Skip to main content

Articles

398 result(s) for 'Comparative Migration Studies' within Comparative Migration Studies

Page 4 of 8

  1. Over the last decade, six EU member states have introduced pre-departure integration requirements for family migrants. The Netherlands was the first to introduce such ā€˜civic integration abroadā€™ policies. Its e...

    Authors: Saskia Bonjour
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2015 2:2020203
  2. Starting from the idea that border externalization ā€“ understood as the spatial and institutional stretching of borders ā€“ is enmeshed with the highly contextual humanitarian and securitarian dynamics of migrant...

    Authors: Nanneke Winters and Cynthia Mora Izaguirre
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2019 7:27
  3. Organisations are important gatekeepers in the labour market inclusion of immigrants and their children. Research has regularly documented ethnic discrimination in hiring decisions. Aiming to further our under...

    Authors: Christine Lang
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2021 9:26
  4. This article explores the different memorial strategies of the civil society associations and the public authorities in Mali through various practices and discourses of the International Migrant Day around the...

    Authors: Almamy Sylla and Susanne U. Schultz
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2020 8:4
  5. Recent literature has emphasised the importance of family involvement within immigrant families in determining their childrenā€™s educational pathways. On the one hand, the focus on family involvement and the tr...

    Authors: Philipp Schnell, Rosita Fibbi, Maurice Crul and Martha Montero-Sieburth
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2015 3:14
  6. During the last decade, Canadaā€™s immigration and citizenship policies have been radically transformed. Hardly any aspect has been left untouched. That humanitarian migration has also been restricted and transf...

    Authors: Dagmar Soennecken
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2015 2:2010101
  7. The development of cooperation on asylum and migration matters in the European Union (EU) has often been explained as the result of ā€˜venue-shoppingā€™, that is, the move by national policy-makers to a new EU pol...

    Authors: Christian Kaunert, Sarah LĆ©onard and Ulrike Hoffmann
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2015 1:1010179
  8. Studying transnational behaviour, i.e. interactions between the sending and receiving countries of international migrants, is especially interesting for refugees given their migration motive and history. Due t...

    Authors: Linda Bakker, Godfried Engbersen and Jaco Dagevos
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2015 2:2030261
  9. This paper challenges the assimilationist assumption that suggests migrants cannot be simultaneously embedded in multiple societies. Based on survey data collected among Afghan, Burundian, Ethiopian and Morocc...

    Authors: Ɩzge Bilgili
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2015 2:2030283
  10. In the context of immigration and settlement, Canada and Germany are often portrayed as opposites: Canada represents a settler society and Germany an ethnic nation. The different approaches and attitudes of th...

    Authors: Harald Bauder
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2015 2:2010009
  11. In this rejoinder for this special issue, we enter into dialogue with the various commentaries that our article "Between Fragmentation and Institutionalisation" received. In doing so, we address some of the co...

    Authors: Asya Pisarevskaya, Nathan Levy and Peter Scholten
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2020 8:40
  12. This paper compares the transition from school to work among Mexican-origin youth in the United States and North African-origin youth in France relative to the native-majority youth with similar low-level cred...

    Authors: Amy Lutz, Yaƫl Brinbaum and Dalia Abdelhady
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2015 2:2020227
  13. Migration is the basis for developmentā€”economic, social, and psychological. In this paper I will examine borders on migration that entail the ambivalent relating by the societal context of migration to the act...

    Authors: Jaan Valsiner
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2022 10:2
  14. The aim of this paper is to map the emergence and development of a research field around the topic of ā€œgender-based violence (GBV) against women with precarious legal status and their access to social protecti...

    Authors: Claudia Di Matteo and Roberto Scaramuzzino
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2022 10:40
  15. What explains cross-national and temporal variations in migrant rights? This article argues that policymakers implement more exclusionary or inclusive policies toward migrants in response to exchange-rate fluc...

    Authors: Adrian J. Shin
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2021 9:21
  16. This study compares the longitudinal dynamics of labor market integration between asylum refugees, resettled refugees and their reunited family members. The labor market integration of the three refugee groups...

    Authors: Jussi Tervola
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2020 8:28
  17. In recent decades millions of people have migrated to the democracies of North America and Western Europe. Some of these immigrants have become citizens of their new homelands, while others remain foreign resi...

    Authors: Alex Street
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2015 1:1010023
  18. This paper examines migrant workersā€™ subjective views of their rights and wellbeing in the Gulf Arab state of Qatar. Since the announcement of the World Cup, Qatar has been roundly criticized for the living a...

    Authors: Michael Ewers, Abdoulaye Diop, Nathan Duma and Kien Le
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2023 11:20
  19. Theoretically embedded in the migration/social policy nexus, this paper investigates cooperation with return (CWR) as a policy tool to remove practical deportation barriers for third-country nationals pending ...

    Authors: Sieglinde Rosenberger and Sabine Koppes
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2018 6:26
  20. This article maps from a critical and comparative perspective how scholars at risk are currently being integrated into the European research infrastructure, as well as in various EU and non-EU Member States. T...

    Authors: Dina Gusejnova, Alina Dragolea, Andrea Pető, Andrei-Vlăduț Terteleac, Artemis Photiadou and Rebeka Bakos
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2024 12:4
  21. The reintegration of return migrants has been an important issue in migration studies for several decades. While much research has been done to identify returneesā€™ strategies and their labour market situation ...

    Authors: Agnieszka Trąbka, Luka Klimavičiūtė, Olga Czeranowska, Dovile Jonavičienė, Izabela Grabowska and Iga Wermińska-Wiśnicka
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2022 10:29
  22. Whether refugees in need of protection should be granted long- or short-term residence permits in the host country upon arrival is a long-standing debate in the migration policy and scholarly literature. Right...

    Authors: Kristoffer Jutvik and Darrel Robinson
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2020 8:44
  23. Cities are taking a prominent role in solving global challenges, with a ā€˜new localismā€™ inviting a reorientation of power from nation-states downwards, outwards and globally. This special issue explores this ph...

    Authors: Caroline Oliver, Rianne Dekker, Karin Geuijen and Jacqueline Broadhead
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2020 8:30
  24. The article examines the evolution of concepts of solidarity and trust in the Common European Asylum System by analysing the legislative and judicial development of the Dublin system of intra-EU transfers of a...

    Authors: Valsamis Mitsilegas
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2015 2:2020181
  25. This contribution investigates the intersection between macro-level political narratives on diversity and micro-level lived experience of social inclusion and everyday interaction. The case studies for analysi...

    Authors: Andrea CarlĆ  and Marcus Nicolson
    Citation: Comparative Migration Studies 2023 11:2

Back content

Volumes 1 and 2 of Comparative Migration Studies are available hereā€‹ā€‹ā€‹ā€‹ā€‹ā€‹ā€‹

Affiliated with

Annual Journal Metrics

2022 Citation Impact
3.5 - 2-year Impact Factor
2.679 - SNIP (Source Normalized Impact per Paper)
1.340 - SJR (SCImago Journal Rank)

2023 Speed
77 days submission to first editorial decision for all manuscripts (Median)
288 days submission to accept (Median)

2023 Usage 
683,383 downloads
373 Altmetric mentions