Research
Database

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

Showing page of 163,043 results, sorted by

Socioeconomic and Health Profile of Haitian Immigrants in a Brazilian Amazon State

Authors Fabiano Tonaco Borges, Ana Paula Muraro, Luís Henrique da Costa Leão, ...
Year 2018
Journal Name JOURNAL OF IMMIGRANT AND MINORITY HEALTH
Citations (WoS) 2
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43101 Journal Article

Brief Report: Subjective Social Mobility and Depressive Symptoms in Syrian Refugees to Germany

Authors Frank Euteneuer, Sarina J. Schäfer
Year 2018
Journal Name JOURNAL OF IMMIGRANT AND MINORITY HEALTH
Citations (WoS) 2
43102 Journal Article

Immigration society and 'refugee crisis' in Germany

Authors Klaus J. Bade
Year 2018
Journal Name HISTORICAL SOCIAL RESEARCH-HISTORISCHE SOZIALFORSCHUNG
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43104 Journal Article

Central American minors prostituted in California

Authors Simon Pedro Izcara Palacios, Karla Lorena Andrade Rubio
Year 2018
Journal Name NOESIS-REVISTA DE CIENCIAS SOCIALES Y HUMANIDADES
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43105 Journal Article

Israeli Infotech Migrants in Silicon Valley

Authors Steven J. Gold
Year 2018
Journal Name RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences
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43106 Journal Article

Ethnic Groups, Social Identities: Jokes about Georgians and Tajiks

Authors Guillem Castanar Rubio
Year 2018
Journal Name MUNDO ESLAVO-JOURNAL OF SLAVIC STUDIES
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43107 Journal Article

Australian soccer rivalries: diasporas, violence and the Balkan connection

Authors Binoy Kampmark
Year 2018
Journal Name Soccer & Society
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43111 Journal Article

TEACHING TURKISH CULTURAL VALUES THROUGH NARRATIVES WITH A PLOT-STRUCTURE ANALYSIS APPROACH

Authors Defne Erdem Mete
Year 2018
Journal Name TURKIYAT ARASTIRMALARI DERGISI-JOURNAL OF STUDIES IN TURKOLOGY
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43113 Journal Article

Immigration and Refugee Crises in Fourth-Century Greece: An Athenian Perspective

Authors Lene Rubinstein
Year 2018
Journal Name EUROPEAN LEGACY-TOWARD NEW PARADIGMS
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43114 Journal Article

Language Situation and Language Policy in Sweden

Authors Darya Sergeyevna Borodina
Year 2018
Journal Name NAUCHNYI DIALOG
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43117 Journal Article

The encyclopedia of European migration and minorities. From the seventeenth century to the present. Foreword / Introduction

Authors Klaus J. Bade
Year 2018
Journal Name HISTORICAL SOCIAL RESEARCH-HISTORISCHE SOZIALFORSCHUNG
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43118 Journal Article

The Sekujam language of West Kalimantan (Indonesia)

Authors James T. Collins, Herpanus
Year 2018
Journal Name WACANA-JURNAL ILMU PENGETAHUAN BUDAYA-JOURNAL OF THE HUMANITIES OF INDONESIA
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43119 Journal Article

Analysing transnational and internal migration in the German North-east before World War I: Outlining a heuristic concept

Authors Klaus J. Bade
Year 2018
Journal Name HISTORICAL SOCIAL RESEARCH-HISTORISCHE SOZIALFORSCHUNG
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43120 Journal Article

Image of America in Telugu Cinema: A Study of the Cultural Implications

Authors D. Sudha Rani
Year 2018
Journal Name RUPKATHA JOURNAL ON INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES IN HUMANITIES
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43121 Journal Article

The Rise of Market-Based Job Search Institutions and Job Niches for Low-Skilled Chinese Immigrants

Authors Zai Liang, Bo Zhou
Year 2018
Journal Name RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences
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43122 Journal Article

Inclusionary policy and marginalised groups in Aoteaora/New Zealand process, impacts and politics

Authors Rachel Simon-Kumar
Year 2018
Journal Name Kōtuitui: New Zealand Journal of Social Sciences Online
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43123 Journal Article

END TO DREAM? BRITISH RETIRED RESIDENTS IN SPAIN AND THEIR RETURN PATTERNS

Authors Jordi Giner-Monfort
Year 2018
Journal Name JOURNAL OF SPATIAL AND ORGANIZATIONAL DYNAMICS
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43124 Journal Article

Montenegrin-Albanian Linguistic Border: In Search of "Balanced Language Contact"

Authors Maria S. Morozova, Alexander Yu. Rusakov
Year 2018
Journal Name SLOVENE-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SLAVIC STUDIES
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43125 Journal Article

Where the Wild Things Are: Fear of Islam and the Anti-Refugee Rhetoric in Hungary and in Poland

Authors Elzbieta M. Gozdziak, Peter Marton
Year 2018
Journal Name Central and Eastern european Migration Review
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43129 Journal Article

ETHNOGRAPHY OF CONVIVIALITY AND SUPERDIVERSITY: METHODOLOGICAL REFLECTIONS

Authors Beatriz Padilla, Antonia Olmos Alcaraz, Joana Azevedo
Year 2018
Journal Name Andamios, Revista de Investigación Social
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43131 Journal Article

Towards fairer borders: Alleviating global inequality of opportunity

Authors Magnus Skytterholm Egan
Year 2018
Journal Name ETIKK I PRAKSIS
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43134 Journal Article

Coach migration in German high performance sport

Authors Pamela Wicker, Johannes Orlowski, Christoph Breuer
Year 2018
Journal Name European Sport Management Quarterly
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43135 Journal Article

How are Patterns of Public Governance Changing in the US and the EU? It's Complicated

Authors Laurence E. Lynn, Aleksandra Malinowska
Year 2018
Journal Name Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis: Research and Practice
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43136 Journal Article

Transit Migrants in a Country Undergoing Transition: The Case of Greece

Authors Georgios Agelopoulos, Elina Kapetanaki, Konstantinos Kousaxidis, ...
Year 2018
Book Title Characteristics of Temporary Migration in European-Asian Transnational Social Spaces
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43137 Book Chapter

The Ethnicity of Refugees (ER): A new dataset for understanding flight patterns

Authors Seraina Rüegger, Heidrun Bohnet
Year 2018
Journal Name Conflict Management and Peace Science
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43138 Journal Article

Smartphone-basierte Analyse von Migrationstrends zur Identifikation von Schleuserrouten

Principal investigator André Calero Valdez (Principal Investigator)
Description
Das deutsch-österreichische Kooperationsprojekt Smar­tIdentifikation wird ein System entwickeln, um Daten aus mitgeführten Dokumenten und Smartphones aus­zuwerten. Mithilfe dieser Daten sollen die Identität von Personen sowie die von ihnen getätigten Angaben über­prüft werden. Dazu werden die für eine Alterserkennung auf dem Smartphone gespeicherten Bilder herangezo­gen. Weiterhin wird versucht, Schleuserrouten mittels Analysen aus den erhobenen Daten zu identifizieren. Da­bei sollen auch alternative Kommunikationsplattformen zur Entdeckung der Schleuser analysiert werden. Parallel zu den technischen Entwicklungen werden die recht­lichen und ethischen Rahmenbedingungen für einen akzeptierten und rechtskonformen Einsatz des Systems im Projekt erforscht und in die technische Realisierung überführt. nnovationen und Perspektiven Das System wird es ermöglichen, bei mobilen Kontrol­len die Aussagen der Migrantinnen und Migranten zu überprüfen und ihre Mitnahme zu Polizeiwachen auf ein Minimum zu reduzieren. Weiterhin wird die Verfolgung von Schleuserkriminalität durch die gewonnenen Daten über Routen und Chats unterstützt. Zum Nachweis der Einsatztauglichkeit werden Feldtests durchgeführt.
Year 2018
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43140 Project

Affektive und kulturelle Dimensionen von Integration infolge von Flucht und Zuwanderung

Principal investigator Christian von Scheve (Principal Investigator), Jürgen Schupp (Principal Investigator)
Description
Das Vorhaben geht von der Annahme aus, dass sich Diversität und kultureller Wandel durch Zuwanderung nicht allein anhand von Wissen und Kompetenzen bemessen lassen, sondern substanziell mit Werten, Einstellungen und Emotionen auf Seiten der Zugewanderten und der einheimischen Bevölkerung verbunden sind. Ausgehend von Ansätzen sozialwissenschaftlicher und psychiatrischer Integrations- und Akkulturationsforschung verfolgt das Vorhaben die These, dass diese kognitiv-evaluativen und affektiven Dimensionen des Miteinanders essenziell für das gesellschaftliche Zusammenleben und Integrationsprozesse sind. Dies gilt besonders für Zuwanderung im Kontext von Flucht und Vertreibung, da Geflüchtete oft erheblichen Stressoren ausgesetzt sind.
Year 2018
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43142 Project

BEYOND RACISM. ETHNOGRAPHIES OF ANTIRACISM AND CONVIVIALITY.

Principal investigator Diana Mulinari (), Hans Albin Seltenberg (), Anders Neergaard ()
Description
The aim of the project is to explore antiracist ideas, practices and strategies, focusing on women and migrants doing antiracism and everyday practices of conviviality. Methodologically the project is inspired by institutional ethnography, extended case method and ‘What’s the problem represented to be’ (WPR). In-depth, focus group interviews and participant observation will be carried in two major and two rural municipalities, where 5 different organizations/networks will be studied (human rights, migrant; antiracist, feminists and religious). participant observations. The project will provide knowledge on the elusive concept and practice of antiracism as well as new forms of conviviality in multicultural societies, with particular focus on the role of women and migrants/ethnic minorities.
Year 2018
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43143 Project

Polish Americans’ reception of the „Solidarity” immigration cohort

Authors Joanna Wojdon
Year 2018
Journal Name Studia Migracyjne – Przegląd Polonijny
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43144 Journal Article

European Management of Migration and Refugees - Consequences for mobility and political stability in transit countries

Principal investigator Guri Tyldum (Principal Investigator)
Description
The project will investigate how policies of migration management and protection systems shape access to protection, education and sustainable livelihoods for refugee populations, refugee mobility (their decision to repatriate, remain or move on to Europe or other third countries) and political developments and political stability in host communities. The analysis will focus in particular on the humanitarian responses and how refugees are provided access to education and sustainable livelihoods. The project will provide recommendations for international interventions to governments and humanitarian organisations on ways to improve current policies of migration management and refugee protection. Recommendations will focus on policy options that give refugees better access to education and sustainable livelihoods, limit tension between host population and refugees, limit secondary mobility and facilitate repatriation when possible. The project will target four countries and regions with large refugee populations: Lebanon (the Bekaa Valley); Jordan (Amman); Uganda (Nakivale); Niger (Agadez). The analysis will draw on existing, high-quality survey data on refugee and host populations in three of the regions, in combination with document analysis and qualitative interviews. We approach the refugee protection systems as systems of practice and aim to describe the structural factors that create opportunities for action for international actors, refugees, local governments and host populations, how the various actors respond to these opportunities (or lack of opportunities), as well as how they understand their own situation and opportunities.
Year 2018
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43145 Project

The bargaining power of sending countries in influencing the rights of their low skilled migrant workers

Description
This project asks how governments of migrant sending countries can influence the rights of their low skilled migrant workers in receiving countries. The project approaches this question from both the sending and the receiving country side; looking at factors that determine when and how sending states intervene and what determines the responses from receiving countries. The surplus of aspiring migrants and economic importance of remittances would suggest sending states have little bargaining power. Single case studies however suggest that some nevertheless intervene. A comprehensive overview of the drivers of immigration and emigration policy will result in a set of hypotheses. A survey of policy makers in sending countries will generate an overview of interventions by sending country governments. The project’s core is a systematic comparative case study of six sending countries with partly overlapping receiving countries and three of these receiving countries. The sending country cases are three sets of two countries in which migrant remittances constitute a similar share of GDP but involvement with the rights of their workers abroad differ; the Philippines, Senegal, India, Ecuador, Morocco and Vietnam. The receiving countries are South Korea, Saudi Arabia and Italy. These countries vary strongly in the rights for migrant workers and the level of cooperation with sending states. QCA and process tracing will be used to assess the hypotheses. The project is innovative in 1) providing a systematic analysis of a larger number of cases including countries rarely covered in comparative studies on migrant rights, 2) examining of the actions of both sending and receiving countries, and 3) taking the trade-off between migrant numbers and rights into account. The project will push theory development forward by connecting theoretical fields and expanding geographic scope. It is policy-relevant by providing further insight into how the rights of migrant workers can be improved.
Year 2018
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43146 Project

How resilient were OECD health care systems during the “refugee crisis”?

Authors Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
Year 2018
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43147 Policy Brief

Beneficiaries of international protection travelling to their country of origin: Challenges, Policies and Practices in the EU Member States, Norway and Switzerland – Luxembourg

Authors Sarah Jacobs, Adolfo Sommarribas, Birte Nienaber
Description
The main objectives of this study of the European Migration Network are to provide objective and reliable information about beneficiaries of international protection who travel to their country of origin or come into contact with national authorities of their country of origin, and information on cases where international protection statuses were ceased leading to, for example, the status being ended, revoked or not renewed (as per Article 45 and 46 of the recast Asylum Procedures Directive) and, ultimately, the permission to stay withdrawn. For the Luxembourgish case, it is firstly important to note that beneficiaries of the refugee status and of the status of subsidiary protection are not subject to the same restrictions with regard to travel to the country of origin or contact with national authorities. While refugees are in principle not permitted to travel to the country of origin, beneficiaries of subsidiary protection are not subject to this restriction. In this context, the phenomenon of beneficiaries of the refugee status travelling to their country of origin is currently not considered a policy priority in Luxembourg. While it does occur, there are no statistics providing information on how many refugees undertake this journey or contact the national authorities, on the reasons for travel to the country of origin, nor is there any case law on the cessation of the refugee status for reasons of travel to the country of origin. Luxembourg’s authorities are not systematically informed of such events by the authorities of other Member States. Luxembourg has no external borders with the exception of the international airport of Luxembourg, from where only an extremely limited number of flights to third countries depart. Thus, it is extremely difficult to capture the extent of the phenomenon in Luxembourg. Luxembourg’s Asylum Law establishes the re-availment of the protection of the country of origin and the voluntary re-establishment in the country of origin as grounds for cessation of the refugee status. Travel to the country of origin or contact with its national authorities are not explicitly forbidden by legislation. In principle, refugees are not permitted to travel back to the country of origin. They are provided with this information on multiple occasions: for instance at the moment of the introduction of their application, as well as when they are issued the decision granting them protection. Their travel document also clearly states the restriction. There is no notification or authorisation procedure that would authorise such travel in Luxembourg. When the Directorate of Immigration has the information that a refugee travelled back to the country of origin, it will proceed to an in-depth analysis of the personal situation of the individual. Determining that this travel is proof of the voluntary re-establishment in the country of origin is however considered extremely difficult, as it is nearly impossible to ascertain the reasons for which the refugee returned. Furthermore, a short stay in the country of origin is not necessarily considered like the (permanent) establishment in the country of origin or a proof thereof. This is also due to the fact that the Luxembourgish authorities cannot contact the authorities of the country of origin and have no tools to undertake an investigation there in order to verify that the refugee has re-established him/herself. The travel and the surrounding circumstances can be taken into account if the minister decides to re-examine the validity of the status, which could potentially lead to a withdrawal. The Directorate of Immigration has never considered ceasing protection because a refugee contacted the authorities of the country of origin. Proving that this contact occurred in the first place, and next, proving that it constitutes a re-availment of the protection of the country of origin, is considered nearly impossible. In addition, it is a fact that certain administrative procedures require the production of official documents and that the substitution of these documents with affidavits are in practice not always feasible. As previously mentioned, beneficiaries of subsidiary protection are authorised to travel back to their country of origin and are permitted to contact the authorities of their country of origin. They are even encouraged to contact the national authorities in order to obtain a national passport. These actions can thus not lead to the cessation of the status of subsidiary protection. If the decision to cease the status is taken, the beneficiary is notified of this decision in writing. The decision can be appealed before the First instance Administrative Court. If the decision of the Court is negative, the individual can file an appeal before the Second instance Administrative Court. In principle, the decision to cease international protection carries a return decision. However, the individual can apply for another residence permit if s/he fulfils the conditions established in the Immigration Law. The same is true for family members who got a residence permit through family reunification with the concerned person: the family members will lose their right to stay unless they can gain access to another residence permit under the Immigration Law.
Year 2018
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43148 Report

Every Immigrant Is an Emigrant: How Migration Policies Shape the Paths to Integration (IMISEM)

Description
The IMISEM project adopts a comprehensive view of migration policy that includes both its emigrant/emigration and immigrant/immigration sides, bridging the two sides of migration policy. The main research question is: how does policy offer or hinder a path for migrants to become or remain an integral part of the polity? The theoretical framework bridges the stages of entry/exit, residency in/abroad, and access to citizenship and looks for patterns of how states manage the process of migrant inclusion in or exclusion from the polity. IMISEM gathers cross-regional evidence on the variety and depth of policy configurations governing migration trajectories for different profiles of migrants. With these data it charts the connections between policies of mobility, settlement and belonging, looking forward to extracting the underlying principles structuring them, and possibly to find whether or not there are threads of coherence across the “two sides” (emi-/immigrant policies). Using a comparative area study angle, IMISEM develops a broadened perspective on the migration policy landscape across regions. Thus, it looks at 30 cases from Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean, and Asia, to cover a wide breadth of migratory profiles and institutional contexts to which policies can be traced back un further analyses.
Year 2018
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43150 Data Set
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