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

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Integration of aliens and reintegration of returnees in the Republic of Armenia : legal aspects

Authors Petros AGHABABYAN
Description
The integration of migrants is a complex and lengthy process, and it depends on a number of factors: socio-economic, psychological, legal and political. Research covering this issue, conducted in Armenia, mainly relate to the local integration of the refugees forcibly displaced from Azerbaijan in 1988-1992 and especially to socio-economic aspects of that process . This is due to the fact that since independence refugees were the most important numerically, and their socio-economic issues were acute. Research has covered a wide range of integration issues with special emphasis on legal acts ensuring the implementation of this process/procedure. In particular, the issues related to the integration of foreign nationals (who are ethnically Armenian) arriving in Armenia from the Diaspora, as well as new refugees, who have found asylum in Armenia since 2000, not to mention the refugees who arrived 1988-1992, were examined. The RA citizens returning from foreign states to Armenia have been considered as a separate migration flow and the issues related to their reintegration are also touched upon. Relevant legal acts have been analyzed in the light of challenges faced in their implementation. Some institutional decisions, case-law, findings of the International organizations, NGOs, etc. have been included in the paper.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23702 Report

International migration and the nation state in Arab countries

Authors Philippe FARGUES
Year 2013
Journal Name Middle East Law and Governance, 2013, Vol. 5, No. 1-2, pp. 5-35
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23703 Journal Article

Bodies across borders: oral and visual memory in Europe and beyond

Description
This project intends to study intercultural connections in contemporary Europe, engaging both native and ‘new’ Europeans. These connections are woven through the faculties of embodied subjects – memory, visuality and mobility – and concern the movement of people, ideas and images across the borders of European nation-states. These faculties are connected with that of affect, an increasingly important concept in history and the social sciences. Memory will be understood not only as oral or direct memory, but also as cultural memory, embodied in various cultural products. Our study aims to understand new forms of European identity, as these develop in an increasingly diasporic world. Europe today is not only a key site of immigration, after having been for centuries an area of emigration, but also a crucial point of arrival in a global network designed by mobile human beings. Three parts will make up the project. The first will engage with bodies, their gendered dimension, performative capacities and connection to place. It will explore the ways certain bodies are ‘emplaced’ as ‘European’, while others are marked as alien, and contrast these discourses with the counter-narratives by visual artists. The second part will extend further the reflection on the role of the visual arts in challenging an emergent ‘Fortress Europe’ but also in re-imagining the memory of European colonialism. The work of some key artists will be shown to students in Italy and the Netherlands, both recent migrants and ‘natives’, creating an ‘induced reception’. The final part of the project will look at alternative imaginations of Europe, investigating the oral memories and ‘mental maps’ created by two migrant communities in Europe: from Peru and from the Horn of Africa. Examining the heterogeneous micro-productions of mobility – whether ‘real’ or imagined/envisioned – will thus yield important lessons for the historical understanding of inclusion and exclusion in today’s Europe.
Year 2013
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23704 Project

Emigration and diaspora of the Republic of Armenia

Authors Haykanush CHOBANYAN
Description
Emigration is not separately emphasized in the “Concept for the Policy of State Regulation of Migration in the Republic of Armenia” (2010) as a priority direction. Issues related to emigration are captured in various emigration areas, such as labor emigration, illegal emigration from Armenia and etc. The emigration flows originating from Armenia are mainly composed of labor emigration flows therefore in this Note we have analyzed the policy pursued by the state on labor emigration. An immigration policy also is not set up in the Concept Paper as a separate issue, which is probably conditioned by the low immigration flows towards Armenia. Nowadays Armenian Government is doing great efforts on keeping ties with Diaspora. Constitutional amendments, approved by the referendum in 2005, abolished the norm to ban dual citizenship. In 2008 the Ministry of Diaspora was established. In 2009 the Concept Paper on Development of Armenia and Diaspora Co-operation was approved by the Armenian Government and the Draft of the Concept Paper on Organization of Repatriation Process has already been developed.
Year 2012
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23705 Report

Problems of Migrant Integration in Ukraine

Authors Oleksii POZNIAK
Description
The paper assesses opportunities and develops proposals for the integration of immigrants, as well as the adaptation of re-emigrants – long-term Ukrainian labour migrants returning home. An analysis of immigration to Ukraine has been carried out on the basis of: the 2001 population census; the current registering of migration processes; and also administrative sources of information. These sources include material from the Ministry of the Interior of Ukraine, the State Migration Service of Ukraine, the State Employment Service of the Ministry of Social Policy of Ukraine, the Ministry of Education and Science, Youth and Sports of Ukraine, as well as data from special sampling surveys, including those held under the author’s guidance. The paper considers three specific migration groups in Ukraine: ‘non-traditional’ immigrants; the ‘Soviet Diaspora’; and long-term labour emigrants. An assessment has been made of ‘non-traditional’ immigrants in Ukraine and the prospects for their integration. A bilateral approach was here employed – the comparison of opinions from Ukrainian citizens and from foreigners on the basis of student youth surveys (including foreign students). It has been demonstrated that the frequency of contacts between immigrants and the receiving society is an important integration mechanism. An assessment has been made of the conditions of long-term Ukrainian migrants in recipient countries with the conclusion that these conditions are not significantly different from the conditions of short- and medium-term migrants. Particular attention has been paid to the ‘Soviet Diaspora,’ thus far practically untouched by scholarly publications in Ukraine. It is shown that the Soviet Diaspora in Ukraine (and other former USSR republics) has certain features sharply distinguishing it from ‘diaspora’ in the classical sense. An attempt has been made to define the term, develop the criteria to limit the reference groups and to assess the dimensions of the Soviet Diaspora. An analysis of current Ukrainian immigration policies has been given. Policy recommendations for perfecting Ukrainian state policy in the field of immigration, immigrants’ integration and the reintegration of returning long-term Ukrainian labour migrants have been formulated as well.
Year 2012
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23707 Report

Beyond "Home Identity"? Immigrant Voices in Contemporary Greek Fiction

Authors Georgia Gotsi
Year 2012
Journal Name Journal of Modern Greek Studies
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23709 Journal Article

Reclaiming Diaspora: The Israeli State, Migration, and Ethnonationalism in the Global Era

Authors Yossi Yonah
Year 2012
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23710 Journal Article

Ethnic Return Migrations—(Are Not Quite)—Diasporic Homecomings

Authors Fran Markowitz
Year 2012
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23712 Journal Article

The Refugee-Trafficking Nexus: Making Good (The) Connections

Authors S. Kneebone
Year 2010
Journal Name REFUGEE SURVEY QUARTERLY
23713 Journal Article

New Diaspora in a Post-Soviet City: Transformations in Experiences of Belonging in Odesa, Ukraine

Authors Vera Skvirskaja
Year 2010
Journal Name Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism
23714 Journal Article

La migration hautement qualifiée : cas du Mali

Authors Djibonding DEMBELE
Description
Le Mali est à la fois un pays d’immigration et d’émigration. Des cadres étrangers hautement qualifiés travaillent dans de nombreux secteurs de développement de ce pays (bâtiments, travaux publics, médecine, sociétés minières, industries sucrières). Dans le même temps, des cadres maliens de haut niveau ont émigré vers tous les continents. Ce phénomène a constitué un véritable handicap pour le développement du Mali. En réaction à cette perte, il a conclu une convention avec le PNUD pour bénéficier de l’expertise de la diaspora hautement qualifiée établie dans les pays étrangers. Le Programme TOKTEN (Transfer of Knowledge Trough Expatriate Nationals) lui a permis d’améliorer la qualité de enseignement supérieur, de former de nombreux enseignants, et d’ouvrir l’université de Bamako sur le monde extérieur. Le TOKTEN a également eu un impact positif sur les domaines de la santé et de l’agriculture. Malgré quelques insuffisances, son bilan est très positif et il a été prolongé. Mali is a country of immigration and of emigration. Highly-qualified foreign nationals work in many sectors linked to the development of the country including building, public works, medicine, mines and sugar industries. Meanwhile, highly-qualified Malians have emigrated all around the world. This phenomenon has constituted a real handicap to Mali’s development. To react to this loss, Mali concluded a convention with the UNPD in order to profit from the expertise of its highly-qualified diaspora. The resulting TOKTEN Programme (Transfer of Knowledge Through Expatriate Nationals) has enabled Mali to improve the quality of its higher education, to train a number of professors and to open Bamako university to the world. The TOKTEN Programme has also had a positive impact on health and agriculture in Mali. Despite some problems, its results are positive and it has been extended.
Year 2010
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23716 Report

Relocated Remembrance: the Great Famine in Irish (Diaspora) Fiction, 1847-1921

Description
The Great Hunger (1845-49) radically transformed Ireland: it led to the wide-scale eviction of farmers, killed one million of the rural population, and caused massive emigration to other parts of the British Empire and the United States. Moreover, the Great Famine encouraged anti-English, nationalist sentiments and its trauma is pivotal to the development of an Irish postcolonial consciousness between 1847-1921. There is a vast unexplored transatlantic corpus of prose fiction, written between the aftermath of the Famine and the Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1921, which remembers the years of starvation and diaspora. My project is the first to inventorise and bring together this under-researched body of literature, written in Ireland and by Irish immigrants in England, Canada and the United States. This fiction requires intensive examination for significant reasons, offering alternative perspectives on how the Famine was culturally experienced than previous studies have displayed, and representing subaltern voices and recollections. Moreover, the texts are written in the homeland as well as in diaspora, by migrated Irish or their descendants. An examination of the corpus will therefore move beyond the largely nation-oriented frontiers of cultural memory studies towards innovative, transnational approaches. The project specifically investigates how remembrance is mediated through time, from one generation to another, and space, in diaspora. It aims to evolve a novel theoretical model about the interaction between temporal and spatial relocation in literary remembrance. This pioneering model will generate groundbreaking insights into the interaction between memory and ethnic identity in comparative contexts of cultural dislocation, a colonised homeland and migrant communities; and in processes of cultural relocation: de-colonisation and ethnic integration. At the same time, the project will analyse genre aspects which play a dynamic role in processes of cultural remembrance, contributing a new perspective to the interdisciplinary debate on media of recollection in cultural memory studies.
Year 2010
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23717 Project

IMPIC (Immigration Policies in Comparison)

Description
The Immigration Policies in Comparison (IMPIC) database includes data on migration policies for 33 OECD countries and the period 1980-2010. The IMPIC defines immigration policy as “government’s statements of what it intends to do or not do (incl. laws, regulations, decisions, or orders) in regards to the selection, admission, settlement and deportation of foreign citizens residing in the country”. The index covers: 1) labour migration; 2) family reunification; 3) refugees and asylum; 4) co-ethnics (e.g., easy access to co-ethics -e.g., children of emigrants). A total of 69 indicators are identified for the four policies fields. Indicators are coded between 0 (more liberal policies) and 1 (more restrictive polices) capturing the extent to which ‘a regulation limits or liberalises the rights and freedoms of immigrants.
Year 2010
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23718 Data Set

New Migrations in Portugal: Labour Markets, Smuggling and Gender Segmentation

Authors João Peixoto
Year 2009
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 16
23720 Journal Article

Migrant workers across European Labour markets. Mobility, citizenship and urban resources in the pre-industrial cities - XVIth-XVIIIth century

Description
The project focus on mobility related to one of the central element of every society: labour market. One of the reasons more frequently adduced at the base of the choice of emigrate is the research of a job. Many scholars have analysed migratory chains and professional specializations of ethnic groups , stressing as immigrants communities were able to conquer relevant places on the labour market. Therefore, the fact that immigrants were not secondary actors on the labour market stage is ascertained, and some studies point out as many foreign people could reach a prestigious position in the city of arrival . Pre-industrial cities and their labour market, in fact, seem to be quite open to foreigners: as many scholars have underlined , modern towns did not divide their inhabitants between citizens and not, but rather between stable and temporary inhabitants. This feature of openness is at the base of the strong circulation of women, men, wealth and knowledges between pre-industrial European countries. In all the major cities we can find foreigners communities, which are frequently well inserted in the local labour markets, to whose functioning they are an indispensable part. Migrant workers mobility traces therefore the lines of a working common space, an European Labour Market where women, men, wealth and knowledges move along, a common space kept together despite its differences and its largeness by the networks between different (and sometimes far) cities, built up and kept in time by its migrant inhabitants.
Year 2008
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23723 Project

Causality Chains in the International Migration Systems Approach

Authors Roel Jennissen
Year 2007
Journal Name Population Research and Policy Review
Citations (WoS) 29
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23724 Journal Article

From "problematic" foreigners to "unproblematic" Muslims: Bosnians in the Swiss Islam-discourse

Authors S. M. Behloul
Year 2007
Journal Name REFUGEE SURVEY QUARTERLY
23725 Journal Article

Reclaiming Diaspora: The Israeli State, Migration, and Ethnonationalism in the Global Era

Authors Yossi Yonah
Year 2007
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23726 Journal Article

Exclusionary Politics and the Question of National Belonging

Authors Kay Anderson, Affrica Taylor
Year 2005
Journal Name Ethnicities
Citations (WoS) 42
23727 Journal Article

The Korean Diaspora and its Impact on Korea's Development

Authors Hye-Kyung Lee
Year 2005
Journal Name Asian and Pacific Migration Journal
23728 Journal Article

Home-Coming and Goings

Authors Armine Ishkanian
Year 2004
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23730 Journal Article

Best Practice Options: Turkey

Authors Philip Martin, Elizabeth Midgley, Michael Teitelbaum
Year 2002
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 6
23731 Journal Article

Gender and Migration

Authors Katie Willis
Year 2000
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23733 Book

Restructuring of Housing and Ethnic Segregation: Recent Developments in Berlin

Authors Franz-Josef Kemper
Year 1998
Journal Name Urban Studies
Citations (WoS) 35
23734 Journal Article

Canada's Guestworkers: Some Comparisons of Temporary Workers in Europe and North America

Authors Lloyd T. Wong
Year 1984
Journal Name International Migration Review
23735 Journal Article

Conditions of Labour Migrants in the Republic of Serbia: Preliminary Perspective

Authors Dragana Antonijević, Marija Krstić, Ana Banić Grubišić
Year 2013
Journal Name Etnoantropološki problemi / Issues in Ethnology and Anthropology
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23737 Journal Article

Kurdish Associations: Community Work and Diasporic Politics

Authors Östen Wahlbeck
Book Title Kurdish Diasporas
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23741 Book Chapter

Immigration and European Integration

Authors Maarten Vink
Book Title Limits of European Citizenship
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23743 Book Chapter

Migrant Organisations and Diaspora Politics

Authors Anastasia Bermudez
Book Title International Migration, Transnational Politics and Conflict
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23744 Book Chapter

Anti-Racism and Ethnic Mobilisation in Europe

Authors John Rex
Book Title Ethnic Minorities in the Modern Nation State
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23745 Book Chapter

Migration from Central and Eastern Europe to Turkey

Authors Tuğba Acar, Deniz Karcı Korfalı
Book Title Between Mobility and Migration
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
23748 Book Chapter
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