268 results on '"Economics of Migration"'
Search Results
2. Economic turbulence and labour migrants' mobility intentions: Polish migrants in the United Kingdom, Ireland, the Netherlands and Germany 2009–2016.
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Jancewicz, Barbara and Markowski, Stefan
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MIGRANT agricultural workers , *LABOR mobility , *GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 , *IMMIGRANTS - Abstract
Economists view earnings as a primary driver of migration, both actual and intended. However, studies on the relationship between migration intentions and earnings yield mixed results. We argue that earnings are an important factor, but that problems related to sample selection and the complexity of migration decision making obscure this importance. Nevertheless, periods of economic turbulence prompt people to reassess their economic situation and when a study is conducted after such economic shock, it surveys migrants who had enough time to revise their mobility intentions but who had not already moved. We used data on remain/move intentions of Polish labour migrants to the UK, Germany, Ireland and the Netherlands in 2009–2016. This was a period of high economic turbulence in the four host countries (Global Financial Crisis, the Euro crises and the Brexit referendum) paralleled by a period of steady improvement for the Polish economy. We applied multinomial logistic regression to probe the Polish migrants' return/settlement intentions, our results show that, in general, higher earnings encourage settlement intentions. However, as expected, this influence tends to fade away from view in times of economic calm but gains in importance when unexpected shocks force migrants to re-evaluate their plans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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3. Wealth formation by economic agents and their international mobility: towards an eclectic migration decision-support framework
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Barbara Jancewicz and Stefan Markowski
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migration theory ,international migration ,economics of migration ,Social Sciences - Abstract
International migration has been a major influence on the economic and social development of nations. Nevertheless, a vast majority of the global population continues to reside in their country of birth. While income/wealth differentials between states create centrifugal forces responsible for migration, impediments to international mobility of human, financial, physical and social capital assets work in the centripetal direction. This paper reviews a large segment of the extant literature on international migration to probe economic influences on people’s international mobility and immobility decisions. It aims to refine and extend the neoclassical foundations of migration theory and to outline how potentially complex decision mechanisms used by potentially mobile economic agents may be modified to simplify the complexity inherent in such choices so that immobility is often a default outcome of indecision.
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- 2020
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4. Americans preferred Syrian refugees who are female, English-speaking, and Christian on the eve of Donald Trump's election.
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Adida, Claire L., Lo, Adeline, and Platas, Melina R.
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SYRIAN refugees , *RELIGIOUS discrimination , *ELECTIONS , *VOTER turnout , *ETHNOLOGY , *LABOR market - Abstract
What types of refugees do Americans prefer for admission into the United States? Scholars have explored the immigrant characteristics that appeal to Americans and the characteristics that Europeans prioritize in asylum-seekers, but we currently do not know which refugee characteristics Americans prefer. We conduct a conjoint experiment on a representative sample of 1800 US adults, manipulating refugee attributes in pairs of Syrian refugee profiles, and ask respondents to rate each refugee's appeal. Our focus on Syrian refugees in a 2016 survey experiment allows us to speak to the concurrent refugee crisis on the eve of a polarizing election, while also identifying religious discrimination, holding constant the refugee's national origin. We find that Americans prefer Syrian refugees who are female, high-skilled, English-speaking, and Christian, suggesting they prioritize refugee integration into the U.S. labor and cultural markets. We find that the preference for female refugees is not driven by the desire to exclude Muslim male refugees, casting doubt that American preferences at the time were motivated by security concerns. Finally, we find that anti-Muslim bias in refugee preferences varies in magnitude across key subgroups, though it prevails across all sample demographics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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5. Immigration and establishment of Trypanosoma cruzi in Arequipa, Peru.
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Berry, Alexander S. F., Salazar-Sánchez, Renzo, Castillo-Neyra, Ricardo, Borrini-Mayorí, Katty, Chipana-Ramos, Claudia, Vargas-Maquera, Melina, Ancca-Juarez, Jenny, Náquira-Velarde, César, Levy, Michael Z., Brisson, Dustin, and null, null
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TRYPANOSOMA cruzi , *BIOTIC communities , *ABIOTIC environment , *INTRODUCED species , *CHAGAS' disease , *CITIES & towns - Abstract
Changing environmental conditions, including those caused by human activities, reshape biological communities through both loss of native species and establishment of non-native species in the altered habitats. Dynamic interactions with the abiotic environment impact both immigration and initial establishment of non-native species into these altered habitats. The repeated emergence of disease systems in urban areas worldwide highlights the importance of understanding how dynamic migratory processes affect the current and future distribution and abundance of pathogens in urban environments. In this study, we examine the pattern of invasion of Trypanosoma cruzi—the causative agent of human Chagas disease—in the city of Arequipa, Peru. Phylogenetic analyses of 136 T. cruzi isolates from Arequipa and other South American locations suggest that only one T. cruzi lineage established a population in Arequipa as all T. cruzi isolated from vectors in Arequipa form a recent monophyletic group within the broader South American phylogeny. We discuss several hypotheses that may explain the limited number of established T. cruzi lineages despite multiple introductions of the parasite. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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6. Influence of time since naturalisation on socioeconomic status and low birth weight among immigrants in Belgium. A population-based study.
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Sow, M., Schoenborn, C., De Spiegelaere, M., and Racape, J.
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MATERNAL age , *LOW birth weight , *DEATH certificates , *VITAL records (Births, deaths, etc.) , *SOCIAL accounting - Abstract
Background: Increasingly studies show that immigrants have different perinatal health outcomes compared to native-born women. Nevertheless, we lack a detailed examination of the combined effects of maternal immigrant trajectory and socioeconomic status on perinatal outcomes. Our objective was to analyze the influence of time since naturalization on low birth weight and maternal socioeconomic status in Belgium. Methods: The data came from the linkage between the Brussels birth and death registers, the national register of migrant trajectories and the social security register for the years 2004–2010. We used logistic regression to estimate the odds ratios of the associations between low birth weight (LBW) and time since naturalization, by nationality groups, taking into account socioeconomic status (SES), parity and maternal age. Results: Data relate to all singleton births to Belgian, Maghrebi, Sub-Saharan African and Turkish women (n = 76 312). The results show an U-shaped of LBW according to time since naturalization for all migrant groups. LBW declines for women naturalized since less than one year and increases significantly thereafter (p<0.0001). In parallel, we observe an increase of SES among all migrant groups. Compared to Belgians, we found a lower risk of LBW among women from Maghreb (p<0.0001) and this protection is maintained even after 10 years since naturalization. In contrast, the risk of LBW for Sub-Saharan African and Turkish mothers is lower than for Belgians after one year of naturalization but similar to that of Belgians after 10 years of naturalization. Conclusion: Our results show that, despite an improvement of their SES, LBW increases among Maghrebi, Sub-Saharan African and Turkish women with time since naturalization. Mothers from Maghreb have lower rates of LBW compared to Belgians and maintain their protection even after more than 10 years of having acquired the Belgian nationality. Additional studies need to be carried out in order to gain a better understanding of the association between migration trajectories, SES and perinatal health of immigrants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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7. Return on capital? Determinants of counter-migration among early career Israeli STEM researchers.
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Israel, Emil, Cohen, Nir, and Czamanski, Daniel
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CULTURAL capital , *OCCUPATIONS - Abstract
Migration studies emphasize the role of economic, social and cultural capital in shaping out-migration decisions. Yet, little attention is paid to the effect of capital endowment on return migration, particularly among the highly educated. This article examines the extent to which different forms of capital determine return decisions of early-career researchers (ECRs). We hypothesized that individuals from more privileged backgrounds would repatriate at higher rates, due to the benefits that their capital stock might offer them upon homeland re-integration at home. Drawing on a sample of 223 early career Israeli scholars in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) disciplines, we used logistic regressions to analyze the effects of material wealth, social ties, and family-oriented cultural capital on their return propensities. No significant differences were found between repatriating and non-repatriating scholars with respect to cultural capital. However, accumulating social and economic capital was positively correlated with the decision to repatriate as was marrying into academic families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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8. Factors associated with IPV victimisation of women and perpetration by men in migrant communities of Nepal.
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Shai, Nwabisa, Pradhan, Geeta Devi, Chirwa, Esnat, Shrestha, Ratna, Adhikari, Abhina, and Kerr-Wilson, Alice
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INTIMATE partner violence , *VIOLENCE against women , *OLDER women , *MARRIED women , *RANDOM effects model , *CREDIT , *CHILDREN - Abstract
This paper aims to describe the prevalent forms of intimate partner violence (IPV), and the factors associated with IPV among women and men living in the two migrant communities of Baglung district, Nepal. 357 adult women and men were enrolled following a family model, interviewing young married women with daughter-in-law status in the home, their husbands, and mothers-in-law and fathers-in-laws using an electronic questionnaire. Random effects regression modelling compared men and women, as well as young married women with daughter-in-law status and older women with mothers-in-law with status. 28.6% of women had ever experienced physical and/or sexual violence by an intimate partner compared to 18.2% of men ever perpetrated these forms of violence against their wives. Being older, male controlling behaviour and poor relations with husband increased women’s IPV in their lifetime while perceptions that the mother-in-law is kind were protective. Being ashamed of being unemployed and childhood trauma were associated with men perpetrating IPV in their lifetime. Borrowing money or food increased young married women’s lifetime IPV risk while mother-in-law cruelty and male control increased older married women’s lifetime IPV exposure. Factors associated with IPV in the past year among men were being younger, job seeking, experiences of childhood trauma and depression exposure among men while difficulty accessing money for emergencies, holding inequitable gender attitudes, and depression was associated with women’s increased IPV exposure. Unemployment stress, holding inequitable gender attitudes and mother-in-law kindness were associated with young women’s increased IPV risk and hunger, mother-in-law cruelty and depression with older women’s IPV risk. There is a need to critically challenge harmful social and gender norms by using approaches that are sensitive to young married women’s position and unequal gender relations in the family. IPV prevention interventions need to employ a holistic approach that combines changing social and gender norms and improving socioeconomic conditions of women living in migrant communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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9. Can immigrants counteract employer discrimination? A factorial field experiment reveals the immutability of ethnic hierarchies.
- Author
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Vernby, Kåre and Dancygier, Rafaela
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FACTORIAL experiment designs , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *LABOR market , *EMPLOYERS , *IMMIGRANTS - Abstract
How pervasive is labor market discrimination against immigrants and what options do policymakers and migrants have to reduce it? To answer these questions, we conducted a field experiment on employer discrimination in Sweden. Going beyond existing work, we test for a large range of applicant characteristics using a factorial design. We examine whether migrants can affect their employment chances—by adopting citizenship, acquiring work experience, or signaling religious practice—or whether fixed traits such as country of birth or gender are more consequential. We find little systematic evidence that immigrants can do much to reduce discrimination. Rather, ethnic hierarchies are critical: callback rates decline precipitously with the degree of ethno-cultural distance, leaving Iraqis and Somalis, especially if they are male, with much reduced employment chances. These findings highlight that immigrants have few tools at their disposal to escape ethnic penalties and that efforts to reduce discrimination must address employer prejudice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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10. Spatial spread of malaria and economic frontier expansion in the Brazilian Amazon.
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Souza, Patrícia Feitosa, Xavier, Diego Ricardo, Suarez Mutis, Martha Cecilia, da Mota, Jurema Corrêa, Peiter, Paulo Cesar, de Matos, Vanderlei Pascoal, Magalhães, Mônica de Avelar Figueiredo Mafra, and Barcellos, Christovam
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ECONOMIC expansion , *MALARIA , *ECONOMIC activity , *INFECTIOUS disease transmission , *GEOGRAPHIC spatial analysis , *ENVIRONMENTAL protection - Abstract
The temporal and spatial evolution of malaria was described for the postfrontier phase of the Brazilian Amazon in 2003–2013. The current ecological study aimed to understand the relationship between spatial population mobility and the distribution of malaria cases. The study identified epidemiologically relevant areas using regional statistical modeling and spatial analyses that considered differential infections and types of work activities. Annual parasite incidence (API) in the region was highest in hotspots along the Amazon River and in the south and west settlement zone of Hiléia, with concentrations in environmental protection areas and açaí and Brazil nut extraction areas. The dispersal force decreased in the Central Amazon due to rapid urbanization and improved socioeconomic conditions for workers in consolidated settlement areas. The study characterized the spatial patterns of disease transmission according to the economic activity and regionalization of geographic areas, confirming that the incidence of infection by work activity and labor flow is linked to extractive activities and agricultural settlements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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11. Urban amenity and settlement intentions of rural–urban migrants in China.
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Liao, Liping and Wang, Chunchao
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MIGRANT agricultural workers , *INTENTION , *LABOR mobility - Abstract
The existing literature concentrates on the relationship between amenities and migrants or residents. However, only a few studies have focused on the role of city amenities in determining the intentions of rural–urban migrants. Such a relation is a key issue in Chinese urbanisation development. The current study investigates the effects of urban amenities on the settlement intentions of rural–urban migrants in China. We find that medical amenities have a significantly positive effect on rural–urban migrants’ intentions. We also indicate that educational amenities and transportation services attract rural–urban migrants to settle in cities. Furthermore, we explore the heterogeneous effects of amenities on different cohorts by education and age. High- and low-skilled rural–urban migrants focus on transportation amenities, while young and middle–aged migrants are attracted by urban educational amenities. Results suggest that increasing access to urban amenities for rural–urban migrants and improving urban amenities enhance the willingness of rural–urban migrants to stay in cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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12. Influence of internal migration on the use of reproductive and maternal health services in Nepal: An analysis of the Nepal Demographic and Health Survey 2016.
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Thapa, Naba Raj, Adhikari, Sunil, and Budhathoki, Pawan Kumar
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CONTRACEPTIVES , *MATERNAL health services , *REPRODUCTIVE health services , *INTERNAL migration , *DEMOGRAPHIC surveys , *HEALTH surveys - Abstract
Background: Internal migration has been an integral part of socioeconomic transformation in a country. Migrants are a vulnerable group for access to the reproductive and maternal health services. Very little is known regarding the role of internal migration on the use of reproductive and maternal health services in Nepal. This study examines the effect of internal migration on the use of reproductive and maternal health services in Nepal. Methods: The data for this study were extracted from the 2016 Nepal Demographic and Health Survey (2016 NDHS). The study population is women age 15–49. The sample population is different for modern contraceptive use than for Antenatal care (ANC) visits and place of delivery. The sample population for modern contraceptive use is restricted to the 8,811 (weighted) women who are currently married. The total analytic sampled population for ANC visits and place of delivery is 3,220 (weighted) women. The study used descriptive and logistic regression analysis, with three outcome measures: current use of modern contraception; at least four ANC visits; and place of delivery. Results: Sixty-eight percent women were internal migrants. Forty-four percent of eligible women reported current use of modern contraception, 71% of women made at least four ANC visits, about 9% of women made 8 or more ANC visits and 58% of women delivered in a health facility. Our findings show that modern contraceptive use is significantly higher among urban non-migrant women and urban-to-urban migrants. Urban-to-urban migrant women and rural-to-urban migrant women have significantly higher odds of attending at least four ANC visits for the most recent birth compared with rural-to-rural migrant women. Women who moved between urban areas, women who moved from an urban to a rural area, women who moved from a rural area to an urban area and urban non-migrants are significantly more likely to deliver in a health facility compared with women who moved between rural areas. Conclusion: The differentials of use of reproductive and maternal health services by migration status may need consideration during program planning to improve women's reproductive and maternal health services in Nepal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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13. The impact of soil erosion on internal migration in China.
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Zhang, Hua and Zhuang, Li
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SOIL erosion , *INTERNAL migration , *SOIL conservation , *CENSUS , *WATER conservation , *GRAVITY model (Social sciences) , *SPATIAL distribution (Quantum optics) - Abstract
The impact of environmental change on internal migration has received wide attention in recent years. Mass internal migration has been a significant economic and social phenomenon in China, and soil erosion is a major environmental problem that impacts sustainable socioeconomic development. This study aims to identify the impact of soil erosion on internal migration in China at the county level based on gravity model by analyzing related data, such as the sixth national population census data and the soil and water conservation survey data. The results of spatial overlay could not identify an obvious relationship between soil erosion and net outmigration in China. The traditional gravity model of migration is modified to analyze the impact of soil erosion on net outmigration while other variables are controlled. The results indicate that only serious soil erosion increases the possibility of outmigration and that the impact is considerably higher in agricultural counties than in non-agricultural counties. In general, the impact of soil erosion on internal migration is far less than the impact of socioeconomic factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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14. Is the push-pull paradigm useful to explain rural-urban migration? A case study in Uttarakhand, India.
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Hoffmann, Ellen M., Konerding, Verena, Nautiyal, Sunil, and Buerkert, Andreas
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RURAL-urban migration , *FORESTS & forestry , *LAND cover , *ENVIRONMENTAL degradation , *AGRICULTURE & the environment , *FOREST monitoring - Abstract
The present study explored the motivation of rural-urban migrants who moved from the Himalaya foothills of Uttarakhand to its capital city, Dehradun. A survey of 100 migrant families reported their socio-economic profile before and after migration, personal and general reasons for migration, problems in the village and in the city, and perception of push- and pull factors. A remote sensing-based analysis of land cover and forest changes was conducted for two villages of the migrants’ origin, aiming to link the reasons for migration to land cover changes. This was contextualised by reported large scale changes in forest cover. Major reasons for migration mentioned in this study were education, employment opportunities with the associated income, and facilities. These were perceived as both, push and pull factors, whereas environmental factors ranked very low. Declining environment or agriculture were never mentioned spontaneously as personal reason, and only occasionally as a presumed general reason for migration, but were frequently confirmed as a major problem in the village. Thus, although such problems existed, they seemed not a major driver of rural-urban migration. For most of the respondents their migration resulted in a profound change of livelihoods and significantly improved their socio-economic situation. Land and forest cover around the chosen villages fluctuated by up to 15% with a trend to increasing forest cover in recent years. At the district and state scales, forest cover was rather stable. These results question the narrative of deforestation and environmental degradation in the Himalayas as major push-factors for rural-urban migration in Uttarakhand. Even if environmental constraints were felt, it was rather the differences in socio-economic opportunities (education, employment, facilities) that drove people to migrate to the city. Regarding the push-pull paradigm, we conclude that scenarios of external conditions under which people migrate cannot be evaluated without taking the migrants’ attitudes and choices into account. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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15. Respective roles of migration and social deprivation for virological non-suppression in HIV-infected adults on antiretroviral therapy in France.
- Author
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Raho-Moussa, Mariem, Guiguet, Marguerite, Michaud, Céline, Honoré, Patricia, Palacios, Christia, Boué, François, Azghay, Mohammed, Kansau, Imad, Chambrin, Véronique, Kandel, Tania, Favier, Marion, Miekoutima, Elsa, Sayre, Naomi, Pignon, Carole, Shoai, Michka, Bouchaud, Olivier, and Abgrall, Sophie
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SOCIAL role , *ART , *HIV , *AIDS , *VIRAL load , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Barriers to achieve sustained HIV virological suppression on antiretroviral therapy (ART) jeopardize the success of the 90:90:90 UNAIDS initiative which aims to end the HIV/AIDS epidemic. In France, where access to ART is free and universally available, we analyze the way in which social determinants of health (i.e. cultural, environmental) and economic factors might influence virological outcomes. A cross-sectional study was performed in two hospitals located in Paris area. All consecutive people living with HIV (PLHIV) on ART for at least 6 months attending the outpatient clinics between 01/05/2013 and 31/10/2014 answered an individual score of deprivation, EPICES, retrieving information on health insurance status, economic status, family support and leisure activity. This score varies from 0 to 100 with deprivation state defined above 30.17. Factors associated with HIV viral load >50 copies/ml were assessed by logistic regression modeling with a backward stepwise selection to select the final multivariable model. Sensitivity analyses were performed using two other thresholds for virological non-suppression (100 or 200 copies/ml). Overall, 475 PLHIV were included (53% male, median age 47 years, 66% not born in France mainly in a sub-Saharan African country). Half of French natives and 85% of migrants were classified as deprived. Median duration on ART was 9.7 years with virological suppression in 95.2% of non-deprived participants and in 83.5% of deprived ones (p = 0.001). The final multivariable model retained ART tiredness, younger age, a previous AIDS event and social deprivation (adjusted Odds Ratio, 2.9; 95%CI, 1.2–7.0) as determinants of virological non-suppression but not migration in itself. When using separate components of EPICES score, reporting economic difficulties and non-homeownership were associated with virological non-suppression. In addition to interventions focusing on cultural aspects of migration, social interventions are needed to help people with social vulnerability to obtain sustained responses on ART. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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16. Using the Dirichlet process to form clusters of people’s concerns in the context of future party identification.
- Author
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Meyer, Patrick, Schophaus, Fenja M., Glassen, Thomas, Riedl, Jasmin, Rohrer, Julia M., Wagner, Gert G., and von Oertzen, Timo
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INDIVIDUAL differences , *HUMAN behavior , *POLITICAL parties , *POLITICAL participation , *SOCIOECONOMICS - Abstract
Connections between interindividual differences and people’s behavior has been widely researched in various contexts, often by using top-down group comparisons to explain interindividual differences. In contrast, in this study, we apply a bottom-up approach in which we identify meaningful clusters in people’s concerns about various areas of life (e.g., their own health, their financial situation, the environment). We apply a novel method, Dirichlet clustering, to large-scale longitudinal data from the German Socioeconomic Panel Study (SOEP) to investigate whether concerns of people living in Germany evaluated in 2010 (t0) cluster participants into robust and separable groups, and whether these groups vary regarding their party identification in 2017 (t0 + 7). Clustering results suggest a range of different groups with specific concern patterns. Some of these notably specific patterns of concerns indicate links to party identification. In particular, some patterns show an increased identification with smaller parties as the ‘Bündnis 90/Die Grünen’ (‘Greens’), the left wing party ‘Die Linke’ (‘The Left’) or the right-wing party ‘Alternative für Deutschland’ (‘Alternative for Germany’, AfD). Considering that we identify as many as 37 clusters in total, among them at least six with clearly different party identification, it can also be concluded that the complexity of political concerns may be larger than has been assumed before. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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17. Association between migration and physical activity among medical students from a university located in Lima, Peru.
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Zevallos-Morales, Alejandro, Luna-Porta, Leslie, Medina-Salazar, Henry, Yauri, María, and Taype-Rondan, Alvaro
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PHYSICAL activity , *MEDICAL students , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *SELF-evaluation - Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the association between migration and physical activity among medical students from a university located in Lima, Peru. Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted among second-year medical students from a Peruvian university. Data on moderate- to vigorous-intensity physical activity (MVPA) and migration features were obtained through a self-report questionnaire. To assess the associations of interest, prevalence ratios (PR) along with their 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) were calculated using Poisson regression with robust variances. Results: We analyzed data from 312 students (54.5% were women, mean age: 19.0 years, standard deviation: 1.4 years), 90 (28.9%) students performed MVPA for ≥150 minutes/week, 118 (37.8%) performed MVPA for ≤30 minutes/week, and 114 (36.7%) were migrants. Being a migrant was not associated with performing MVPA for ≤30 nor ≥150 minutes/week. However, adjusted analysis showed that the frequency of performing MVPA for ≤30 minutes/week was greater among those who migrated less than five years ago (PR: 1.43; 95% CI: 1.05–1.93) and among those who migrated to continue their studies (PR: 1.44; 95% CI: 1.06–1.94), compared to non-migrants. Conclusion: In our population, being a migrant was not associated with physical activity. However, low physical activity was more prevalent among recent migrants and among those who had migrated to study, compared to non-migrants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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18. The influence of immigrant generation on obesity among Asian Americans in California from 2013 to 2014.
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Gong, Shaoqing, Wang, Kesheng, Li, Ying, and Alamian, Arsham
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IMMIGRANTS , *BODY mass index , *PHYSICAL activity , *INCOME inequality - Abstract
Objectives: We aimed to examine the association between immigrant generation and obesity among Californian adults and Asian Americans. Methods: We pooled weighted data (n = 2,967) on Asian Americans from the 2013–2014 California Health Interview Survey. Overweight and obesity were defined using body mass indices (BMI) of 25 kg/m2 and 30 kg/m2, respectively, in non-Asians, compared with BMI of 23 kg/m2 (for being overweight) and 27.5 kg/m2 (for being obese) in Asians. First-generation or immigrant Asian Americans were defined as those born outside of the U.S. Second-generation Asian Americans were defined as those born in the U.S. with at least one foreign-born parent. All other Asian participants were classified as third-generation or higher. Multiple logistic regression analyses were used with adjustment for age, sex, family income, smoking status, marital status, education, physical activity, and fast food consumption. Results: Overall, 23.3% of the Asian population was obese, and 40.0% was overweight. The percentage of 1st, 2nd, and 3rd generation were 72.7%, 22.6%, and 4.6%, respectively. Overall, 1st generation of Asians had lower odds of being obese compared to Whites (OR = 0.34, 95%CI = 0.26–0.45). Multiple logistic regression analyses showed that overall, 2nd generation (OR = 1.69, 95%CI = 1.10–2.60) and 3rd generation (OR = 2.33, 95%CI = 1.29–4.22) Asians had higher odds of being obese compared to 1st generation Asians. Among Chinese, compared to the 1st generation, the 3rd generation had increased likelihood of being obese (OR = 6.29, 95%CI = 2.38–16.6). Conclusion: Compared to Whites, Hispanics, and Blacks, Asian immigrants are less likely to be obese. Among Asians, 2nd and 3rd generations were more likely to be obese compared to 1st generation. The obesity rate seems to increase the longer Asian immigrants remain in the U.S. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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19. Development impacts of migration and remittances on migrant-sending communities: Evidence from Ethiopia.
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Redehegn, Misgina Asmelash, Sun, Dingqiang, Eshete, Aseres Mamo, and Gichuki, Castro N.
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REMITTANCES , *LABOR economics , *INCOME inequality , *ECONOMIC decision making - Abstract
This paper evaluates the development impacts of migration and remittances in migrant source communities by applying insights from the New Economics of Labor Migration (NELM) theory to Ethiopia’s migration. Using household survey data, we empirically evaluate how household participation in migration arises and so that the subsequent labor losses and the influx of remittances affect income sources and asset accumulation of smallholder farm households. To account several econometric issues and consistently estimate the impacts of migration and remittances, we adopted three-stage least-squares method complemented with endogeneity and multicollinearity test. Besides, using logistic and multinomial logistic regressions respectively, we estimate the determinants of the household migration decision to have migrants, as well as the probability of the household to send out temporary or permanent migrants. Findings suggest that larger and wealthier households are less likely to have migrant family members, while households living below the poverty line, as well as villages with the highest unemployment rate, are the most likely to have both temporary and permanent migrants. However, a rise in months spent out of agriculture has a significant negative effect on crop income and asset accumulation, but only for permanent migration. By contrast, the influx of remitted income from migrants has led to increased crop income and asset values in the form of land and livestock holdings. Finally, this manuscript provides more comprehensive evidence by showing the net-returns of migration in terms of initial lost-labor effects and the positive developmental impacts that it produces varied for households with different types of migration and production conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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20. The determinants of internal migration in Vietnam: Could 'Broad Lessons' from empirical literature be learned?
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Ngoc Kien Do
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economics of migration ,internal migration ,rural-urban migration ,Economics as a science ,HB71-74 - Abstract
Migration, especially from rural to urban, is one of important factor in social development. This paper examines 7 hypotheses on potential impact of age, human capital, economic earning, economic security, amenities, geographic distance and social capital on migration discussed in Schaffner (2014) for the case of Vietnam. These hypotheses were re-organized to construct a an uniform conceptual framework of determinants of migration decision making. Using various data-sets from many different survey together with empirical results from economic literature, we test these hypothesis one after the other. Our results reveals that (1) young age is a characteristics of migrants but (2) high stock of human capital is not; (3) higher earnings and (4) risk-sharing mechanism are motivations of migration, but (5) amenities is not. (6) Distance does not impact migration decision and (7) social capital’ impact is ambiguous. If any, it comes from the network at destination location.
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- 2016
21. Türkiye'den İngiltere'ye Gerçekleşen İşçi Göçlerinin İki Ülke Arasındaki Ticarete Etkisi
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Yasin Kerem Gümüş
- Subjects
international trade ,economics of migration ,turkey ,uk ,uluslararası işçi göçleri ,uluslararası ticaret ,türkiye ,Political science ,Political science (General) ,JA1-92 - Abstract
Bu makale uluslararası işçi göçleri ve uluslararası ticaret arasındaki ilişkiyi Türkiye ve Birleşik Krallık arasındaki ticari ilişkiler üzerinden analiz etmeyi amaçlamaktadır. Elde edilen veriler şunu gösteriyor ki Birleşik Krallıkta yaşayan Türk göçmenler Birleşik Krallığın ekonomisine sadece vergi geliri sağlama yoluyla katkı sağlamamış, aynı zamanda Türk ürünlerine olan talepte artış dolayısıyla iki ülke arasındaki ticareti arttırmıştır. Bununla beraber Birleşik Krallıkta yaşayan Türk göçmenlerin Türkiye’deki akrabaları ile olan ilişkileri dolayısıyla Birleşik Krallığın Türkiye’deki yatırımlarının oranında ve Birleşik Krallık menşeili ürünlerin sayısında da artış görülmüştür. Dolayısıyla uluslararası işçi göçlerinin her iki taraf için de ticareti arttırıcı bir etki yarattığı anlaşılmaktadır
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. An evaluation of fertility- and migration-based policy responses to Japan’s ageing population.
- Author
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Parsons, Alexander J. Q. and Gilmour, Stuart
- Subjects
- *
FERTILITY , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *AGING , *SOCIAL policy , *MATHEMATICAL models of population - Abstract
Japan’s ongoing struggle with rapid ageing is well known. Fertility and migration policies have both been proposed as solutions to Japan’s ageing population. We used stock flow population models to estimate the impact of hypothetical fertility and migration policy interventions on measures of aging in Japan from 2015 to 2050. We evaluated policy models based on the Old Age Dependency Ratio (OADR) they produced at the specified end date. Start dates ranged from 2020 to 2030 to assess the time horizons of individual policies. Fertility policies were found to be highly time dependent and only slowed the rate of increase of OADR. It would require a Total Fertility Rate far above replacement levels to compensate for Japan’s already aged demography. Migration policy was less time dependent. However, such measures would require unprecedented, and ultimately unrealistic, volumes of migration over coming decades in order to reduce Japan’s OADR. Our results suggest that fertility and migration based policy responses will be unable to significantly reduce Japan’s OADR or reverse Japan’s ageing population within the next few decades. Japan should focus on activating its human capital through the prolongation of working lives, increasing participation, and improving productivity within the Japanese labour force to mitigate and adapt to the inevitable effects of ageing populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Deriving the priority weights from probabilistic linguistic preference relation with unknown probabilities.
- Author
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Song, Yongming
- Subjects
- *
DECISION making , *INVERSE functions , *NORMALIZATION (Sociology) , *MATHEMATICAL programming , *ALGORITHMS - Abstract
Generally, the probabilistic linguistic term set (PLTS) provides more accurate descriptive properties than the hesitant fuzzy linguistic term set does. The probabilistic linguistic preference relation (PLPR), which is applied to deal with complex decision-making problems, can be constructed for PLTSs. However, it is difficult for decision makers to provide the probabilities of occurrence for PLPR. To deal with this problem, we propose a definition of expected consistency for PLPR and establish a probability computing model to derive probabilities of occurrence in PLPR with priority weights for alternatives. A consistency-improving iterative algorithm is presented to examine whether or not the PLPR is at an acceptable consistency. Moreover, the consistency-improving iterative algorithm should obtain the satisfaction consistency level for the unacceptable consistency PLPR. Finally, a real-world employment-city selection is used to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method of deriving priority weights from PLPR. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. An attitude network analysis of post-national citizenship identities.
- Author
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Schlicht-Schmälzle, Raphaela, Chykina, Volha, and Schmälzle, Ralf
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL responsibility , *NATURALIZATION , *GREEN cards , *DEPORTATION , *RESIDENCE requirements - Abstract
How are evaluative reactions pertaining post-national citizenship identities interrelated and what are the potential mechanisms how post-national identities evolve? Previous efforts to operationalize and measure post-national citizenship identities leave it open how people’s stances on different issues are related and suffer from a variety of theoretical and methodological shortcomings regarding the nature of political attitudes and ideologies. A recently proposed approach conceptualizes ideologies as networks of causally connected evaluative reactions to individual issues. Individual evaluative reactions form the nodes in a network model, and these nodes can influence each other via linked edges, thereby giving rise to a dynamic thoughts system of networked political and identity-related views. To examine this system at large, we apply network analysis to data from the European Values Study. Specifically, we investigate 33 evaluative reactions regarding national and supra-national identity, diversity, global empathy, global environmentalism, immigration, and supra-national politics. The results reveal a strongly connected network of citizenship identity-related attitudes. A community analysis reveals larger clusters of strongly related evaluative reactions, which are connected via bridges and hub nodes. Centrality analysis identifies evaluative reactions that are strategically positioned in the network, and network simulations indicate that persuasion attempts targeted at such nodes have greater potential to influence the larger citizenship identity than changes of more peripheral attitude nodes. We lastly show that socio-demographic characteristics are not only associated with the overall level of post-national citizenship, but also with the network structure, suggesting that these structural differences can affect the network function as people develop national or post-national citizenship identities, or respond to external events. These results provide new insights into the structure of post-national identities and the mechanism how post-national identities might evolve. We end with a discussion of future opportunities to study networked attitudes in the context of civic and citizenship education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Towards a Rational Migration Policy.
- Author
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Söllner, Fritz
- Subjects
POVERTY ,SOCIAL conditions of refugees ,REFUGE (Humanitarian assistance) ,IMMIGRANTS ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
A rational migration policy has to be based on a coherent set of objectives and its instruments have to be chosen so as to best achieve these objectives. If the focus of migration policy is on the interests of the receiving country, it has to be decided, firstly, how many and what kind of immigrants are to be invited and, secondly, how many refugees are to be accepted for humanitarian reasons. The former are supposed to live permanently in the receiving country, while the latter may stay only temporarily. For the determination of these objectives, the economic and the non-economic consequences of immigration for the native population need to be analyzed. As there will be conflicts of interest, an open debate about the objectives of migration policy is necessary. In particular, it needs to be acknowledged that economic self-interest motivates, at least in part, both the critics and the proponents of immigration. Only when objectives have been agreed upon, can the appropriate instruments be chosen. Among those, the instrument of the entrance fee may play an important role, especially with regard to selecting qualified immigrants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Migration, acculturation, and the maintenance of between-group cultural variation.
- Author
-
Mesoudi, Alex
- Subjects
- *
SOCIOCULTURAL factors , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *ACCULTURATION , *COGNITIVE science , *BIOLOGICAL evolution - Abstract
How do migration and acculturation (i.e. psychological or behavioral change resulting from migration) affect within- and between-group cultural variation? Here I address this question by drawing analogies between genetic and cultural evolution. Population genetic models show that migration rapidly breaks down between-group genetic structure. In cultural evolution, however, migrants or their descendants can acculturate to local behaviors via social learning processes such as conformity, potentially preventing migration from eliminating between-group cultural variation. An analysis of the empirical literature on migration suggests that acculturation is common, with second and subsequent migrant generations shifting, sometimes substantially, towards the cultural values of the adopted society. Yet there is little understanding of the individual-level dynamics that underlie these population-level shifts. To explore this formally, I present models quantifying the effect of migration and acculturation on between-group cultural variation, for both neutral and costly cooperative traits. In the models, between-group cultural variation, measured using F statistics, is eliminated by migration and maintained by conformist acculturation. The extent of acculturation is determined by the strength of conformist bias and the number of demonstrators from whom individuals learn. Acculturation is countered by assortation, the tendency for individuals to preferentially interact with culturally-similar others. Unlike neutral traits, cooperative traits can additionally be maintained by payoff-biased social learning, but only in the presence of strong sanctioning mechanisms (e.g. institutions). Overall, the models show that surprisingly little conformist acculturation is required to maintain realistic amounts of between-group cultural diversity. While these models provide insight into the potential dynamics of acculturation and migration in cultural evolution, they also highlight the need for more empirical research into the individual-level learning biases that underlie migrant acculturation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Ethnicity and wealth: The dynamics of dual segregation.
- Author
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Sahasranaman, Anand and Jensen, Henrik Jeldtoft
- Subjects
- *
SEGREGATION , *ETHNICITY , *SOCIAL marginality , *SOCIAL change , *WEALTH management services - Abstract
Creating inclusive cities requires meaningful responses to inequality and segregation. We build an agent-based model of interactions between wealth and ethnicity of agents to investigate ‘dual’ segregations—due to ethnicity and due to wealth. As agents are initially allowed to move into neighbourhoods they cannot afford, we find a regime where there is marginal increase in both wealth segregation and ethnic segregation. However, as more agents are progressively allowed entry into unaffordable neighbourhoods, we find that both wealth and ethnic segregations undergo sharp, non-linear transformations, but in opposite directions—wealth segregation shows a dramatic decline, while ethnic segregation an equally sharp upsurge. We argue that the decrease in wealth segregation does not merely accompany, but actually drives the increase in ethnic segregation. Essentially, as agents are progressively allowed into neighbourhoods in contravention of affordability, they create wealth configurations that enable a sharp decline in wealth segregation, which at the same time allow co-ethnics to spatially congregate despite differences in wealth, resulting in the abrupt worsening of ethnic segregation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The cultural origin of saving behavior.
- Author
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Costa-Font, Joan, Giuliano, Paola, and Ozcan, Berkay
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL norms , *CULTURE , *IMMIGRANTS , *SAVINGS , *HUMAN capital ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
Traditional economic interpretations have not been successful in explaining differences in saving rates across countries. One hypothesis is that savings respond to cultural specific social norms. The accepted view in economics so far is that culture does not have any effect on savings. We revisit this evidence using a novel dataset, which allows us to study the saving behavior of up to three generations of immigrants in the United Kingdom. Against the backdrop of existing evidence, we find that cultural preferences are an important explanation for cross-country differences in saving behavior, and their relevance persists up to three generations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Proximity and waiting times in choice models for outpatient cardiological visits in Italy.
- Author
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Seghieri, Chiara, Calovi, Martina, and Ferrè, Francesca
- Subjects
- *
OUTPATIENT medical care , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *AGE factors in disease , *HEALTH facilities - Abstract
We apply mixed logit regression to investigate patients' choice of non-emergency outpatient cardiovascular specialists in Tuscany, Italy. We focused on the effects of travel time and waiting time. Results reveal that patients prefer clinics nearby and with shorter waiting times. Differences in patient choice depend on age and socioeconomic conditions, thus confirming equity concerns in the access of non-acute services. Our results could be used to optimize the allocation of resources, reduce inequities and increase the efficiency and responsiveness of outpatient systems considering patient preferences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Would you like to leave Beijing, Shanghai, or Shenzhen? An empirical analysis of migration effect in China.
- Author
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Liu, Tingting, Feng, Hong, and Brandon, Elizabeth
- Subjects
- *
EMIGRATION & immigration , *SELECTION bias (Statistics) , *IMMIGRATION policy - Abstract
This study aims to estimate the migration effect of the overall samples and different flowing scales for the floating population from the perspective of personal wages. Although we used both the OLS and PSM methods to estimate the migration effect, we found that the PSM method was preferred in the study of migration as a result of the selection bias. The empirical results show that there is a significant difference in wage before and after migration. In fact, migration increased wages by 15.18% to 23.63% overall. Additionally, wages were increased by 44.96% to 59.20%, 23.06% to 26.18%, and 10.89% to 15.08% respectively for these three migration patterns: flowing into the three largest megacities, inter-provincial migration, and inter-city migration within a province, but for this pattern of inter-district migration within a city, the migration effect is not significant. We concluded that the floating population removing policies of the largest megacities maybe are effective because of the administrative power of their government. On the other hand, for these policies of non-largest megacities to attract labor and local employment and local urbanization near the floating population’s place of origin, they were not effective enough as a result of the lack of significant migration effect in these cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. From welcome culture to welcome limits? Uncovering preference changes over time for sheltering refugees in Germany.
- Author
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Liebe, Ulf, Meyerhoff, Jürgen, Kroesen, Maarten, Chorus, Caspar, and Glenk, Klaus
- Subjects
- *
REFUGEES , *CHRISTIANS , *DWELLINGS , *POLITICAL refugees , *HOUSING - Abstract
Europe recently experienced a large influx of refugees, spurring much public debate about the admission and integration of refugees and migrants into society. Previous research based on cross-sectional data found that European citizens generally favour asylum seekers with high employability, severe vulnerabilities, and Christians over Muslims. These preferences and attitudes were found to be homogeneous across countries and socio-demographic groups. Here, we do not study the general acceptance of asylum seekers, but the acceptance of refugee and migrant homes in citizens’ vicinity and how it changes over time. Based on a repeated stated choice experiment on preferences for refugee and migrant homes, we show that the initially promoted “welcome culture” towards refugees in Germany was not reflected in the views of a majority of a sample of German citizens who rather disapproved refugee homes in their vicinity. Their preferences have not changed between November 2015, the peak of “welcome culture,” and November 2016, after political debates, media reporting and public discourse had shifted towards limiting admission of immigrants. A minority of one fifth of the sample population, who were initially rather approving of refugee and migrant homes being established in their vicinity, were more likely to change their preferences towards a rather disapproving position in 2016. Experience of contact with refugees and migrants, higher education, and general pro-immigration attitudes explain acceptance of refugee and migrant homes as well as preference stability over time. Country of origin and religion of refugees and migrants are considered less important than decent housing conditions and whether refugee and migrants arrive as families or single persons. In this respect our results highlight the importance of humanitarian aspects of sheltering and integration of refugees and other migrants into society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. An estimate of rural exodus in China using location-aware data.
- Author
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Ma, Ting, Lu, Rui, Zhao, Na, and Shaw, Shih-Lung
- Subjects
- *
RURAL-urban migration , *WIRELESS localization , *RURAL planning , *DEMOGRAPHIC change - Abstract
The rapidly developing economy and growing urbanization in China have created the largest rural-to-urban migration in human history. Thus, a comprehensive understanding of the pattern of rural flight and its prevalence and magnitude over the country is increasingly important for sociological and political concerns. Because of the limited availability of internal migration data, which was derived previously from the decennial population census and small-scale household survey, we could not obtain timely and consistent observations for rural depopulation dynamics across the whole country. In this study, we use aggregate location-aware data collected from mobile location requests in the largest Chinese social media platform during the period of the 2016 Chinese New Year to conduct a nationwide estimate of rural depopulation in China (in terms of the grid cell-level prevalence and the magnitude) based on the world’s largest travel period. Our results suggest a widespread rural flight likely occurring in 60.2% (36.5%-81.0%, lower-upper estimate) of rural lands at the grid cell-level and covering ~1.55 (1.48–1.94) million villages and hamlets, most of China’s rural settlement sites. Moreover, we find clear regional variations in the magnitude and spatial extent of the estimated rural depopulation. These variations are likely connected to regional differences in the size of the source population, largely because of the nationwide prevalence of rural flight in today’s China. Our estimate can provide insights into related investigations of China’s rural depopulation and the potential of increasingly available crowd-sourced data for demographic studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Climate change and women's health: Impacts and policy directions.
- Author
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Sorensen, Cecilia, Murray, Virginia, Lemery, Jay, and Balbus, John
- Subjects
- *
CLIMATE change , *WOMEN'S health , *CLIMATE change mitigation , *CLIMATE change prevention , *HEALTH impact assessment , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *INTERNATIONAL public health laws , *MEDICAL policy laws , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *POLICY sciences , *RESEARCH , *RISK assessment , *SEX distribution , *EVALUATION research , *PHENOMENOLOGICAL biology , *HEALTH equity , *LAW - Abstract
In a Policy Forum, Cecilia Sorensen and colleagues discuss the implications of climate change for women's health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Gravity and scaling laws of city to city migration.
- Author
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Prieto Curiel, Rafael, Pappalardo, Luca, Gabrielli, Lorenzo, and Bishop, Steven Richard
- Subjects
- *
GRAVITY , *SCALING laws (Statistical physics) , *HUMAN migrations , *HUMAN geography , *DECISION making - Abstract
Models of human migration provide powerful tools to forecast the flow of migrants, measure the impact of a policy, determine the cost of physical and political frictions and more. Here, we analyse the migration of individuals from and to cities in the US, finding that city to city migration follows scaling laws, so that the city size is a significant factor in determining whether, or not, an individual decides to migrate and the city size of both the origin and destination play key roles in the selection of the destination. We observe that individuals from small cities tend to migrate more frequently, tending to move to similar-sized cities, whereas individuals from large cities do not migrate so often, but when they do, they tend to move to other large cities. Building upon these findings we develop a scaling model which describes internal migration as a two-step decision process, demonstrating that it can partially explain migration fluxes based solely on city size. We then consider the impact of distance and construct a gravity-scaling model by combining the observed scaling patterns with the gravity law of migration. Results show that the scaling laws are a significant feature of human migration and that the inclusion of scaling can overcome the limits of the gravity and the radiation models of human migration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The deep roots of economic development in the U.S. states: an application of Putterman and Weil (2010).
- Author
-
Murphy, Ryan H. and Nowrasteh, Alex
- Subjects
AGRICULTURAL history ,ECONOMIC development ,UNITED States economy ,UNITED States emigration & immigration ,ECONOMIC impact analysis - Abstract
The “Deep Roots” literature investigates the effects of ancient cultural variables on economic outcomes. We extend Putterman and Weil’s (Q J Econ 125(4):1627-1682,
2010 ) inquiry into the effects of State History and Agricultural History to the economic output in ethnically and racially diverse fifty U.S. States. The ethnic and racial differences across the populations of the fifty U.S. states vary considerably due to historical immigration and slave flows that, as a result, produced radically different State History and Agricultural History scores across the states. Results derived from Putterman and Weil’s methodology do not robustly predict per capita levels of economic output across U.S. States. We also investigate the institutions channel, and find that they impact some measures of institutions, but they do not impact the quality of economic institutions which may be essential for promoting economic growth and development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Factors influencing the migration of Iranian healthcare professionals: A qualitative study.
- Author
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Asadi, Heshmatollah, Ahmadi, Batoul, Nejat, Saharnaz, Akbari Sari, Ali, Garavand, Ali, Almasian Kia, Abdollah, and Hasoumi, Mojtaba
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL personnel , *MEDICAL quality control , *QUALITATIVE research , *HEALTH policy ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Background: The migration of healthcare specialists from developing countries has increased in recent years. This has caused a rapid reduction in the access to and quality of healthcare services in such countries. The aim of this study is to evaluate the factors affecting the migration of specialist human resources in Iran’s healthcare system. Methods: This is a qualitative study, which was carried out through semi-structured interviews between 2015 and 2016. For sampling, purposive sampling method with maximum variation sampling was used. Further, data saturation was observed by conducting 21 interviews, and data analysis was performed using the MAXQDA10 content analysis software. Results: Factors affecting the migration of specialists were classified into five key themes, including structural, occupational, personal, socio-political and economic factors. These themes consisted of 12 categories and 50 subcategories. The most important factors affecting the migration of our study population were structural issues, occupational problems, and personal concerns. Conclusion: Identification of factors influencing migration is the first step to prevent the migration of specialist human resources. Implementing the recommendations proposed in this study would assist to prevent migration of medical professionals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The mediating effect of self-esteem on the relationship between perceived discrimination and psychological well-being in immigrants.
- Author
-
Urzúa, Alfonso, Ferrer, Rodrigo, Godoy, Nidia, Leppes, Francisca, Trujillo, Carlos, Osorio, Camila, and Caqueo-Urízar, Alejandra
- Subjects
- *
SELF-esteem , *IMMIGRANTS , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *COLOMBIANS , *PERUVIANS - Abstract
The aim of the study is to analyze the mediating effect of self-esteem on the relationship between perceived discrimination and psychological well-being in South American immigrants in Chile. An analytical, cross sectional, non-experimental design was used. We evaluated 853 Peruvians and Colombians living in the northern cities of Arica, Antofagasta, and Santiago de Chile, the capital located in the center of the country. The instruments used were the Ryff Psychological Well-being Scale, the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale and the Perceived Discrimination Scale by Basabe, Paez, Aierdi and Jiménez-Aristizabal. We used the estimation method (RWLS) and polychoric correlation matrices, to estimate the effect size and overall fit of the direct effect models of discrimination and self-esteem on psychological well-being, and indirect and total effects of discrimination mediated by self-esteem. While both populations reported similar levels of perceived discrimination, it was found that the means in psychological well-being and self-esteem of the Colombian population were significantly higher than that of the Peruvian population. Regarding self-esteem, the results provided evidence for the possible mediating effect on the relationship between perceived discrimination and psychological well-being. This research aims to contribute to the development of interventions seeking to strengthen self-esteem in order to circumvent possible negative consequences of perceived discrimination, as a consequent, improving immigrants´ personal resources to successfully cope with the diverse demands of their new context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Spanish youth is emigrating: A bibliometric approach to the media coverage.
- Author
-
Selva, Clara and Recordà, Aniol
- Subjects
- *
YOUTH , *MASS media , *INTELLECTUAL life , *EMIGRATION & immigration ,SPANISH social conditions - Abstract
Recent years have witnessed the emigration of young Spanish people searching for labor opportunities. A decade after the beginning of the worldwide economic crisis in 2007, the rapid deterioration of living conditions and lack of opportunities for personal development combined with the breakdown of professional expectations have led thousands of young people to emigrate from Spain, creating the so-called youth exodus. The press has paid recurrent attention to this phenomenon, often using eye-catching headlines such as ‘Brain Drain’. Given the regular interest of the media in this phenomenon, the objective of this research is to analyze the media coverage of the drain of Spanish talent capital, or the emigration of young Spanish people seeking a better future, to create a distributive map that defines the characteristics and trends of this coverage. The analyzed corpus comprises 346 articles from eight Spanish and eleven international newspapers. The articles were coded based on descriptive variables (i.e., author, publication year, newspaper and language) and categorical variables (i.e., section, method, approach to the phenomenon, assessment of the phenomenon and overview of the phenomenon). The results indicate a significant increase in press coverage over the past few years and reveal associations between assessment of the phenomenon and year and between assessment of the phenomenon and section. As a result of this research, new investigative lines are unveiled regarding the social construction of the phenomenon in the media and the identity and individual construction of the ‘truncated careers’ of young Spanish people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Impact of immigrants on a multi-agent economical system.
- Author
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Kaufmann, Léa, Razakanirina, Ranaivo, Groen, Derek, and Chopard, Bastien
- Subjects
- *
FOREIGN workers , *ECONOMIC equilibrium , *LABOR market , *LABOR economics , *LABOR supply - Abstract
We consider a multi-agent model of a simple economical system and study the impacts of a wave of immigrants on the stability of the system. Our model couples a labor market with a goods market. We first create a stable economy with N agents and study the impact of adding n new workers in the system. The time to reach a new equilibrium market is found to obey a power law in n. The new wages and market prices are observed to decrease as 1/n, whereas the wealth of agents remains unchanged. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Immigrant community integration in world cities.
- Author
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Lamanna, Fabio, Lenormand, Maxime, Salas-Olmedo, María Henar, Romanillos, Gustavo, Gonçalves, Bruno, and Ramasco, José J.
- Subjects
- *
MULTICULTURALISM , *IMMIGRANTS , *NEUROSCIENCES , *SPATIO-temporal variation , *COMMUNICATION & culture - Abstract
As a consequence of the accelerated globalization process, today major cities all over the world are characterized by an increasing multiculturalism. The integration of immigrant communities may be affected by social polarization and spatial segregation. How are these dynamics evolving over time? To what extent the different policies launched to tackle these problems are working? These are critical questions traditionally addressed by studies based on surveys and census data. Such sources are safe to avoid spurious biases, but the data collection becomes an intensive and rather expensive work. Here, we conduct a comprehensive study on immigrant integration in 53 world cities by introducing an innovative approach: an analysis of the spatio-temporal communication patterns of immigrant and local communities based on language detection in Twitter and on novel metrics of spatial integration. We quantify the Power of Integration of cities –their capacity to spatially integrate diverse cultures– and characterize the relations between different cultures when acting as hosts or immigrants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Depression and its correlations with health-risk behaviors and social capital among female migrants working in entertainment venues in China.
- Author
-
Yang, Qiaohong, Operario, Don, Zaller, Nickolas, Huang, Wen, Dong, Yanyan, and Zhang, Hongbo
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL depression , *HEALTH risk assessment , *CULTURAL industries , *MIGRANT labor , *INTERNAL migration , *HEALTH - Abstract
Objectives: Among the dramatic increased internal migration in China in past three decades, a considerable proportion of young females migrated to urban areas and found employment in “entertainment venues”, who may be vulnerable to psychological distress. This study examines the prevalence of depression and explores its associations with health-risk behaviors and social capital among this subgroup. Methods: 358 female migrants were recruited from entertainment venues in a rapidly growing urban city in China. A survey which included measures of depressive symptoms, health-risk behaviors, social capital, and socio-demographic characteristics was administered. Multivariable logistic regression was conducted to identify the independent correlates of depression. Results: Of participants, 31.0% had clinically significant depressive symptoms (CES-D score ≥ 16). In multivariable models, greater likelihood of depressive symptoms was associated with working in massage centers/hotels (OR = 3.20, 95% CI: 1.80–5.70), having probable alcohol dependence (OR = 2.25, 95% CI: 1.22–4.16), self-reported lifetime use of illicit drugs (OR = 2.98, 95% CI: 1.26–7.06), growing up in a non-nuclear family (OR = 2.46, 95% CI: 1.18–5.16), and poor social capital (OR = 6.01, 95% CI = 2.02–17.87). Conclusion: Intervention strategies to address the high prevalence of depression among female migrants are needed, and should also aim to reduce problematic alcohol and drug use, improve social capital, and target women working in massage centers or hotels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Influence of peer support on HIV/STI prevention and safety amongst international migrant sex workers: A qualitative study at the Mexico-Guatemala border.
- Author
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Febres-Cordero, Belen, Brouwer, Kimberly C., Rocha-Jimenez, Teresita, Fernandez-Casanueva, Carmen, Morales-Miranda, Sonia, and Goldenberg, Shira M.
- Subjects
- *
HIV prevention , *SEX workers , *WOMEN migrant labor , *SOCIAL isolation , *PEER pressure , *PSYCHOLOGY , *MEDICAL care , *PREVENTION , *SOCIAL conditions of women - Abstract
Background: Migrant women engaged in precarious employment, such as sex work, frequently face pronounced social isolation alongside other barriers to health and human rights. Although peer support has been identified as a critical HIV and violence prevention intervention for sex workers, little is known about access to peer support or its role in shaping health and social outcomes for migrant sex workers. This article analyses the role of peer support in shaping vulnerability and resilience related to HIV/STI prevention and violence among international migrant sex workers at the Mexico-Guatemala border. Methods: This qualitative study is based on 31 semi-structured interviews conducted with international migrant sex workers in the Mexico-Guatemala border communities of Tapachula, Mexico and Tecún Umán and Quetzaltenango, Guatemala. Results: Peer support was found to be critical for reducing social isolation; improving access to HIV/STI knowledge, prevention and resources; and mitigating workplace violence, particularly at the initial stages of migration and sex work. Peer support was especially critical for countering social isolation, and peers represented a valuable source of HIV/STI prevention knowledge and resources (e.g., condoms), as well as essential safety supports in the workplace. However, challenges to accessing peer support were noted, including difficulties establishing long-lasting relationships and other forms of social participation due to frequent mobility, as well as tensions among peers within some work environments. Variations in access to peer support related to country of work, work environment, sex work and migration stage, and sex work experience were also identified. Conclusions: Results indicate that peer-led and community empowerment interventions represent a promising strategy for promoting the health, safety and human rights of migrant sex workers. Tailored community empowerment interventions addressing the unique migration-related contexts and challenges faced by migrant sex workers should be a focus of future community-based research, alongside promotion of broader structural changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The effective family size of immigrant founders predicts their long-term demographic outcome : From Québec settlers to their 20th-century descendants
- Author
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Labuda, Damian, Harding, Tommy, Milot, Emmanuel, Vézina, Hélène, Labuda, Damian, Harding, Tommy, Milot, Emmanuel, and Vézina, Hélène
- Abstract
Population history reconstruction, using extant genetic diversity data, routinely relies on simple demographic models to project the past through ascending genealogical-tree branches. Because genealogy and genetics are intimately related, we traced descending genealogies of the Québec founders to pursue their fate and to assess their contribution to the present-day population. Focusing on the female and male founder lines, we observed important sex-biased immigration in the early colony years and documented a remarkable impact of these early immigrants on the genetic make-up of 20th-century Québec. We estimated the immigrants’ survival ratio as a proportion of lineages found in the 1931–60 Québec to their number introduced within the immigration period. We assessed the effective family size, EFS, of all immigrant parents and their Québec-born descendants. The survival ratio of the earliest immigrants was the highest and declined over centuries in association with the immigrants’ EFS. Parents with high EFS left plentiful married descendants, putting EFS as the most important variable determining the parental demographic success throughout time for generations ahead. EFS of immigrant founders appears to predict their long-term demographic and, consequently, their genetic outcome. Genealogically inferred immigrants’ "autosomal" genetic contribution to 1931–60 Québec from consecutive immigration periods follow the same yearly pattern as the corresponding maternal and paternal lines. Québec genealogical data offer much broader information on the ancestral diversity distribution than genetic scrutiny of a limited population sample. Genealogically inferred population history could assist studies of evolutionary factors shaping population structure and provide tools to target specific health interventions.
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- 2022
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44. Essays on political economy
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Silva, Luiz Gustavo Araújo da Cruz Casais e, Escolas::EESP, Souza, André Portela Fernandes de, Santos, Gervásio Ferreira dos, Sakurai, Sergio Naruhiko, Menezes, Rafael Terra de, and Mattos, Enlinson
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Economia política ,Development economics ,Economic recession ,Economia da migração ,Microeconometria ,Microeconometrics ,Economics of migration ,Economia ,Recessão (Economia) ,Migração ,Political economy ,Desenvolvimento econômico ,Recessão econômica ,Eleições - Brasil ,Economia - Brasil - Abstract
Esta tese é composta por três ensaios relacionados à Economia Política. Os dois primeiros investigam o movimento migratório do início do século XXI para o Brasil, sua relação com os resultados eleitorais e compartilham do mesmo banco de dados. O terceiro examina o impacto sociopolítico de um declínio econômico na região cacaueira no estado da Bahia, Brasil. O primeiro capítulo analisa o impacto da imigração nas eleições presidenciais no Brasil entre 2006 e 2018. Para tanto, utilizo duas variáveis instrumentais: (i) com base na distância geográfica e (ii) no shift-share. Os resultados sugerem que se um município recebe a média da proporção dos imigrantes na população local, a parcela de votos do PT diminui em 5,25 pontos percentuais (p.p.). Para o efeito heterogêneo, o impacto é mais forte para os municípios que (i) abrigam uma parcela menor de imigrantes, (ii) têm uma população menor, (iii) têm uma taxa de desemprego mais alta e (iv) têm menor qualidade educacional. Maior participação de imigrantes aumenta a participação de votos do PT na região Sul do Brasil. Além disso, restringindo as estimativas para diferentes ciclos eleitorais, o impacto passa a ser positivo no ciclo 2007-2010 e negativo no restante. A análise do mecanismo sugere que o impacto eleitoral se dá potencialmente pelo aumento da participação de estudantes estrangeiros, o que pode ser uma proxy de competição por bens públicos. Além disso, os resultados mostram que os imigrantes reduzem os homicídios, aumentam o gasto per capita do município e sua receita líquida. O segundo capítulo examina se os imigrantes tomam decisões sobre para onde ir dentro de um país com base nos resultados das eleições. Utilizo os resultados das eleições para prefeito no Brasil de 2004 e 2008 sobre o número de pedidos de visto de longa duração em nível municipal. As variáveis políticas são três: partidos políticos de esquerda e centro, PT e PSDB. A investigação emprega a abordagem da variável instrumental para verificar o efeito causal do fenômeno. As estimativas sugerem que 1 p.p. de aumento da parcela de votos dos partidos de esquerda e centro está correlacionado com o aumento da imigração em 0,7 por município. Os resultados, no entanto, não devem ser interpretados como causais, uma vez que as verificações de robustez sugerem que os pressupostos das variáveis instrumentais não são satisfeitos. O terceiro capítulo avalia as consequências eleitorais do declínio econômico da região cacaueira mais produtiva do Brasil após a infecção pela vassoura-de-bruxa. Aplico duas abordagens de pesquisa, a saber, a diferença em diferenças e a variável instrumental. Encontro evidências de que os eleitores da área afetada puniram o candidato presidencial do titular no curto prazo, aumentando a parcela de votos do Partido dos Trabalhadores. Com relação à eleição para governador, os resultados sugerem o mesmo movimento: os eleitores puniram persistentemente o partido do titular ao longo de todo o período analisado, atribuindo maior parcela de votos ao Partido da Frente Liberal. Os eleitores são mais receptivos entre os municípios com maior PIB per capita, maior produção de cacau e maior população rural. A análise do mecanismo revela que o fenômeno elevou a taxa de desemprego, a pobreza e a desigualdade This thesis is composed of three essays related to Political Economy. The first two investigate the migratory movement of the beginning of the 21st century to Brazil, its relationship with electoral results, and they share the same database. The third examines the sociopolitical impact of an economic decline in the cacao region in the state of Bahia, Brazil. The first chapter analyzes the impact of the international immigration on the presidential elections in Brazil between 2006 and 2018. For this purpose, it uses two instrumental variables: (i) based on the geographical distance, and (ii) the shift-share. The results suggest that if a municipality hosts the mean of the immigrant share of the local population, the PT’s vote share reduces by 5.25 percentage points (p.p.). For the heterogeneous effect, I find that the impact is stronger for municipalities that (i) host a lower share of immigrants, (ii) have a lower population, (iii) have a higher unemployment rate, and (iv) hold a lower educational quality. Higher immigrant share increases the PT’s vote share in the Brazilian South region. Besides, restricting the estimations for different election cycles, the impact becomes then positive in the 2006–2010 cycle and negative for the remainder. The mechanism analysis suggests that the electoral impact potentially run through the increase of foreign student share in the educational system, which may be a proxy of competition for public goods. Moreover, I find that immigrants reduce homicide, increase municipality spending per capita, and its net revenues. The second chapter examines whether immigrants make decisions about where to go within a country based on the election outcomes. I use the results of the Brazilian mayoral elections of 2004 and 2008 on the number of long-term visa requests at the municipality level. The political variables are three: left and center political parties, PT, and PSDB. The investigation employs the instrumental variable approach to verify he causal effect of the phenomenon. The estimates suggest that a 1 p.p. increase of the left and center parties’ vote share is correlated with the raise of immigration by 0.7 per municipality. The results, though, should not be interpreted as causal, since the robustness checks suggest that the the instrumental variable assumptions are not satisfied. The third chapter assesses the electoral consequences of the economic decline of Brazil’s most productive cocoa region after infection with the witches’ broom disease. I run tworesearch designs, namely, the difference in differences and the instrumental variable. I find evidence that the voters in the affected area punished the incumbent’s presidential candidate in the short-run, by increasing the Workers’ Party vote share. With respect to the gubernatorial election, the results suggest the same movement: the voters punished the incumbent’s party persistently throughout the entire period analyzed by giving a higher share of votes to the Liberal Front Party. Voters are more responsive among the municipalities with the highest GDP per capita, highest cocoa production, and highest rural population. The mechanism analysis reveal that the phenomenon raised the unemployment rate, the poverty, and the inequality.
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- 2022
45. Fears and Tears : Should More People Be Moving within and from Developing Countries, and What Stops This Movement?
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McKenzie, David
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BENEFITS OF URBANIZATION ,WEALTH AND WELLBEING ,PSYCHOLOGICAL UNCERTAINTY OF RELOCATION ,INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION ,INTERNAL RELOCATION ,MIGRATION POLICY ,ECONOMICS OF MIGRATION ,ATTACHMENT TO HOME ,CONSTRAINTS THAT LIMIT MOVEMENT - Abstract
Only one in seven of the world’s population has ever migrated, despite the enormous gains in income possible through international and internal movement. This paper examines the evidence for different explanations given in the economics literature for this lack of movement and their implications for policy. Incorrect information about the gains to migrating, liquidity constraints that prevent poor people paying the costs of moving, and high costs of movement arising from both physical transportation costs and policy barriers all inhibit movement and offer scope for policy efforts to inform, provide credit, and lower moving costs. However, the economics literature has paid less attention to the fears people have when faced with the uncertainty of moving to a new place, and to the reasons behind the tears they shed when moving. While these tears reveal the attachment people have to particular places, this attachment is not fixed, but itself changes with migration experiences. Psychological factors such as a bias toward the status quo and the inability to picture what one is giving up by not migrating can result in people not moving, even when they would benefit from movement and are not constrained by finances or policy barriers from doing so. This suggests new avenues for policy interventions that can help individuals better visualize the opportunity costs of not moving, alleviate their uncertainties, and help shift their default behavior from not migrating.
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- 2022
46. Patterns and Implications of Migration and Rebordering
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Roose, Jochen, author, Karolewski, Ireneusz Pawel, author, and Sata, Robert, author
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- 2020
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47. Timing of chronic hepatitis B diagnosis after migration and its determinants among Sub-Saharan African migrants living in France.
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Pannetier, Julie, Gigonzac, Virginie, Lydié, Nathalie, Desgrées du Loû, Annabel, and Dray Spira, Rosemary
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CHRONIC hepatitis B , *IMMIGRANTS , *UNEMPLOYMENT , *PREGNANCY , *MEDICAL personnel , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Objective: In European countries, chronic hepatitis B (CHB) disproportionately affects migrants from medium- and high-endemic areas and is largely underdiagnosed. To inform policy and improve screening strategies, we measured the timing of CHB diagnosis after migration and its determinants among sub-Saharan migrants living in the Paris metropolitan area (France). Design: The PARCOURS study is a retrospective life-event history survey conducted in health care services in 2012–2013 among 779 migrants from sub-Saharan Africa who were receiving care for CHB. We investigated the timing of CHB diagnosis from the time of arrival in France using the Kaplan-Meier method and characteristics associated with CHB diagnosis since the time of arrival in France using discrete-time multivariate logistic regression models. Results: The median CHB diagnosis occurred during the fourth year spent in France for men and during the second year spent in France for women. Among men, the probability of CHB diagnosis increased during years with (versus without) a temporary resident permit (aOR: 1.6, 95%CI: 1.1–2.2), a precarious accommodation (aOR: 1.7, 95%CI: 1.1–2.6), and hospitalization (aOR: 7.7, 95%CI: 3.4–15.1). Among women, CHB diagnosis was more likely to occur during years with unemployment (aOR: 1.9, 95%CI: 1.1–3.94), pregnancy (aOR: 6.6, 95%CI: 3.5–12.5) and hospitalization (aOR: 9.0, 95%CI: 2.95–32.3). For both sexes, the probability of CHB diagnosis was higher among those who migrated to France because they were threatened in their country. Conclusion: This study shows that social hardships (residential, economic, administrative) and contact with the health care system after arrival in France hasten access to a CHB diagnosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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48. Human trafficking and exploitation: A global health concern.
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Zimmerman, Cathy and Kiss, Ligia
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HUMAN trafficking , *HUMAN trafficking victims , *HEALTH policy , *SOCIAL mobility , *HUMAN rights violations , *MEDICAL care - Abstract
In this collection review, Cathy Zimmerman and colleague introduce the PLOS Medicine Collection on Human Trafficking, Exploitation and Health, laying out the magnitude of the global trafficking problem and offering a public health policy framework to guide responses to trafficking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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49. Comparison of rubella immunization rates in immigrant and Italian women of childbearing age: Results from the Italian behavioral surveillance system PASSI (2011-2015).
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Fabiani, Massimo, Ferrante, Gianluigi, Minardi, Valentina, Giambi, Cristina, Declich, Silvia, Masocco, Maria, and Riccardo, Flavia
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RUBELLA vaccines , *IMMIGRANTS , *PUBLIC health surveillance , *WOMEN , *SOCIAL status , *COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Background: International migration rapidly increased in the last decade, raising a renewed attention to its impact on public health. We evaluated differences in rubella immunization rate (RIR) between immigrant and Italian women of childbearing age and tried to identify the driving factors causing them. Methods: We analyzed data from the Italian behavioral surveillance system PASSI collected in 2011–2015 in a nationally representative sample of residents in Italy. The analysis was performed using log-binomial models to compare RIR between 41,094 Italian women and 3140 regular immigrant women of childbearing age (18–49 years), stratifying the latter by area of origin and length-of-stay in Italy (recent: ≤ 5-years; mid-term: 6-10-years; long-term: > 10-years). Results: Immigrant women showed a RIR of 36.0% compared to 60.2% among Italian women (RIR-ratio = 0.60, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.57–0.63). Adjusting for demographic characteristics (i.e., sex, age and area of residence), socio-economic factors (i.e., education, occupation, family composition and economic status) and an indicator of the presence of at least one health-risk behavior (i.e., physical inactivity, current cigarette smoking, excessive alcohol consumption and excess weight) did not significantly change this difference (RIR-ratio = 0.56, 95% CI: 0.53–0.59). Recent immigrants (RIR-ratio = 0.47, 95% CI: 0.42–0.53) and immigrants from high migratory pressure countries (HMPC) in sub-Saharan Africa (RIR-ratio = 0.41, 95% CI: 0.31–0.56) and Asia (RIR-ratio = 0.42, 95% CI: 0.33–0.53) showed the greatest differences in RIR compared with Italian women. Conclusions: Differences in RIR between immigrant and Italian women were not explained by different demographic, socioeconomic and health-risk behaviors characteristics. As entitlement to free-of-charge immunization in Italy is universal, regardless of migration status, other informal barriers (e.g., cultural and barriers to information access) might explain lower RIRs in immigrant women, especially recent immigrants and those from HMPC in sub-Saharan Africa and Asia. Further investigations are needed to identify obstacles and appropriate promotion and access-enabling strategies for rubella immunization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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50. Methodology, theory and inquiry in Italian economic and social thought: The making of Francesco Coletti.
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Prévost, Jean-Guy, Spalletti, Stefano, and Perri, Stefano
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SOCIAL scientists , *AGRICULTURAL economics , *CAREER development , *SOCIAL sciences , *WORK ethic , *OCCUPATIONAL achievement , *HISTORY ,ITALIAN politics & government - Abstract
During the first decades of the twentieth century, Italian economist Francesco Coletti (1866–1940) was recognised as an authority on emigration and agricultural economics. We intend to focus here on Coletti's early career to understand how he rapidly managed to secure an enviable reputation. We examine Coletti's interventions on economic semiology and measurement of national wealth. We then move on to a series of theoretical debates (notably on Marx's theory of value) to which Coletti made significant contributions. Finally, we survey Coletti's fieldwork in agriculture and emigration, topics that allowed for connecting theoretical issues, methodological constraints, and empirical data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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