Research
Database

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

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GEITONIES

Description
The increasing ethnic and religious diversity of the population in European cities has generated politically and ideologically controversial discussions about interethnic coexistence and the future of social cohesion. The issue of the integration of a heterogeneous immigrant population has become a priority for urban decision-makers and politicians in the European Union. Concrete encounters between different migrant groups and non-migrants mostly take place in the workplace and at the local level of the neighbourhood. The actual form that intercultural contacts and conflicts in urban settings take and their consequences for individual attitudes are still widely unknown. The GEITONIES (“neighbourhood” in Greek) project was concerned with how interethnic interactions, in neighbourhoods in European cities might help towards the creation of a more tolerant, cohesive and integrated society. Research was conducted in Bilbao, Lisbon, Rotterdam, Thessaloniki, Vienna and Warsaw. The main questions looked at how interethnic contacts are determined by spatial micro-level units and how these contacts affect tolerant or intolerant individual attitudes towards members of other ethnic groups. This project aimed to address these issues from a relational perspective through the lens of place, assuming that in contemporary multi-ethnic European cities, spaces of intercultural communication and engagement are vital to promote tolerance, cohesion, participation and inclusion in society.
Year 2008
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32852 Project

Diasporas for Peace: Patterns, Trends and Potential of Long-distance Diaspora Involvement in Conflict Settings. Case studies from the Horn of Africa

Description
DIASPEACE seeks to generate policy-relevant, evidence-based knowledge on how diasporas (exiled populations from conflict regions) play into the dynamics of conflict and peace in their countries of origin. In a globalised world diasporas have become new forces shaping the interactions between countries, regions and continents. On one hand, they are seen to fuel conflict by transferring remittances and logistic support to the warring parties, and to exacerbate tensions through radical mobilisation along ethnic and religious lines. One the other, diaspora groups are playing an increasingly prominent role in peace and reconciliation processes. There is a need for a balanced empirical account of the nature, motivations and impact of transnational diaspora activities in conflict settings. The project has an empirical focus on diaspora networks operating in Europe which extend their transnational activities to the Horn of Africa. This is a region where decades of violent conflict have resulted in state collapse and the dispersal of more than two million people. The project will conduct field research in seven European countries and in Somalia, Ethiopia and Eritrea. DIASPEACE aims to: a) devise and test methodologies of multi-sited comparative research and to develop the conceptual framework for researching migrant political transnationalism in a conflict context; b) facilitate interaction between diaspora and other stakeholders in Europe and in the Horn of Africa; c) provide policy input on how to better involve diaspora in conflict resolution and peace-building interventions, and how to improve coherence between security, development and immigration policies. The consortium involves six partners from Europe and two from the Horn of Africa, bringing together cross-disciplinary expertise from the fields of Conflict Analysis, Migration Studies and Anthropology among others. The project is coordinated by the University of Jyväskylä in Finland.
Year 2008
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32853 Project

Transferring the Margins to the Center

Authors Suzanne Oboler
Year 2007
Journal Name LATINO STUDIES
32863 Journal Article

UWT: Undocumented Worker Transitions: Compiling evidence concerning the boundaries and processes of change in the status and work of undocumented workers in Europe

Description
The Undocumented Worker Transitions (UWT) project will document the factors that underlie migration flows, illegal and legal, focusing on undocumented migrants and under-documented migrants, whose migration status limits or prevents their working. The link between work and migration flows is at its heart: what knowledge such migrants have of their host labour markets, how they find work, what work they do, what transitions between different jobs and statuses take place and what impact their working arrangements and migration have more generally both in the host country and in their countries of origin. Recognising that gender, age and ethnicity are key factors in understanding migrant and refugee flows, UWT will analyse migration and work trajectories in a differentiated way to better understand the process. The ethical issues are considerable and the project will guarantee its interviewees complete anonymity while ensuring that researchers' personal safety is not compromised. Its purpose is to deepen understanding and awareness of contemporary migration flows and to present clear choices to policymakers, not to provide an assessment of the efficacy of policing. Our objectives are as follows: to give more reliable estimates of migration and refugee flows into the EU; to deepen understanding of the impact of migration flows on EU labour markets; to theorise the relationship between the presence of 'informal' or 'shadow' industry labour markets and migration flows; to map and model migrant and refugee pathways in to and within the EU; to deepen knowledge of how legal status interacts with migrant labour market positions; to deepen understanding of the impact of migration flows on countries of origin; to test key theories concerning human capital and social capital in relation to migration; and to explore the particular consequences of migration for women workers, including trafficked workers. At the core are in-depth interviews with 210 migrant and refugee workers.
Year 2007
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32865 Project

Between Ashkenaz and Québécois: Fifty Years of Francophone Sephardim in Montréal

Authors William F.S. Miles
Year 2007
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
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32866 Journal Article

Post-Soviet diaspora politics: The case of the Soviet Greeks

Authors Eftihia Voutira
Year 2006
Journal Name Journal of Modern Greek Studies
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32867 Journal Article

Labour mobility and regional disparities: the role of female labour participation

Authors Sjef Ederveen, Richard Nahuis, Ashok Parikh
Year 2006
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
Citations (WoS) 12
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
32868 Journal Article

Immigration to Egypt

Authors Ayman Zohry
Year 2006
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies
32869 Journal Article

The two faces of the ghetto

Authors Loic Wacquant
Year 2005
Journal Name Actes de la recherche en sciences sociales
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32874 Journal Article

STABLE SIZE, CHANGING COMPOSITION: RECENT MIGRATION DYNAMICS OF THE DUTCH LARGE CITIES

Authors MARCO BONTJE, JAN LATTEN
Year 2005
Journal Name Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie
Citations (WoS) 9
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32877 Journal Article

Welsh-Patagonian Fiction: Language and the Novel of Transnational Ethnicity

Authors Esther Whitfield
Year 2005
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
32878 Journal Article

News Media Consumption among Immigrants in Europe

Authors Connie Carøe Christiansen
Year 2004
Journal Name Ethnicities
32881 Journal Article

Emigration, return and development in Cape Verde: the impact of closing borders

Authors Jørgen Carling
Year 2004
Journal Name Population, Space and Place
32882 Journal Article

Use of social science research on migration policy in the Czech Republic

Authors Z Uherek
Year 2004
Journal Name International Social Science Journal
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
32883 Journal Article

Financial Globalization and Cross-Border Comovements of Money and Population: Foreign Bank Offices in Los Angeles

Authors Gary Dymski, Wei Li
Year 2004
Journal Name Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space
32885 Journal Article

Forging the vacancy chain: Law enforcement efforts and mobility in criminal economies

Authors HR Friman
Year 2004
Journal Name Crime, Law and Social Change
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32886 Journal Article

Rethinking migration, ancient to future

Authors Roger Sanjek
Year 2003
Journal Name Global Networks
Citations (WoS) 12
32890 Journal Article

What does integration mean? social insertion of Russian immigrants in Israel

Authors Larissa Remennick
Year 2003
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
32891 Journal Article

Foreigners Transformed: International Migration and the Remaking of a Divided People

Authors Roger Waldinger
Year 2003
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
32892 Journal Article

Immigrant Place Entrepreneurs in Los Angeles, 1970–99

Authors Ivan Light
Year 2002
Journal Name International Journal of Urban and Regional Research
Citations (WoS) 36
32897 Journal Article

The Migration–Development Nexus: Afghanistan Case Study

Authors Leila Jazayery
Year 2002
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 14
32898 Journal Article

Ethnic Communities and Ethnic Organizations Reconsidered: South‐East Asians and Eastern Europeans in Chicago

Authors Lorraine Majka, Brendan Mullan
Year 2002
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 13
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
32899 Journal Article

The hierarchy of Greekness

Authors Anna Triandafyllidou, Mariangela Veikou
Year 2002
Journal Name Ethnicities
32900 Journal Article
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