russian borderland is implemented with huge support from local communities. Inhabitants of the Polish border area support all possible tools intended for the protection of the Polish – Russian border. The results also show that the war in Ukraine and potential threats of migration from the Kaliningrad Oblast change the social optics with regard to the border with Russia. The present paper seeks to investigate how the local communities of Polish border zone with Russia perceive the activities conducted in order to reinforce the defensive function of the Polish – Russian border. For this purpose, a survey was carried out among inhabitants of the Polish border area with Russia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
34. Understanding Tibetan Exile: a review of literature and bibliometric analysis (1960-2021).
- Author
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D'Rozario, Priyanka, Vohra, Prince, and Mishra, Sunil Kumar
- Subjects
- *
TIBETANS , *BIBLIOMETRICS , *REFUGEES , *EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
This research aims to use VOSviewer to undertake bibliometric analysis to map the primary areas of Tibetan Exile literature to create a taxonomy of topic subareas and a research plan on this issue. Two hundred eighty-one papers published between 1960 and 2021, which were extracted from the Scopus database, have been examined to evaluate their interconnection, clusters, and citations to build a text-based map. The study highlights the most cited document, essential journals publishing on the issue, important keywords, prominent authors, and discussions on Tibetan refugees; also classifying the subthemes and the leading author's name. The findings will guide researchers interested in contemporary Tibetan studies. This categorization table of subthemes explored in the last 61 years comprises the following subjects: identity & human rights, immigration, government, media, health, international politics, Dalai Lama, nationhood, preservation of culture, resettlement, and a new generation of Tibetans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. 'Do not disturb': patience, social control and good citizenship in the Canadian family reunification process.
- Author
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Geoffrion, Karine
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL control , *CITIZENSHIP , *DEMOGRAPHIC surveys , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *GOVERNMENT regulation - Abstract
This paper focuses on the Canadian spousal reunification process and its specific bureaucratic temporality, in relation to citizenship and mechanisms of social control. Based on ethnographic research in a Facebook support group of Canadian women married to a non-Canadian man, I examine the role of online communities in reinforcing compliance to immigration slow temporalities at the expense of group members' urgent love temporalities. Spousal reunification applicants were recommended not to intervene as long as their file was still within official processing times. Those who acted too soon showed low compliance with government regulations and were called back to order by other applicants. The promotion of discourses that valorise both patience and proactivity deployed at the 'right time' – when delays are expired – constitute mechanisms of social control and contribute to shaping 'good', 'informed' and thus deserving citizens, in the context of marriage fraud suspicion. This article builds on the literature on waiting in immigration processes and articulates it with concepts of good citizenship. It reflects on how online immigration support groups become spaces in which applicants police and discipline each other along gendered lines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. German is the holy grail: language, migration and ethnolingual belonging in transnational spaces.
- Author
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Isiaka, Adeiza Lasisi
- Subjects
- *
LANGUAGE & languages , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *LINGUISTICS , *NIGERIANS , *LANGUAGE acquisition - Abstract
This study explores the dynamics of migration in the growing prominence of German in Nigeria, and the ways self-perception of language competence shapes ethnolingual belonging and future trajectories of transmigrant Nigerians residing in Germany. Drawing on promotional texts of German language schools and migration-themed discourses on Nairaland, I show that while German is mainly espoused for migration purposes back at home, most Nigerians in Germany conceptualise belonging and otherness through the lens of language proficiency—a perspective that rationalises their inclination towards relocating to Anglophone destinations for greater linguistic capital and social inclusion. I argue that the narrowed view of German as a migration asset impedes its wider adoption and mainstreaming in the Nigerian linguistic market, and illuminate the complex nexus between language, racialisation, migration, and belonging, as well as the tenuous link between language learning and acculturation. The paper offers insights into the ways language competence shapes ethnolingual membership and migration patterns in a globalised world and suggests a nuanced understanding of new language acquisition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Emigration and tax revenue.
- Author
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Gu, Yuanyuan and Ayala Garcia, Jhorland
- Subjects
- *
VALUE-added tax , *INTERNAL revenue , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *ANIMAL disease models , *CAPITAL gains ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The World Migration Report 2020 shows that the number of international migrants increased from 84 million in 1970–272 million in 2019, accounting for 3.5% of the world’s population. This paper investigates the aggregated effect of emigration on the tax revenue of sending countries with a focus on developing nations. Using a gravity approach, we construct a time-varying exogenous instrument out of measures of changes in transportation technology from geographic time-invariant dyadic characteristics. Then, we follow an instrumental variable approach where we use our predicted emigration rate as an instrument of the observed migration rate. The results show that the predicted emigration rate is a good instrument of the current emigration rate for developing countries, and that there is a positive aggregated effect of emigration on tax revenue of sending countries. The results vary depending on the type of tax: emigration increases goods and services tax revenue, but it decreases income, profit, and capital gains tax revenue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. United we stand, divided we fall. Union organization and political activism among Jewish woodworkers in early-twentieth-century Buenos Aires.
- Author
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Koppmann, Walter L.
- Subjects
- *
ACTIVISM , *WOODWORKERS , *WORKING class , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *JEWS , *SOCIAL conflict - Abstract
This article focuses on the formation of the working class in Argentina, specifically within the Jewish East-European sector of the furniture industry during the early twentieth century. It examines Jewish immigration, their integration into the timber sector of Buenos Aires, and diverse labour relationships. Through an analysis of social and labour conflicts, the paper aims to study how Yiddish-speaking workers integrated into a highly cosmopolitan working class, put, at the same time, into a broader perspective of Jewish immigration into the Global South. By doing so, we hope to enhance our understanding of the significant role played by Jewish workers in the trajectory of the Argentine working class. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The inconsistency of immigration policy: the limits of "Top-down" approaches.
- Author
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Vigneswaran, Darshan and de León, Ernesto
- Subjects
- *
IMMIGRATION policy , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
To what extent can we infer government objectives from policies on paper? We show that this assumption in migration scholarship is problematic because most states adopt immigration policies that are inconsistent, combining or alternating between contradictory objectives. Further, we develop a measure to track how immigration policy inconsistency varies over time. We use these methods to demonstrate that some of the main theories of policy inconsistency, which focus on variables located at the national scale, find limited empirical support. Based on these findings, we make the case for further research into the local scale of politics, focusing on the agency of street-level bureaucrats and migrants. We then discuss the potential for crossing quantitative and qualitative divides in order to further explore the impact of local factors on national immigration policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Contextualización transformativa de Educación Intercultural Bilingüe: A migrant Indigenous Andean community in the Galapagos Islands.
- Author
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Román, Diego, Masaquiza, Daniel, Ward, Katherine, and Gonzalez-Quizhpe, Luis
- Subjects
- *
MINORITIES , *TRADITIONAL knowledge , *CREATIVE ability , *EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
Latin American countries have experienced demographic and linguistic changes since Educación Intercultural Bilingüe (EIB) was first developed. Yet, ministries of education continue to impose generic models that do not reflect the realities of migrant Indigenous groups, who experience linguistic and ethnic minoritisation processes. Based on our ongoing work with a migrant Salasaka Indigenous community from the Ecuadorian Andes living in Galapagos, a region in which the majority of the population does not identify as Indigenous nor speak Kichwa, we propose Contextualización Transformativa de Educación Intercultural Bilingüe (CTEIB). CTEIB 1) considers processes of enacting Indigeneity in migratory contexts; 2) reflects the dialogic influence of place on migrant Indigenous communities' languages, traditional ecological knowledge, and culture; and 3) acknowledges the agency and creativity of Indigenous groups as transformative agents in maintaining their languages and Indigeneity outside their ancestral lands. This paper describes the theoretical underpinnings of CTEIB by building on the work of the Salasaka community in contextualising and adapting the Ecuadorian EIB programme to Galapagos. Beyond the importance of this work for migrant Indigenous communities, this work advocates for EIB programmes to address Indigenous migration in their design and implementation with implications for educational researchers, policy makers, and educators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Introduction: towards migration-violence creative pathways.
- Author
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McIlwaine, Cathy and Ryburn, Megan
- Subjects
- *
EMIGRATION & immigration , *METHODOLOGY , *DECOLONIZATION , *FEMINISTS , *COMMUNITY-based participatory research - Abstract
This introduction to the special issue on 'Arts-based approaches, migration and violence: intersectional and creative perspectives' highlights the complexities and paradoxes in relation to existing debates in the field. Drawing on the emerging body of rich work that has recognised the importance of arts-based approaches within research on migration and violence, the introduction provides a critical assessment of the nature of the connections between the two in methodological, empirical and conceptual ways. It explores these intersections across multiple geographical scales, temporalities and imaginations through innovative creative research. In contributing to these debates, the introduction and the papers included in this special issue examine the potential for new insights, understanding and transformations to emerge through engaging with visual, performative, visceral, embodied and collaborative arts-based research. Yet, it also addresses some epistemological and ethical concerns including tensions around participation, positionality, co-production and the decolonisation of research. The introduction also aims to move beyond evaluating the benefits and drawbacks of arts-based approaches and provides a conceptual frame delineated as 'migration-violence creative pathways' that emphasise feminist and embodied perspectives. The frame does not prescribe how to engage with the creative arts, but rather encapsulates the variety of ways to do so. Finally, we set out an agenda for future creative research on migration-violence connections that highlights some practical, epistemological and conceptual suggestions for critically and productively engaging with arts-based approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Selective law enforcement at the intersection of ethnicity and entrepreneurship.
- Author
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Ceccagno, Antonella
- Subjects
- *
LAW enforcement , *ETHNICITY , *ENTREPRENEURSHIP , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *LOCAL government - Abstract
This paper discusses the inconsistent law enforcement which only targets Chinese manufacturing firms active in the Italian fashion industry. Theory building is deeply embedded in rich empirical data and in a dialogue with concepts and theories developed in a wide range of fields and subfields such as urban studies, development studies, studies on local governance, and migration studies. While focusing on dynamics unfolding at the local scale, the paper positions selective law enforcement measures into a wider, multi-layered context which encompasses shifts in the global division of labour, processes of capital investment and disinvestment putting pressure on territories, local policies of migrant inclusion/exclusion, and the trajectory of local production systems. I analyse non-enforcement of the law as an ethnicised battle over economic accumulation, with significant redistributive consequences. At the same time, I point at the role of ethnically selective forced compliance as a tool used by the stakeholders in the territory to counter the potential loss of political authority engendered by the impact of crucial global shifts on the locality. In short, the paper proposes a political economy perspective: it teases out the underlying logic of selective law enforcement disentangling its economic, social, axiological, ethnical, and ultimately political dimensions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Wellbeing Outcomes and Risk and Protective Factors for Parents with Migrant and Refugee Backgrounds from the Middle East in the First 1000 Days: A Systematic Review.
- Author
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Winter, Amelia Kate, Due, Clemence, and Ziersch, Anna
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL illness risk factors , *MENTAL illness prevention , *PREVENTION of mental depression , *RISK assessment , *MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *HEALTH services accessibility , *INFANT development , *HEALTH attitudes , *HEALTH status indicators , *RESEARCH funding , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *MATERNAL health services , *PSYCHOLOGY of refugees , *MOTHERS , *CHILD health services , *PARENT attitudes , *POSTPARTUM depression , *HELP-seeking behavior , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DISEASE prevalence , *LONELINESS , *PARENTING , *FAMILY roles , *FAMILIES , *PREGNANCY outcomes , *POPULATION geography , *EXPERIENCE , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *MEDLINE , *THEMATIC analysis , *MIGRANT labor , *CHILD development , *PATIENT-professional relations , *PSYCHOLOGY of parents , *ONLINE information services , *SOCIAL support , *PATIENT satisfaction , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *WELL-being , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *MENTAL depression , *SOCIAL isolation , *COMMUNICATION barriers , *COVID-19 pandemic , *PREGNANCY ,ANXIETY prevention - Abstract
The First 1000 Days (the period from conception to a child's second birthday) is an important developmental period. However, little is known about experiences of parents with refugee and migrant backgrounds during this period. A systematic review was conducted according to PRISMA guidelines. Publications were identified through searches of the Embase, PsycINFO, PubMed, and Scopus databases, critically appraised, and synthesised using thematic analysis. A total of 35 papers met inclusion criteria. Depressive symptomatology was consistently higher than global averages, however maternal depression conceptualisations differed across studies. Several papers reported changes in relationship dynamics as a result of having a baby post-migration. Consistent relationships were found between social and health support and wellbeing. Conceptualisations of wellbeing may differ among migrant families. Limited understanding of health services and relationships with health providers may impede help-seeking. Several research gaps were identified, particularly in relation to the wellbeing of fathers, and of parents of children over 12 months old. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. "Why Here?"—Pull Factors for the Attraction of Non-EU Immigrants to Rural Areas and Smaller Cities.
- Author
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Diogo, Elisete
- Subjects
- *
SMALL cities , *RURAL geography , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *COST of living , *COUNTRY of origin (Immigrants) , *QUALITY of life - Abstract
The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development recognizes the crucial role of the regional dimension for economic, social, and environmental development. Sustainable development may be linked to migration management to strategically disperse international migrants to regions in need of ameliorating rural challenges. This paper explores the features affecting international migrants' intentions to move to rural areas, such as Alentejo, Portugal, based on a set of micro-, mezzo-, and macro-sociological migration theories to support policymakers. This paper addresses the following research question: what motivates immigrants' decisions to move to rural regions, such as Alentejo, Portugal? Practitioners (n = 8) and migrants (n = 15) were interviewed, and then a thematic analysis supported by MaxQDA 2022 was conducted. The results suggest that there is a set of motives for international migrants to move to rural areas and smaller cities based on multilevel factors, both economic and non-economic, such as the following: employment availability and promises of work; lower living costs compared to bigger cities; quality of life; local services support; and echoes of the country of origin. Migrants' networks and seeking greater opportunities were consistent motives. The pull to rural areas, however, is a side effect of the attraction of Portugal and Europe as destinations. The conclusions highlight implications for policy and practice on migration and local development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. The effects of adult child migration and migration duration on the emotional health of rural elders in China.
- Author
-
Li, Aihong
- Subjects
- *
EMIGRATION & immigration , *MENTAL health , *ENDOWMENTS , *NOMADS , *ADULT children , *RURAL conditions , *COMPARATIVE studies , *MENTAL depression , *WELL-being , *OLD age - Abstract
A large body of literature shows that the emotional health of rural elders in China is negatively affected by the migration of their adult children. However, the precise mechanism that underpins this relationship has yet to be fully uncovered. This paper introduces two new dimensions of analysis to expand the understanding of this 'left behind' phenomenon, and offers statistical insights, theoretical explanations and policy recommendations, as well as suggestions for further study. Firstly, in this paper, rural elders have been distinguished based on whether all , or any , of their adult children have migrated. This distinction leads to the finding that rural elders suffer more adverse mental health impacts when all adult children from a household move away. Secondly, the temporal dimension of migration is investigated, finding that there is a 'turning point' after which the mental health of rural elders appears to recover after the migration of their adult children. Comparison of the two groups shows that rural elders who see any of their adult children migrate recover from depression twice as quickly as those who see all of their children migrate. Receiving financial support or providing child care can only partly mediate the negative influence of migration. Also, the level of depression and wellbeing of rural elders can be significantly moderated by the emotional closeness between them and their adult children. Providing (grand)child-care assistance and receiving economic support is shown to have smaller mitigating effects. This paper concludes with a discussion of how the notion of 'filial piety' could, directly and indirectly, play a role in the emotional health of rural elders, with policy implications provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Digital Practices of Negotiation: Social Workers at the Intersection of Migration and Social Policies in Switzerland and Belgium.
- Author
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ANDREETTA, SOPHIE and BORRELLI, LISA MARIE
- Subjects
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DIGITAL technology , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *DOCUMENTATION , *SOCIAL security , *SOCIAL workers , *GOVERNMENT policy , *RESEARCH funding , *NEGOTIATION , *INTERVIEWING , *ETHNOLOGY research , *FIELDWORK (Educational method) , *SOCIAL services , *NOMADS , *DECISION making , *ELECTRONIC data interchange , *INSTITUTIONAL cooperation , *RESEARCH methodology , *COMMUNICATION , *PUBLIC welfare , *AUTOMATION , *REFUGEES - Abstract
Paperwork has always been a central part of bureaucratic work. Over the last few years, bureaucratic procedures have become increasingly standardised and digitalised. Based on interviews and ethnographic fieldwork within welfare offices in Switzerland and Belgium, we reflect on the way evidence is constructed within social policy and cases built for or against noncitizen welfare recipients in order to show how paper truths are established and challenged. The focus on digital practices within public policy implementation highlights how it contributes to enhanced control mechanisms on the implementation level and how migration law continues to guide welfare governance for noncitizens. This allows targeting of the most marginalised groups, whose rights to access state support are institutionally impeded. Through database information flows, official forms, paper reports and face-to-face meetings, we further show how a hybrid form of bureaucratic work emerges, where direct contact with the client is still key, yet highly influenced by standardisation processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Latent Cumulative Disadvantage: US Immigrants' Reversed Economic Assimilation in Later Life.
- Author
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Ye, Leafia Z
- Subjects
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EMIGRATION & immigration , *IMMIGRANTS , *LABOR supply , *WAGES , *RETIREMENT planning - Abstract
One of the most salient findings in research on immigration has been that immigrants experience substantial economic mobility as they accumulate more years in the host-society labor force and eventually approach earnings parity with their native-born counterparts. However, we do not know whether this progress is sustained in retirement. In this paper, I develop a framework of Latent Cumulative (Dis)advantage and hypothesize that even as immigrants are approaching parity with the native-born in terms of current earnings, they accumulate disadvantages in lifetime earnings, job benefits, and retirement planning that eventually lead them to have growing disadvantages in income in later life. Drawing on decades of longitudinal data from the Health and Retirement Study, I find that while foreign- and native-born men in the United States both experience a decline in income after age 50, the decline is much more substantial among foreign-born men. As a result, immigrant men's economic assimilation is reversed in later life. I find evidence that this phenomenon is driven mainly by immigrants' lower lifetime earnings and cumulative exposure to worse job benefits. Given that the foreign-born elderly population in the United States is projected to quadruple by 2050, findings from this paper have important implications for long-term policy planning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Trade and Labor-Allocation: Evidence from Sectoral Embodied Labor Transfer between China and Africa.
- Author
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Ji, Xi, Liu, Yifang, and Yin, Jingyu
- Subjects
- *
AFRICA-China relations , *LABOR market , *LABOR mobility , *INPUT-output analysis , *INTERNATIONAL trade , *EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
Under the influence of international trade, labor flow not only exists in the waves of international labor migration but is also embodied in international products and services. This paper focused on members of the China–Africa Cooperation Forum (FOCAC). We computed and analyzed the sectoral embodied labor transfer between China and Africa from 2000 to 2015 based on the Multiregional Input-Output Method. Our results are as follows: (1) Both China and Africa play roles as labor suppliers in the global supply chain. By ameliorating the trade structure, both China and Africa can better utilize their labor surplus. (2) China and Africa share complementarity in sectoral labor allocation. In short, the embodied labor transfer via international trade between China and Africa has, to some extent, relieved the labor shortage on both sides. (3) Africa has transformed into a net exporter of industrial labor since 2011. By analyzing the embodied labor flow from the global perspective, this paper beats a new path in depicting the effect of international trade on labor allocation, enriches the evaluation of embodied labor transfer between China and Africa, and also provides a beneficial supplement to Multiregional Input-Output analysis in the field of factor flows. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Loitering with (research) intent: Remote ethnographies in the immigration tribunal.
- Author
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Hynes, Jo
- Subjects
- *
COVID-19 pandemic , *ETHNOLOGY , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *TRIALS (Law) - Abstract
Court ethnographies have commonly relied on the physical presence of the ethnographers. This paper explores the opportunities and the challenges of conducting court ethnographies without this physical presence. Specifically, it examines what it means to conduct remote ethnographies of legal processes where neither the ethnographer nor the other hearing participants are physically co‐present. The sudden shift towards remote hearings in fieldwork conducted during the COVID‐19 pandemic presented an opportunity to compare in‐person and remote ethnographic methods. Through a case study of bail hearings in the immigration tribunal in the UK, this paper explores the value and challenges associated with conducting remote ethnographies and asks how they can help to shed light on the impact of absences in legal events. Court ethnographies have commonly relied on the physical presence of the ethnographers. This paper explores the opportunities and the challenges of conducting court ethnographies without this physical presence. Specifically, it examines what it means to conduct remote ethnographies of legal processes where neither the ethnographer nor the other hearing participants are physically co‐present. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. COVID-19 and labour market adjustments: policies, foreign labour and structural shifts.
- Author
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Kaczmarczyk, Pawel
- Subjects
- *
ETHNIC studies , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *COVID-19 pandemic , *LABOR market - Abstract
The paper looks at one of the most dynamically evolving migration processes in contemporary Europe – labour migrants in Poland. Poland, until very recently a typical emigration country started receiving large numbers of migrants only after 2014. This process, however, cannot be explained in supply terms only. In fact, it was also a strong structural demand for foreign workers that played at least an equally important role. This newly established migration system has been tested during the pandemic along with policy adjustments and economic changes. We claim that despite the very fact that the 'essential workers' rhetoric was almost absent in the Polish public discourse, foreign workers played a significant role in securing the continuous operation of many sectors of the economy. The paper shows that the role of migration in Poland has changed along with the transition from a net-sending to a net-receiving country, but still it worked as a safety valve during the pandemic. We argue it was possible because of liberal rules regarding international movement and work abroad. By focusing on the role of exogenous shocks and by considering the very specific migration system in Poland, this paper contributes to the growing literature on the labour market-immigration nexus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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